The Irish in Canada Podcast artwork

The Irish in Canada Podcast

39 episodes - English - Latest episode: 3 months ago -

Exploring the histories and legacies of Irish immigrants and their Canadian descendants.

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Episodes

Episode 8 - Parting Shots

April 25, 2024 06:00 - 10 minutes - 7.4 MB

Over the last three seasons, we've explored just how much Irish immigrants and their descendants have shaped Canada over the past 250 years, in so many ways.  In this concluding episode to the podcast, Jane looks back at some of her favourite moments from the show, wonders why certain bloodthirsty tales are eternally popular, takes a stand on cancel culture, and gives James FitzGibbon one last shout-out.

Episode 7 - Controversial Women, Part 3: Emily Murphy

April 18, 2024 06:00 - 30 minutes - 20.8 MB

Ah, Emily Murphy... where do we begin?!  Maybe with the salient fact that this first female magistrate in the British Empire and driving force behind the Persons' Case of 1929 was also the grand-daughter of Ogle Gowan, the founder and Grand Master of the Orange Order in Canada.  In terms of having an Irish pedigree, she definitely had one, though how many of her fans knew that her great-grandfather was the leader of Co. Wexford's notorious Black Mob after the 1798 Irish Rising?  Emily Gowan ...

Episode 6 - Controversial Women, Part 2: Nellie McClung

April 11, 2024 06:00 - 25 minutes - 17.9 MB

Nellie McClung was a provocative woman, stirring up controversies and column inches in her own lifetime and in all the years since she died.  Arguably Canada’s most famous first-wave feminist, her efforts guaranteed that Manitoba’s women won the provincial vote in 1916, a first in Canada.  She was also one of The Famous Five, the group of activists who won the right for Canadian women to be considered as legal ‘persons’ under the law.  On the other hand, Nellie is also the first woman we’ve ...

Episode 5 - Controversial Women, Part 1: Katherine Hughes

April 04, 2024 06:00 - 27 minutes - 18.9 MB

Considering everything she did in her life – as a teacher, an author, a political activist, an archivist, private secretary to the premier of Alberta, and a journalist – we should be much more familiar with the name of Katherine Hughes.  Most people, however, are unaware of everything she achieved and helped to create in the first decades of the twentieth century, in part because of some of the controversies surrounding her, the most notable of which was her strident and vocal support for Ir...

Episode 4 - The Dulmages: Tracing an Irish Family

March 28, 2024 06:00 - 29 minutes - 20.5 MB

So far, we’ve talked about famous and infamous people in Irish Canadian history.  But, what about those who weren’t so extraordinary?  What was it like to be one of them?  Today, we’re following one Irish family from Co. Limerick to Canada as they lived through times of war, eviction, violence, and change.  Join us as we explore the history of the Dulmage family, Irish immigrants and their Canadian descendants who aren't necessarily in the history books, but whose experiences were full of dr...

Episode 3 - Sir Guy Carleton and The Quebec Act

March 21, 2024 06:00 - 25 minutes - 17.5 MB

Who was the most important Irish person in Canadian history?  Or perhaps the most frustrating?  In today’s episode, Jane makes a case for Sir Guy Carleton as a serious contender for both titles.  Born to an Ulster Protestant military family, Carleton was perhaps an unlikely defender of Catholicism and French-Canadian civil rights, but his unyielding support for the Quebec Act of 1774 laid a blueprint for modern Canadian identity that still can be felt 250 years later.  And just wait until yo...

Episode 2 - 1847: The Doctor and the Priest

March 14, 2024 06:00 - 25 minutes - 17.3 MB

In the summer of 1847, over 100,000 refugees from the Great Irish Famine poured into Canada, making their way up the St Lawrence River to Grosse Île, Québec, Montréal, and Toronto.  Others arrived at Partridge Island, the quarantine station just outside the harbour of Saint John, New Brunswick.  This is the story of two Irish Canadians — one in Toronto, and the other in Saint John — who tried to help as best they could, with tragic results.

Episode 1 - Benjamin Lett: "The Rob Roy of Upper Canada"

March 07, 2024 07:00 - 20 minutes - 14.1 MB

When the Brock Monument exploded at Queenston Heights on 17 April 1840, the colonial authorities quickly decided upon the identity of the guilty culprit: the notorious Irishman, Benjamin Lett.  A follower of William Lyon Mackenzie, Ben Lett unleashed a campaign of terror and violence in the years following the failed 1837 Upper Canadian Rebellion.  To some, he was a Robin Hood figure, “the Rob Roy of Upper Canada” who continually evaded capture; to others, he was a dangerous rebel who needed...

