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Little Ireland

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Little Ireland Long Lost Histories 39Little Ireland39 Manchester If Those Walls

Colin watling jarrow england known as little ireland


Little Ireland was a slum district of the township of Manchester in Lancashire in the early 19th century. It was inhabited for about 20 years from about 1827 to 1847 and was given its name from the presence of many poor Irish immigrants. It was south of Oxford Road railway station and enclosed by the railway line and the loop in the river.

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Little Ireland httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Containing mainly poorly skilled Irish immigrants it became Manchester's oldest, smallest and most short lived Irish slum. In the 1820s the first immigrants moved there, however, by the mid-1840s they were moved on and the area was later demolished to make way for the industrious Victorian capitalists in their attempts to build the Manchester South Junction Railway line, which remains there to this day. In his book titled The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844 social scientist Friedrich Engels wrote unfavourably about his experience of Little Ireland in Manchester in his book, claiming it was a 'horrid little slum'. the worst of the slums of the township. Little Ireland would become world famous, and the term itself became a generic shorthand for Irish living in slum housing throughout the 19th century industrial world.

Little Ireland Little Ireland 2 MULE

It is commemorated by a red plaque on 8 Great Marlborough Street, about half-way between New Wakefield Street and Hulme Street.

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Little Ireland Singing a Song of Victorian Poverty Welcome to LJMU English

References

Little Ireland Wikipedia