Lord
Palmerston served in that century under five Prime Ministers as Foreign
Secretary (Secretary at War, mainly!) and later as Prime Minister himself. Like most of the English Lords, he ‘owned’ large
estates in Ireland. He ruthlessly used the Great Hunger of the
mid-century to clear his estates of unwanted tenants. Indeed the Montreal Gazette anticipated the
coming disaster, writing,
‘we
are going to be inundated with an enormous crowd of poor and destitute
emigrants’.
The
medical superintendent at Gross Isle, Dr Douglas, requested great and immediate
funds to build a new hospital there but what he received was inadequate to the
task.
The
first ship of the ’47 season, the Syria, brought almost a hundred
passengers sick with fever. It also
carried the news that thousands more were on their way. Nine vessels carried Palmerston’s evicted
tenants. They were in such desperate
condition that he was forced to make a statement to Parliament: unsurprisingly, he blamed his land
agent!
Soon there were 40 ships at
anchor, awaiting processing at the quarantine station. Even the well aboard soon succumbed to
disease. Those who landed healthy often
contracted disease on land.
Those
who could walk and were allowed to leave were ferried to Quebec
and Montreal to
make way for another wave. They carried
disease with them as they made their way southwards through the towns of
British North America and even into the United States.
Dr
Douglas reported that at the beginning of the season there was room on the
island for two hundred persons. By early
November when the station closed for winter he was receiving over two thousand. He had inspected 442 vessels and taken 8,691
emigrants into the hospital alone, or sheds or tents. He reported a total of deaths there for that
season of 3,238.
Partridge
Rock, St John, New
Brunswick was the other main point of entry to Canada. Moses Perley, the Chief Immigration Officer
reported for the ’47 season. 106 vessels
had been processed; seven were out of Liverpool;
all the others were from Irish ports. A
total of 17,074 passengers arrived of whom 2,400 died.
The majority of survivors headed for America. The Colonial Commissioners in 1850 reported
that of 253,224 emigrants to Canada
and New Brunswick, more than 73,000 went at
once to the United States
and an overwhelming number eventually found their way there.