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Posted By Spadecaller 1 year, 1 month ago in Arts & Entertainment

A Spadecaller video about the potato famine of 1845 to 1851, which killed over a million men, women, and children in Ireland and caused another million to flee the country. This Irish ballad sung by Paddy Reilly is a fictional story about a man from Athenry sentenced for transportation to Australia for stealing food for his starving family. This video features the paintings of Ivan Aivazovsky, William Bougereau, Antonio Mancini, Pierre - Auguste Renoir, and John William Waterhouse.

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    Spadecaller1 year, 1 month ago

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    Lyrics:

    By a lonely prison wall
    I heard a young girl calling
    Micheal they are taking you away
    For you stole Trevelyn's corn
    So the young might see the morn.
    Now a prison ship lies waiting in the bay.

    Low lie the Fields of Athenry
    Where once we watched the small free birds fly.
    Our love was on the wing we had dreams and songs to sing
    It's so lonely 'round the Fields of Athenry.

    By a lonely prison wall
    I heard a young man calling
    Nothing matter Mary when your free,
    Against the Famine and the Crown
    I rebelled they ran me down
    Now you must raise our child with dignity.

    Low lie the Fields of Athenry
    Where once we watched the small free birds fly.
    Our love was on the wing we had dreams and songs to sing
    It's so lonely 'round the Fields of Athenry.

    By a lonely harbor wall
    She watched the last star falling
    As that prison ship sailed out against the sky
    Sure she'll wait and hope and pray
    For her love in Botany Bay
    It's so lonely 'round the Fields of Athenry.

    Low lie the Fields of Athenry
    Where once we watched the small free birds fly.
    Our love was on the wing we had dreams and songs to sing
    It's so lonely 'round the Fields of Athenry.

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      Spadecaller1 year, 1 month ago

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      My son came home from school the other day and he was shocked that some of his schoolmates who happened to be Irish knew nothing at all about the Potato Famine of 1845 to 1851.

      His teacher talked about the hardships and suffering that occurred; that people were found dead along the roadside with grass in their mouths. He then played this song for them. My son gave me the name of this song and at his request, I made this video. Hope you enjoy...

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        not2needy1 year, 1 month ago

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        I know you are so proud of your son SC, and i bet he's proud of you as well!
        That was a great video. The song brought me to tears! Thanks.

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          bruhaha1 year, 1 month ago

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          My wife and I saw the National Famine Monument when we were in Ireland it 2006. Very moving.

          Thanks for the great posts.

          http://ireland2000seven.com/nationalmonument.html

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            Spadecaller1 year, 1 month ago

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            bruhaha

            I saw photos of the monument while I was putting this together.

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        uncle-dave1 year, 1 month ago

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        I went to Catholic grade school and never heard anything about the Irish potato famine, and it was the same in the public high school that I went to. A few years ago I saw a docu-drama on PBS about the Irish potato famine and it was only then that I really knew the facts about this tragic event. It has been estimated that between 1 and 1.5 million people died as a result of the “great hunger”. And another 250,000 emigrated to the New World.

        A lot of the deaths could have been averted simply by stopping the grain exports to England, buy the merchants didn’t want to see their business suffer although hundreds of thousands of people were starving.

        Excellent work SC.

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          Ciera-Marie1 year, 1 month ago

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          Well I guess my Catholic grade and high school were more liberal (Lots of Irish , Italian, Polish, German Catholics in Milwaukee) than yours because I did learn about in both places.

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            chevydog1 year, 1 month ago

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            C-M : We had pretty much the same mix in central PA, plus assorted east European types. And taught by Slovak nuns. I had thought that the Irish famine rated on the scale of world history. My Irish component forbears had the good fortune to come to the US before the famine (1823 and 1839).

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          Spadecaller1 year, 1 month ago

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          uncle-dave

          Kind of like NAFTA.

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            greenmac1 year, 1 month ago

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            Thanks Spade. The potato famine is part of our history in this part of Canada. This is a bit of the history of the event.

            FTA
            " During the first part of the 1800's, Ireland was supporting its people very largely by its potato crop. It happened that for several seasons these crops were poor and this led to what was known as "The Potato Famine." With their chief means of sustenance removed, many of the people became paupers. To help ease the situation, thousands of these unfortunates were shipped to North America. They were half-starved and in a debilitated state, and the vast majority came in vessels that were poorly provisioned and dreadfully overcrowded. Some owners and masters took the opportunity to make money and added an extra deck in their vessels, allowing them to nearly double the number of passengers they could carry. This practice was fairly widespread and in Saint John alone, thirteen shipmasters were convicted of overcrowding and illfeeding their passengers."

            SEE LINK

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              greenmac1 year, 1 month ago

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              LINK

              new-brunswick.net/Saint_John/partridge/index.html

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              Bkumm1 year, 1 month ago

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              This was an atrocity against the Irish that lasted for nearly a thousand years. Bad, bad stuff. The Great Potato Famine was merely a part of the systematic persecution of the Irish religion (both pagan and Irish Catholic), people and culture.
              Thanks for posting this Spade.

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                Endoscopy1 year, 1 month ago

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                Typical. Take a disease that killed potatoes and turn it into a thousand year systematic persecution. What garbage. While the English did bad things at that time there were also English who tried to help the starving people. It depended on where the people lived how they were treated.

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                  bruhaha1 year, 1 month ago

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                  You know.........

                  Never mind, just go away.

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                    Spadecaller1 year, 1 month ago

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                    The potato famine was caused by a fungus. The death and starvation was cuased by the failure of the English government to place people before their greed and lust for power, which had caused exploitation and wanton neglect of the Irish among other cultures for nearly a thousand years.

                    In the years after the famine, scientists discovered that the blight was, in fact, caused by a fungus, and they managed to isolate it. They named it Phytophthora Infestans. However it was not until 1882, almost 40 years after the famine, that scientists discovered a cure for Phytophthora Infestans: a solution of copper sulphate sprayed before the fungus had gained root.

                    Scientists discovered a cure for this fungus, but no one has yet to discover a cure for Endoscopy's toxic hatred.

                    Bkumm didn' condemn every English person. But a deranged and mentally distorted hateful character like Endoscopy could not possibly see past her blindness.

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                      Bkumm1 year, 1 month ago

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                      You're right that there were English that tried to help. It doesn't change the fact that the English crown systematically treated the Irish as second class citizens for nearly a thousand years.

                      Lest we forget...

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                        bruhaha1 year, 1 month ago

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                        I suppose the fact that England was exporting food out of Ireland during the famine is ok with you.

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                      Ciera-Marie1 year, 1 month ago

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                      Thanks SC for submitting this.

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                        CHAM1 year, 1 month ago

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                        Spadecaller. Beautiful. And it reminded me of the score of the movie "Veronica Guerin", one of the very best ever. I believe the melody was a composition of parts of several Celtic songs sung by Brian O'Donnell and Sinead O' Connor.

                        Sometimes when I go to bed i place the score on and listen to it with that haunting melody, especially where some of the "Fields of Athenry" are woven in.

                        By the Way. Veronica Guerin is a true story. A more courageous woman is hard to imagine. She toppled the drug cartel that was destroying Ireland's youth. And was murdered for her efforts.

                        It is a must see for those who may have missed it.

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                          chevydog1 year, 1 month ago

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                          Really nice song spade, with the usual good visuals. I guess many of us have a portion of Irish in us. It's hard to have a much more streotypical Irish name than my 3g-grandmother Catherine Kennedy.

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                            quackpot1 year, 1 month ago

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                            Certainly a part of my history. Thanks for the beautiful piece, spade.

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