Episode 6 - The Body of Mary Boyd

April 06, 2023 05:00 - 23 minutes - 16.2 MB

To end our second season, Jane is revealing some of her exclusive research from the Gender, Migration & Madness Project: the mystery surrounding the death of Mary Boyd.  Mary was an Irish Quebecer who found work as a young maid in a Toronto doctor’s household in 1868.  But the circumstances surrounding her suicide only a few months later caused a major scandal in the city about sex, virginity, pregnancy, medical experimentation, mental illness, and the immense power men had over women’s bodi...

The Body of Mary Boyd

April 06, 2023 05:00 - 23 minutes - 16.2 MB

To end our second season, Jane is revealing some of her exclusive research from the Gender, Migration & Madness Project: the mystery surrounding the death of Mary Boyd.  Mary was an Irish Quebecer who found work as a young maid in a Toronto doctor’s household in 1868.  But the circumstances surrounding her suicide only a few months later caused a major scandal in the city about sex, virginity, pregnancy, medical experimentation, mental illness, and the immense power men had over women’s bodi...

Episode 5 - The Execution of Thomas Scott

March 30, 2023 05:00 - 18 minutes - 12.9 MB

Few people in Canadian history have created more division than Louis Riel.  At the time of his death in 1885, he had been found guilty of high treason, but even the jury who condemned him agreed that something else in Riel’s past was why he was killed: the execution of Thomas Scott.  Who was Thomas Scott?  Why was he executed in Winnipeg during the Red River Resistance, and why did Riel feel fifteen years later that he was going to be hanged because of an Irishman?   NB – This episode cont...

Episode 4 - The Battle of the Windmill

March 23, 2023 05:00 - 18 minutes - 13 MB

Wild hogs eating corpses on a battlefield, women shot in the face, Irish soldiers strung up by their heels and mutilated, hangings, deportations, and ghosts… Does this sound like Canada to you?  Despite appearances of gentility in Upper Canada, the Battle of the Windmill was anything but – and for a Canadian battle, it was chock-full of Irishmen.  At the tiny hamlet of New Wexford in November 1838, all sorts of horrible things happened; this week, we’re talking all about it.

Episode 3 - Edmund Bailey O'Callaghan

March 16, 2023 05:00 - 19 minutes - 13.6 MB

The 1837 Lower Canadian Rebellion was as close as the Canadian colonies ever came to revolution.  Edmund Bailey O’Callaghan – doctor, politician, and notable newspaper editor in Montreal – was Louis-Joseph Papineau’s right-hand man in the tense years leading to the battles between les patriotes and the British Army.  As the editor of The Vindicator, O’Callaghan became the most powerful Irishman in Montreal, trying to create a Canadian republic through the power of his printing press.

Episode 2 - Irish Nellie

March 09, 2023 06:00 - 19 minutes - 13.1 MB

Ellen Cashman was born during the era of the Great Irish Famine in Co. Cork.  As a young woman, she left with her family for Boston and then the Wild West.  A businesswoman, prospector, philanthropist, and literal trailblazer, “Irish Nellie” was a notable female figure in an extremely masculine world.  Join us as we explore the exploits of this singular Irish woman who found fame (if not fortune) in British Columbia and the Canadian north as “The Angel of the Cassiar.”

Episode 1 - Captain Crozier

March 02, 2023 06:00 - 18 minutes - 12.5 MB

The Franklin Expedition looms large in Canadian myths and legends, in large part because of what happened to the doomed crews of the HMS Erebus and Terror… or what we think happened.  But at the heart of this story of the Canadian north is an Irishman from Co. Down who lived through the worst that the unforgiving winters had to offer, and then led the survivors as they abandoned the ships and wandered off into the ice.  But who was Francis Crozier, and what do we know about the man at the he...

Season 2 - Trailer

February 23, 2023 04:00 - 1 minute - 1.24 MB

We're back on March 2nd with The Irish in Canada Podcast, Season 2!

Episode 9 - The Ghost of Griffintown

November 24, 2022 04:00 - 11 minutes - 8.06 MB

Our final episode this season recounts the tale of Mary Gallagher, Montreal’s ‘Ghost of Griffintown,’ and the gory murder that has had her ghost searching for her lost head for the nearly 150 years.  Well known to Irish Montrealers but not to many who live outside of the city, the story of Mary Gallagher and Susan Kennedy Myers – the woman who allegedly murdered her – brings together themes of Irishness, alcoholism, sexism, violence, and the supernatural.  We’re also not necessarily convince...

