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Saturday, June 25, 2011

Hidden lives of Baltimore's Irish immigrants unearthed for first time

The true story of Irish immigrants in Baltimore in the middle 1800s is finally being discovered and told. - - Donna Poisl

Provided by University of Maryland

An archaeological team from the University of Maryland is unearthing a unique picture of the Baltimore-area's early Irish immigrants - of city children taught to read and write at home before widespread public education and child labor laws, as well as insular rural residents who resisted assimilation for one hundred years.

The excavation in the city represents the first formal archaeological research to focus on Baltimore's early Irish settlement and labor force.

"Behind the closed doors of their modest Baltimore homes, beyond the view of their bosses, these unskilled railroad workers maintained a rich social, religious and family life," says University of Maryland archaeologist Stephen Brighton, whose students just finished digging in the backyards of 19th century Baltimore immigrants.
Click on the headline above to read the rest of this story! This is only a small part of it.

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