[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 41 (Thursday, March 17, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1818-S1819]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IRISH-AMERICAN HERITAGE MONTH
Mr. CARDIN. Madam President, today I applaud the President in
declaring March 2011 Irish-American Heritage Month, and I speak in
celebration of the rich Irish history, culture, and customs still alive
today in the hearts and minds of Irish Americans everywhere.
The association of our two nations began early in our country's
history. Irish immigrants arrived in the early colonial days as
indentured servants, which was often the only affordable method of
passage to the ``New World.'' Close to a quarter of a million Irish
immigrated during the colonial era, and many of them to Maryland. Upon
their arrival, they set immediately upon the heady things of the time:
independence, and the building of a nation. Irish immigrants took up
their new national identity with fervor, especially in Maryland, and
helped to found lasting institutions. Charles Carroll, his family
descendants from the O Cearbhaill lords of Eile, was a member of the
second Continental Congress and signed the Declaration of Independence.
His cousin, John Carroll, born in Upper Marlboro, was elected the first
bishop of Baltimore, and was elevated to the first Archbishop of the
United States when Pope Pius VII made Baltimore the first American
Catholic archdiocese. James Calhoun, of Irish descent, was the first
mayor of Baltimore City, and held a commission with the Baltimore
militia.
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From these auspicious beginnings, those reporting Irish ancestry in
Maryland have today grown to over 700,000, according to the 2006
American Community Survey. These sons and daughters of Eire did not
grow without tribulation. As famine and hunger gripped the Emerald
Isle, nearly 3.5 million Irish immigrants fled to America between 1820
and 1880, engendering discriminatory reactions that often strayed into
violence. Signs of ``No Irish Need Apply'' appeared in business
windows, and young Irishmen were often drummed into service on the
quayside to fight for the Union Army. Indeed, in my own home town of
Baltimore, the mayoral elections of 1856, 1857 and 1858 were marred by
violence, political intimidation and well-founded accusations of
ballot-box stuffing, fomented by nativist political organizations, such
as the Know-Nothing Party.
Irish Americans pushed past these shortsighted prejudices, time and
again, and put their shoulders to the wheel of industry in America.
They helped settle and farm the breadbasket of America, they took up
arms in the defense of freedom and liberty, and they helped build an
ever strengthening bond with the island nation of Ireland. They built
strong communities around the values of hard work, perseverance, faith,
and a shared remembrance of an ancestral home across the sea. Irish
Americans have ever understood that great joy is only earned with great
hardship, and our 35th President, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, showed this
ethic. In service to our country, he faced down the threat of worldwide
nuclear annihilation, and pushed our Nation to do the impossible: to
claim the Moon as the province of man. Irish Americans proudly continue
this tradition of service, and serve at every level of public office,
including in the Governor's Mansion in Annapolis, MD, where Maryland's
favorite Irish-American son, Governor Martin O'Malley, resides.
The millions of Irish that immigrated to the United States, escaping
hunger and religious persecution, chasing the elusive American dream,
forever knitted Ireland and America together. It is right that we honor
this bond, and take this occasion to reflect on the deeply inlaid
threads of American history and tradition that sound, look, feel, and
are distinctly Irish.
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