Lawrence Public Library

To the land of the free from this island of slaves, Henry Stratford Persse's letters from Galway to America, 1821-1832, edited by James L. Pethica and James C. Roy

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Content
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Is part of
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Label
To the land of the free from this island of slaves, Henry Stratford Persse's letters from Galway to America, 1821-1832, edited by James L. Pethica and James C. Roy
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 167-183) and index
resource.biographical
autobiography
Index
index present
Literary form
non fiction
Main title
To the land of the free from this island of slaves
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
39375641
Responsibility statement
edited by James L. Pethica and James C. Roy
Review
"The letters of Henry Stratford Persse, whose great-niece Augusta was to achieve literary celebrity as Lady Gregory of Coole Park, provide a striking account of Galway life, Irish misgovernment and American democracy by a lively and unconventional observer. Persse was a customs official and distiller in the town of Galway, with three sons who had emigrated to Boston and thence to New York in 1821. In a series of letters to his 'darling boys', Persse expressed his prescient distrust of the potato as a staple food, abhorrence of the sectarianism of many fellow-Protestants, dissatisfaction with economic exploitation in Ireland under the Union and admiration for liberty as practised in America. The editors skilfully reconstruct Persse's milieu in Galway, and also the dynamic development of New York and the Erie Canal in the era of Governor DeWitt Clinton, with whom Persse corresponded."--Jacket
Series statement
Irish narratives
Sub title
Henry Stratford Persse's letters from Galway to America, 1821-1832
resource.variantTitle
Henry Stratford Persse's letters from Galway to America

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