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A Saint Patrick's Day Reflection: What Does it Mean to be
"Irish"?
By: Kyle Betit Biography,
Email
When your specialty is Irish genealogy, you are often confronted with the
question of, "How do you define Irish?" This question especially hits me around
Saint Patrick's Day, as it did last week, when I see a myriad of people wearing
green, posting pictures of leprechauns and shamrocks, drinking green beer, and
the like. Is this what it means to be Irish? The people I know in Ireland look
at this with puzzlement and wonder where it all came from. It is a peculiarly
American phenomenon. Such a popular mythology of what is means to be Irish can
unfortunately marginalize elements of the Irish population and of Irish history
and genealogy. Even if people get past the green beer and corned beef and
cabbage, they often seem to assume a set definition of who the Irish are which
can be a narrow picture.
Before I started researching Irish genealogy I sometimes couldn't remember
whether there were more Protestants in the North or the South of Ireland, so I
am no stranger to being uninformed about Ireland. But I've learned a lot since
then about the complexity of Irish culture, history, and people. In this column,
I would like to share some of my own observations and experiences about this. I
don't claim to have all the answers, and I'm not an Irish historian, but I hope
that the following might be though-provoking for those reading this column in
terms of what it means to be Irish.
This year I noticed a Saint Patrick's Day parade lined with flags displaying
Celtic crosses and the word Eire. Now, I greatly admire Celtic crosses. However,
these flags reminded me that, in my experience, I have found that many people
have the perception that "Irish" means both Gaelic and Catholic, thus
eliminating anyone who doesn't fit into those categories. On the other hand,
when I visit Irish festivals and genealogy gatherings around the United States
and Canada, I notice that about half of the people have ancestors from Ireland
who were Protestants rather than Catholics. I also find that many Irish
Catholics and their children left the church when they went to North America or
Australasia; were they no longer Irish?
There were many thousands of Presbyterians from the lowlands of Scotland who
settled in Ulster (the northern province of Ireland) in the 1600s, and their
descendants came in great numbers to America starting in the 1700s. There were
the "Old English" (Norman Irish who often remained Catholics after the
Reformation) and the "New English" (Protestants who came to Ireland after the
Reformation). People of Irish Catholic descent might be surprised to find how
much of their ancestry goes back to the "Old English" and (probably to a lesser
extent) the "New English." The former, in particular, widely intermarried with
the local Gaels.
Some of my own Irish ancestors were "New English" Protestants who came to
Ireland at the time of Cromwell in the 1600s. A Bible from this Irish family,
kept by the generation that came from Queens County (now Laois County), Ireland,
to Canada, is now one of my treasured possessions. Others of my Irish ancestors
were Roman Catholics from County Down; it is from these forebears that I have
inherited my own Roman Catholic religion. So I can see the mix of cultures in
Ireland from a very personal perspective.
Irish families of English origin were often called Anglo-Irish, and some of the
Anglo-Irish produced literature and poetry that are known and loved the world
over. Examples include the works of Jonathan Swift, Oscar Wilde, George Bernard
Shaw, and W. B. Yeats. The more prominent Anglo-Irish comprised the Protestant
Ascendancy which ruled Ireland for several centuries. It was actually Irish
Presbyterians with their Catholic countrymen who were instrumental in the United
Irish movement of the 1790s, and Protestants were prominent in the Home Rule
movement of the late 1800s and early 1900s. Many of the first American
presidents were of Scots-Irish heritage. Canada had important early leaders of
both Catholic and Protestant Irish background. Did you know that it was the
Irish who brought Methodism to America in the 1780s?
We should not use religion as a guideline to what "Irish" means, because
religion is so intermixed among families in Ireland. There were Irish Quakers,
Irish Baptists, Irish Methodists, Irish Jews, Irish Congregationalists, and
others. Did you know that two of the presidents of the Republic of Ireland in
this century were Protestants? From my experience as a family historian, mixed
marriages between Catholics and Protestants were more common than we realize.
For example, you will find numerous Roman Catholic Campbells in the North of
Ireland whose ancestors were originally Presbyterians from Scotland. When you
look at the Irish Diaspora, you see an even more diverse picture of religious
affiliation.
