Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Introduction: ‘A Piece Cut Off from the Old Sod Itself’
- Part One 1800–1914
- 1 Poor Paddy: The Irish in the Liverpool Labour Market
- 2 ‘The Lowest Depth’: The Spatial Dimensions of Irish Liverpool
- 3 The Holy Sanctity of Poverty: Welfare, Charity and the Sacred Irish Poor
- 4 Faith and Fatherland: Ethno-Sectarian Collective Mutuality
- 5 Electoral Politics: Towards Home Rule
- 6 Extra-Parliamentary Politics: The American Connection
- 7 ‘Pat-riot-ism’: Sectarian Violence and Public Disorder
- 8 Cultural Politics: National Regeneration and Ethnic Revival
- 9 Leisure: Irish Recreation
- Part Two 1914–39
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - Poor Paddy: The Irish in the Liverpool Labour Market
from Part One - 1800–1914
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Introduction: ‘A Piece Cut Off from the Old Sod Itself’
- Part One 1800–1914
- 1 Poor Paddy: The Irish in the Liverpool Labour Market
- 2 ‘The Lowest Depth’: The Spatial Dimensions of Irish Liverpool
- 3 The Holy Sanctity of Poverty: Welfare, Charity and the Sacred Irish Poor
- 4 Faith and Fatherland: Ethno-Sectarian Collective Mutuality
- 5 Electoral Politics: Towards Home Rule
- 6 Extra-Parliamentary Politics: The American Connection
- 7 ‘Pat-riot-ism’: Sectarian Violence and Public Disorder
- 8 Cultural Politics: National Regeneration and Ethnic Revival
- 9 Leisure: Irish Recreation
- Part Two 1914–39
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
As economic migrants, the Irish in nineteenth-century Liverpool experienced the kind of occupational disadvantage identified by ‘segmented’ or ‘dual’ labour market theory, discrimination normally applied to workers marked out by phenotypic difference. The absence of any such marker notwithstanding, the Irish were labelled and stigmatised on arrival, victims of prejudice that hindered their prospects in the labour market. As ‘poor Paddies’ they were excluded from the ‘primary sector’ where relatively decent wages, labour conditions, job security and union membership applied, to be confined to a ‘secondary sector’ of low-paid, unprotected, dead-end jobs – on the docks, in adjacent processing and refining plants and on building sites. It was worse still for women, given the absence of textile factory employment in Liverpool and the general reluctance to employ the Irish as domestic servants, often advertised with the caveat, ‘No Irish Need Apply’ – in nineteenth-century Liverpool, with Welsh and country sources of supply for domestic labour, ‘NINA’ was a reality, not ‘an urban myth of victimization’. To make ends meet, Irish women were forced into the lowly chip, grit and oakum trades, or some other form of down-market ‘basket’ selling in Liverpool's notorious ‘secondary economy’ of the streets, the point of income (and consumption) for the least advantaged. Generalising from the Liverpool experience, George Cornewall Lewis categorised the Irish poor in Britain in the early 1830s, a decade before the Famine influx, as ‘an example of a less civilized population spreading themselves, as a kind of substratum, beneath a more civilized community: and, without excelling in any branch of industry, obtaining possession of all the lowest departments of manual labour’.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Irish, Catholic and ScouseThe History of the Liverpool-Irish, 1800-1940, pp. 27 - 55Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2007