Episode 8 - The Gender, Migration & Madness Project

November 17, 2022 04:00 - 11 minutes - 7.9 MB

The Gender, Migration & Madness Project (www.gendermigrationandmadness.ca) is our focus this week: a multi-year investigation Jane has been leading that explores how the Irish were treated in Canadian colonial lunatic asylums in the mid-nineteenth century.  Did negative stereotypes about the Irish affect the ways in which they were treated once they were institutionalised?  And what led to them being confined in asylums in the first place?

Episode 7 - The Shiners

November 10, 2022 04:00 - 16 minutes - 11.4 MB

In another country, the dark legends about The Shiners might never have been forgotten.  But in Canada?  How many people today are aware that one of the most dangerous cities in North America used to be…Ottawa?  Not many – and yet, it was.  The Shiners – violent, intimidating, criminal Irish lumberjacks living along the Ottawa River in the 1830s – fly in the face of every image of Canada as ‘the peaceable kingdom’.  That might be why they’ve been usually overlooked in Canadian history – unti...

Episode 6 - I Love a Man in Uniform

November 03, 2022 03:00 - 17 minutes - 11.8 MB

Jane gets a bit carried away this week, but we can see why.  James FitzGibbon was one of the best known Irishmen in pre-Famine Canada as a hero of the War of 1812, the defender of Toronto, and a one-man riot-squad brought in to stop sectarian violence.  He was beloved, trusted, and a friend to all Irish immigrants and the colonial establishment.  So, why has he now become one of the more forgotten characters from Canada’s past?

Episode 5 - The Gowans

October 27, 2022 03:00 - 18 minutes - 12.8 MB

Ogle Gowan was an Orangeman, a politician, a journalist, a rabble-rouser, and the illegitimate son of one of Co. Wexford’s most notorious anti-Catholics.  His use of violence to achieve political ends in Upper Canada made him a hero to some, and a villain to others – even members of his own family.  This episode explores Ogle Gowan’s life and career, and also investigates some very passionate love letters written by his wife…to his cousin. 

Episode 4 - Orange Beginnings

October 20, 2022 03:00 - 10 minutes - 7.56 MB

The Orange Order – an Irish Protestant fraternal association founded in the 1790s – was hugely popular in English-speaking Canada in the nineteenth century, although it’s mostly forgotten today.  How did Orangemen become so successful, both politically and culturally?  Why did they take root so firmly in parts of Upper Canada?  And what did this success in Canada have to do with the 1798 Irish Rising?

Episode 3 - The 1832 Cholera Epidemic

October 13, 2022 03:00 - 13 minutes - 9.12 MB

Epidemic, pandemic, quarantine – these are words we’re very used to now, in a way that we arguably haven’t been in nearly 200 years.  In 1832, Irish immigrants flooded into the Canadas, fleeing for their lives as cholera, a highly contagious and deadly disease, ravaged Europe, Britain, and Ireland.  They didn’t receive the warmest of welcomes.

Episode 2 - Grace Marks

October 06, 2022 03:00 - 17 minutes - 11.8 MB

In late July 1843, the colony of Upper Canada was stunned with the news of a bloody double-murder.  Thomas Kinnear had been shot and Nancy Montgomery – his housekeeper and pregnant mistress – had been strangled and dismembered.  The two people accused of the murders were Kinnear’s Irish servants: James McDermott and the teenager, Grace Marks.  Grace’s story has since become one of the most famous fictionalised episodes from nineteenth century Canada, but what was the real Grace like?

Episode 1 - Introductions

September 27, 2022 22:00 - 9 minutes - 6.42 MB

Jane offers a brief overview of who we are, what we hope to achieve with this podcast, and a few of her inspirations for the first season of the show.    

CAIS Keynote: Rhona Richman Kenneally – The Matter of Whose Lives? Performing Irishness on the Body

December 07, 2019 18:30 - 53 minutes - 123 MB

Rhona Richman Kenneally is a Professor and former Chair in the Department of Design and Computation Arts, and a co-founder and Fellow of the School of Irish Studies at Concordia University. Her work crosses the domains of design justice, critical materiality, food studies, and the architecture and design of the built environment. Recent publications explore food-related activities, especially in the home, in mid-twentieth-century Ireland, and a new research thread investigates textiles and c...

