Going To America

Terry Coleman

Volume totaling  317 pages. Book is in new condition.  Per The publisher;

 

This is the grim story of the British and Irish immigrants who  came to America during the middle of the nineteenth century. Much the largest  contingent was Irish, and it was above all the departure of the Irish to  America, diseased, half-starved, bewildered, cheated and cheating, which made  the emigrant way across the Atlantic as degrading as the convict route to the  South Seas, and almost as cruel as the Middle Passage of the slave ships.  Confronting the immigrants at every turn were inescapable horrors. Ship owners  packed their holds like slavers; brokers misrepresented and overcharged; runners  stole when they couldn't cheat; customs officials took bribes to ignore  overcrowding. And when the immigrants arrived the swindling didn't stop. They  were fleeced by lodging-house keepers, separated from their possessions, and  sold fraudulent railroad or canal boat tickets--in short, the whole, cruel  apparatus of immigration was turned against them.

 

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