Historical Society Is Going Irish For Its March Program
Historical Society Is Going Irish
For Its March Program
The Irish have been a presence in Newtown for more than 200 years, and make up a sizable proportion of the townâs population. On Monday, March 14, three days before St Patrickâs Day, Newtown Historical Society will explore the history of the Irish in Newtown. Harlan Jessup will offer a presentation called âThe Irish Come To Newtown,â beginning at 7:30 pm in the community room of C.H. Booth Library, 25 Main Street.
The first Irish to arrive in Newtown, as in many places, were single farm workers. This limited influx began before the end of the 18th Century. By the 1840s, Irish families began to arrive, purchasing and working on their own small farms.
Following the potato famines of midcentury, Irish migration ballooned, and large numbers came to work both on farms and in the rubber factory, while the women and girls took jobs as domestics, and in the button and comb shops that had fueled Newtownâs industrial revolution.
Irish names in various town records appeared in increasing numbers throughout the century, and by 1900 the group represented about 45 percent of Newtownâs population, with increasing political sway.
In spite of this near dominance of population and increasing political and economic clout, or perhaps because of these trends, the âNo Irish Need Applyâ mentality was also present in the town. As past research has shown, this split showed itself strongly in the town schools.
As the newer Irish immigrants tended to settle in Sandy Hook near their places of work, the acrimony took on geographic as well as ethnic tones. Some schools even suffered lockouts as the separation grew before residents began to get along as the 20th Century progressed. Mr Jessup will tell the story of those immigrants and their integration into the life of the Newtown community.
Harlan Jessup is a resident of Newtown, a member of the historical society, and is a professional genealogist. He is in residence at the Booth Library as a genealogy volunteer and guide, usually on Monday afternoons, and has written on his familyâs history, and has spoken before a number of local civic clubs and other groups.
Mr Jessup is a member of the Connecticut Professional Genealogists Council and is editor of Connecticut Ancestry, the journal of The Connecticut Ancestry Society.
The presentation will be accompanied by a medley of Irish songs.
Newtown Historical Society programs are free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served following the presentation.
For further information, call 203-426-5937.Â