The Challenge of the Irish Catholic Community in Nineteenth-Century Montreal
Authors
Sherry Olson
Patricia Thornton
Abstract
As a receiving point for the Irish diaspora, Montreal offered the exceptional context
of a Catholic majority, a bilingual labour market, and, in the 1840s, a polity undergoing
reconstruction. The high quality of records in Montreal allows us to trace the
destinies of Irish Catholics who settled in the city in the 1840s and to weigh some of
the factors that contributed to their upward mobility. One such factor was the existence
of an Irish Catholic population that, from as early as the 1820s, constituted a
third community, distinctive in its demographic behaviour and institutional allegiances,
alongside French Canadians and Anglo-Protestants. An examination of
sample families shows that the “famine immigrants” of the 1840s advanced into
new economic niches, their infants thrived, they achieved in the second and third
generations substantial improvement in housing and residential integration, and
they exercised, in each generation, an active and articulate political voice. These
findings contradict earlier assumptions of persistent poverty and powerlessness
among Irish Catholics in North American cities and raise new questions about
urban opportunities and social pathways.