'This splendid study is classic Fitzpatrick: a mixture of imaginative, and sometimes provocative, question-framing with rigorous hypothesis testing. Reverse migration is a topic rarely touched in Irish historical work; this will be recognised as a genuinely seminal work.'
Donald H. Akenson - Queen's University, Ontario
'Historians have assumed that the Irish returned from America in tiny numbers. In a book filled with brilliant insights and vivid details, Fitzpatrick demonstrates that reverse migration was considerable and had a significant impact. Drawing strikingly original conclusions from statistical sources, he offers a major new interpretation of Irish migration history.'
Kevin Kenny - New York University
'Statistically rich and based on a range of sources, this provocative study challenges how we currently perceive returned migrants and urges a new exploration of the field. Fitzpatrick provides the map and there is no doubt that this book will lead to further reinterpretations of the ‘Americanisation’ of Irish society.'
Maria Luddy - University of Warwick
'Challenging orthodoxies of Ireland as an insular sender of emigrants, Fitzpatrick’s original study reverses priorities to explore those who came to Ireland. An original study of rich empirical quality, this book reframes our study of migratory cultures in post-Famine Ireland.'
Donald M. MacRaild - University of Roehampton
'A highly original study by one of Ireland’s greatest historians. Making imaginative use of a rich body of archival sources and demographic data, this ground-breaking study of ‘the returned Yank’ raises important new questions about the relationship between migration and modernity.'
Fearghal McGarry - Queen's University, Belfast
‘Fitzpatrick’s methodology of collating statistics, alongside common sense deduction, paints this fascinating picture of America in Ireland.’
David Doolin
Source: Family & Community History
‘In the Americanization of Ireland the late Fitzpatrick (formerly, Trinity College Dublin) breaks new ground in the study of migration to and from Ireland … imaginative and rigorous … suggesting a new area of research for other scholars.’
W. H. Mulligan Jr.
Source: Choice
‘Migration historians will have much to ponder as they delve into Fitzpatrick’s data. It is as impressive as it is illustrative. But they will not be the only ones. Fitzpatrick has also unearthed an important set of issues that he has engaged in his previous work and that rising generations of scholars would be wise to revisit in light of his data-driven story of return migration.’
Patrick Griffin
Source: Journal of British Studies