A Demographic and Social Profile of Quebec City's Irish Populations, 1842–1861
by Robert J. Grace
IN THE FIRST HALF of the nineteenth century, the port of Quebec
handled over two-thirds of total European immigration to the British
North American colonies. Most of these immigrants had embarked somewhere
in the British Isles and the Irish constituted the largest group for
much of the half century. Both Irish Protestants and Irish Catholics
made their way across the Atlantic to Quebec where, after disembarking,
most continued on to points further west or south while some remained
in the city. The Protestant proportion in this migration was at its
most important in the first three decades of the century while the movement
of Catholics gained strength in the mid–1830s and culminated in
the huge immigration of the Famine (1845–49) and post-Famine (1850–
54) periods. A sizeable proportion of the early Protestant arrivals settled
on the expanding rural frontier of Upper Canada (Ontario) while many
of the later Catholic immigrants found work on the canals, in the lumber
trade, on the railroads and in the cities of the two Canadas. By midcentury,
significant Irish settlements could be found in the Maritimes,
Quebec City, Montreal, Toronto, Hamilton, Kingston, and rural Ontario.
Yet, of all these areas of Irish settlement, Quebec City stands alone as
the only one with a clear Roman Catholic population, that of Montreal
being a mixture of the two cultures. This Catholic majority in Quebec
City proved to be significant with respect to the subsequent social development
for both the Irish Catholic and Irish Protestant communities.
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