The term Eire is sometimes used to refer to what is now the Republic of Ireland
(the larger part of the island of Ireland). Unfortunately, it was often used
pejoratively in twentieth century England to refer to the Irish Republic. But
originally, it referred to the whole island. As we know, the island of Ireland
is now politically divided. In 1921 twenty-six counties separated from Great
Britain to form the Irish Free State, which eventually became the Republic of
Ireland. The six other counties (Antrim, Armagh, Down, Fermanagh, Londonderry
and Tyrone) remained in the United Kingdom with Great Britain. Many people in
Northern Ireland certainly consider themselves Irish, but they are also British
subjects, and many of the Protestants and even some of the Catholics among them
want to remain Irish and British. I would not say that Eire is not a term with
which Northern Irish Protestants identify.
At one Irish festival some years ago, I displayed at my genealogy booth both the
modern Irish Republic's tricolor flag (which our Irish ancestors wouldn't
recognize) as well as the Union Jack (the flag of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland since 1801). I did this because the Union Jack is not only
the official flag of the people of Northern Ireland, but also the flag under
which all of our Irish ancestors lived in the period 1801-1921. However, due to
some disturbing protests at the festival, I decided to take down the Union Jack.
I hadn't intended to offend anyone; I had only intended to be historically
accurate and reflective of the present reality of Ireland.
I have often had someone come up to me at an Irish festival and say, "My
ancestors were from Ireland" and then in hushed tones add, "but they were
Protestant." I would urge people not to avoid learning about their Protestant
Irish heritage and genealogy. What's more, you may find you are descended from
some Catholics too. Conversions happened, in both directions.
Often, Americans also think that to be Irish has always meant to be anti-British
and a supporter of a united Ireland independent from Britain. Well, did you know
that the first recorded Saint Patrick's Day parade was held in colonial New York
City by Irish soldiers in the British Army? People of English descent have been
present in Ireland since the twelfth century. Has their presence been all good
or all bad? I think the answer is much more gray than black and white. It seems
to me that their legacy includes the building of many of the cities and towns of
Ireland, a centralized government, and the use of the English language (now an
international standard). However, their legacy includes the unjust Penal Laws
against Catholics especially in the 1700s and the wresting of lands away from
the old Gaelic leaders in the 1600s to put in the hands of Protestant "planters"
in Ulster, Cromwellian adventurers, and Protestant followers of King William.
But even the story of the Penal Laws themselves points out how much more
complicated the Irish situation was than it's generally made out to be. Many of
the Penal Laws were largely ignored, and many Irish Protestants helped their
Catholic friends and relations to circumvent them. Likewise, when there was
briefly a Catholic King in England Ireland, King James II in the 1680s, many
Irish Catholics helped their Protestant neighbors and relatives. One book I have
been reading which I highly recommend to explain some of the complexity of the
situation is Richard Chenevix Trench's Grace's Card: Irish Catholic Landlords
1690-1800 (Cork, Ireland: Mercier Press, 1997).
Does it matter how we view who is Irish and who is not? I think it does. The
exclusion of certain people from "Irishness" is partly at the root of the
political tensions and violence that have plagued Ireland in recent decades. It
would be naive in my opinion for us North Americans to think we understand the
complexity of the situation in Northern Ireland, but it seems a good start to
seek to understand and respect all of Ireland's people and traditions, whether
they are Protestant or Catholic, nationalist or unionist, Gaelic or Anglo-Irish
or Scots-Irish.
In my view "Irish" means simply "from the island of Ireland." And I would urge
all to respect the very complex history of Ireland and the many cultural
experiences and political viewpoints of the Irish people. Having a more
open-minded view of the varied and complex Irish experience might also help us
avoid overlooking important possibilities and unexpected clues in our family
history research.
Further Reading:
 | Beckett, J.C. The Anglo-Irish Tradition. Belfast: The
Blackstaff Press, 1976. |
 | Brown, Terence. Ireland: A Social and Cultural History
1922-79. Glasgow, Scotland: William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd., 1981. |
 | Lyons, F.S.L. Culture and Anarchy in Ireland 1890-1939.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1982. |
Reprinted with the permission of GlobalGenealogy.com Inc., 13 Charles Street, Suite 102, Milton, Ontario, Canada L9T 2G5 ph.

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