Geburtsorte der Männer der 23. Illinois-Infanterie. „Die irische Brigade“ Sie kämpfte im amerikanischen Bürgerkrieg von 1861 bis 1865. Ungefähr 200.000 irische Amerikaner dienten während des Krieges in der Unionsarmee.

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    Von Ok_Being_2003

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    22 Kommentare

    1. Witty_Dig786 on

      A beautiful country and a bad$$ people. Can it be argued that there is another country this size that has contributed so much to the world?

    2. MilBrocEire on

      What I find pretty fascinating is that 60% of Irish men of fighting age enlisted for the union, roughly 600,000 men total. Thats about 1 in 6 Irish people in America enlisting. And the 200,000 is just the first generation Irish who were born in Ireland. This made Irish people BY FAR the highest rate of service by ethnic background per capita.

      It’s also worth noting that for the confederate side, it was literally 10 times fewer, although there were also fewer Irish in the South, so if I’m being cynical, it was just a job to many of them, but still fascinating.

    3. Maleficent-Put1705 on

      Maybe the 23rd Illinois regiment had a nickname of ‚The Irish Brigade‘ (which seems odd as it was a regiment, not a brigade), but ‚The Irish Brigade‘ that most would think about when talking about the US civil war would be that formed by Thomas Meaghar (who was a pretty interesting charachter and introduced the modern Irish tricolour). That Brigade consisted of New York, Massachusetts and Pennsylvanian regiments and was famous for getting shred to bits at Fredericksburg. I also imagine that it would have a much higher number of Irish born recruits, being raised in New York, Boston and Philidelphia on the east coast of the US than a regiment raised in Illinois.

    4. Downtown_Expert572 on

      In 1863 they legislated for a Draft to keep up with the manpower needs of the army. They also allowed substitution so a rich man could pay a poor man to serve instead of him.

    5. SeriesDowntown5947 on

      I think that there were conscripted off the boat. No option. Press ganged. Must have been somthing coming from a village farm in north ferry to the killing fields of the civil war. Many never made it but a short while. Hopefully many made it through also. I guess some of my family could have been there given the numbers from kerry limerick.

    6. SeriesDowntown5947 on

      Fair point. Most irish arrived in new york or canada i think. Some i guess found there way into the confederate. I dont think a kerryman would have had a strong option of eather side to be honest

    7. Straight-Jump-6813 on

      It’s a pity they didn’t have social media in those days, the lads could have stayed at home and just posted stories about the conflict.

    8. I have read quite a bit on this area. Those who fought in that war, essentially passed the confidence/baton/funds for the 1916 rising and war of independence. I genuinely think our efforts to get rid of the brits mightnt have happened. Quite a lot of these Irish in the US were running from the british or devastating effects from brits. Meagher was a revolutionary in the young irelanders, sent to australia, escaped to US, rallied the irish together there and became a hero of the civil war (all while drunk). It was their success, that rallied the irish to come back and make links with home. He also made the Irish flag I believe. It’s not to be shrugged off as another US claim to being Irish. Disclaimer I’m from ireland, and not from the US. I couldn’t find a person who part of the young irelanders, and 1916, but the baton was passed in the US for sure.

    9. Inevitable-Story6521 on

      It’d be much more interesting if it was broken down by parish or diocese. Of course cork and Galway would be dark green. They’re the size of three or four smaller counties.

      The smaller breakdown would give an idea of what actual communities they came from.

    10. Imaginary-Candy7216 on

      John O’Neill (Fenian) 9 March 1834 – 8 January 1878) was an [Irish](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ireland)-born officer in the [American Civil War](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Civil_War) and member of the [Fenian Brotherhood](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fenian_Brotherhood). O’Neill is best known for his activities leading the [Fenian raids](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fenian_raids) on Canada in 1866 and 1871.[^([1])](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_O%27Neill_(Fenian)#cite_note-1)Founder of the City of O’Neill [https://cityofoneillnebraska.com/](https://cityofoneillnebraska.com/)

      https://preview.redd.it/n3kgf8uv1rbg1.jpeg?width=276&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=c732b8d9621abe87c7e70df18dbc7b8707cfe538

    11. Jacques-de-lad on

      135 men with my surname were in both armies (more in the union than the confederacy thankfully) one particularly interesting chap was a sniper in the 13th Georgian rifles

    12. „Not for honour nor for country

      We kill for 3 square meals a day

      Of the boat with back on shoulder

      Gun in hand we’re here to stay“

      Clear the way- John Doyle

    13. the_sneaky_one123 on

      It’s really fucked up when you consider that these were mostly poor immigrants, many of whom didn’t even speak English.

      They really did use the most vulnerable people to fight their wars.

    14. You can see the West is heavily represented, probably because the Famine was worse so more people emigrated from there.

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