David Conwill said:Maybe you know this, but that's actually a Lewis Gun, a WWI light machine gun.
-Dave
Precisely David.............Irish......potato.......Never mind, I think it fizzled.
David Conwill said:Maybe you know this, but that's actually a Lewis Gun, a WWI light machine gun.
-Dave
Me also, due to me fahmily bein Oirish on side, this is a good resourceWinoJunko said:This is a bit of history I've always been interested in. Its cool to see reenactment groups for it so that way more people can learn about it.
dr greg said:Me also, due to me fahmily bein Oirish on side, this is a good resource http://libraryautomation.com/nymas/irishcivilwar.html
Corky said:"To Hell or Barbados" is a must-read book for anyone interested in the history of Ireland.
The nonfiction book "To Hell or Barbados: The Ethnic Cleansing of Ireland" by Sean O'Callaghan describes a sad period in history that is generally ignored by historians. In the seventeenth century, Oliver Cromwell encouraged the mass slaughter, enslavement, and deportation of Irish men, women, and children for various reasons, the primary one being that the Protestant English overclass regarded the Catholic Irish as subhuman and not christian.
During this period, the entire British Slave Fleet was diverted from their triangular course from England to West Africa to the New World to transport the captive Irishmen to the New World as "Indentured Servants". (This is why Marcus Garvey put the symbolic Irish Green on the Black Liberation flag - Garvey considered the what the Irish had suffered had made them brothers in the struggle for equality.)
Irish priests were hunted down like wolves and Irish soldiers exiled to Spain or France, while rebels and widows alike were forcibly sent to Barbados in the Caribbean as indentured servants or slaves. People were sent to Hell (the mainland or "Virginia" plantations) or to Barbados (slang for any of the islands) to work on the sugar plantations. This book chronicles what happened to them. Beatings, whippings, torture, rape, and humiliation were just some of the terrible indecencies that these people suffered because they were Catholic and Irish.
The narrative moves from Cromwell's invasion and occupation of Ireland (including the ethnic cleansing of the Six Counties and re-population with Scots-Irish Protestants) to the treatment of the surviving Irish and deportation to the Caribbean and the modern-day descendants of the Irish on Barbados. In between, you will get a detailed and informative account of life in Ireland during the seventeenth century while at war in the UK and as plantation owners and slaves in the Caribbean. There is even a chapter on Irish buccaneers.
The book also explains how all these poor white people got transported to the American South (along with their Celtic music and taste for whiskey) and how they subsequently became a perpetual underclass.
cookie said:Barbados would today be a predominately white country if the Irish had survived en masse.
cookie said:The Irish have a long history of mercenary recruitment.
Story said:I just had a fleeting mental image of Irish dreadlocks.
As well as 'official' mercenarism, where the waves of immigrants where recruited right off the boats during the Mexican-American and Civil Wars.
Like many of the unfortunate CSS Hunley's first crew - they had arrived in New Orleans before the war, and enlisted in the Confederate Navy...only to drown as a result of an accident when the submarine dove with hatches still open.Story said:As well as 'official' mercenarism, where the waves of immigrants where recruited right off the boats during the Mexican-American and Civil Wars.
Story said:I just had a fleeting mental image of Irish dreadlocks.
Corky said:In the seventeenth century, Oliver Cromwell encouraged the mass slaughter, enslavement, and deportation of Irish men, women, and children for various reasons, the primary one being that the Protestant English overclass regarded the Catholic Irish as subhuman and not christian.
Story said:I just had a fleeting mental image of Irish dreadlocks.
Fascinating stuff, Story.Story said:Historian probes Liverpool's links to IRA
By Runcorn And Widnes Weekly News on Feb 26, 09 01:41 PM in 2000 onwards
http://blogs.chesterchronicle.co.uk/cheshire-memories/2009/02/historian-probes-liverpools-li.html
IAN McKeane, a recognised authority on Ireland and its troubled past, gave Runcorn Historical Society members an insight into The IRA and Liverpool at their February meeting.
Chas said:No Black And Tan Reenactors, I suppose. No, I guess not.