CAIS 2019: A Reading by Author Kevin Barry

August 20, 2019 16:41 - 54 minutes - 74.4 MB

Kevin Barry is an award-winning Irish writer. His novel City of Bohane was the winner of the 2013 International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. His 2015 novel Beatlebone won the Goldsmiths Prize, and is one of seven books by Irish authors nominated for the 2017 International Dublin Literary Award. At the Canadian Association for Irish Studies 2019 conference, Kevin read from three of his works – including an extract from his latest book Night Boat to Tangier, available September 2019.

CAIS 2019 Keynote: Dr. Joanna Bourke A ‘Diabolical Crime’: Sexual Violence in Ireland, 1830s to 1914

August 01, 2019 14:04 - 54 minutes - 74.9 MB

Sexual violence is an essentially contested concept. Exploring the competing meanings of violence presents formidable challenges, which increases in difficulty when we wander back in time. What do we find when we explore the different meanings attached to sexual violence in 19th and early 20th century Irish history? How did conceptions of such forms of violence change? About Joanna Bourke: Joanna Bourke is a professor of History at Birkbeck College, University of London, and a fellow of ...

Episode 4: Eimear McBride at Concordia’s Writers Read Series plus in conversation with Susan Cahill

May 20, 2019 17:29 - 1 hour - 99.3 MB

Eimear McBride grew up in the west of Ireland and trained at Drama Centre London. Her first novel A Girl is a Half-formed Thing took nine years to find a publisher and subsequently received a number of awards, including the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction, Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year, and the Goldsmiths Prize. Her second novel The Lesser Bohemians won the 2017 James Tait Black Memorial Prize, and was shortlisted for the Goldsmiths Prize and the International Dublin Literary Award. I...

Episode 3: Cliona O'Gallchoir - 'Living Along the Line': Women's Writing in 18th Century Ireland

October 31, 2018 23:33 - 52 minutes - 47.7 MB

Clíona Ó Gallchoir is a Lecturer at the University College Cork. Her research interests include Irish women's writing, Irish and British eighteenth and nineteenth-century writing, the figure of the child in eighteenth-century Ireland, the novel in Ireland, and children's literature. Most recently, she has co-edited with Heather Ingman, A History of Modern Irish Women's Literature (Cambridge University Press, 2018). Dr Ó Gallchoir is an expert on the work of Maria Edgeworth, who is the subject...

Podcast 2: Margaret Kelleher - Commemorating the Irish Famine: Sites and Dynamics of Memory

October 17, 2018 02:41 - 1 hour - 58.8 MB

Margaret Kelleher is Professor and Chair of Anglo-Irish Literature and Drama at University College Dublin. Her books include The Feminization of Famine (published by Duke UP and Cork UP, 1997), The Cambridge History of Irish Literature (2006), co-edited with Philip O'Leary, and Ireland and Quebec: Interdisciplinary Essays on History, Culture and Society (Four Courts Press, 2016), co-edited with Michael Kenneally. She has recently completed a monograph entitled Language, Life and Death: Myles ...

Season 2: Podcast 1 - Cahal McLaughlin on The Prisons Memory Archive

October 04, 2018 01:06 - 38 minutes - 35.3 MB

Cahal McLaughlin visits the School of Irish Studies at Concordia University in Montreal and gives a guest lecture on 'The Prisons Memory Archive' More information available: http://prisonsmemoryarchive.com/ http://www.concordia.ca/artsci/irish-studies.html

Podcast 7: 12th Annual St. Patrick’s Society Lecture by Ambassador Jim Kelly

December 21, 2017 16:36 - 58 minutes - 53.1 MB

Jim Kelly became Ambassador of Ireland to Canada in August 2016. This is Ambassador Kelly's fourth posting as an Irish diplomat. He previously served as Deputy Permanent Representative at Ireland's Mission to the United Nations in New York (2008-13), and also served at Ireland's Permanent Representation to the European Union in Brussels (2001-05) and at the Embassy in Copenhagen, Denmark (1995-98). Most recently, Ambassador Kelly established and directed the new Policy Planning function at th...

Podcast 6: Dr. Maureen Murphy, 2017 Peter O’Brien Visiting Scholar, School of Irish Studies

December 19, 2017 00:56 - 1 hour - 64.6 MB

Dr. Maureen Murphy, co-director of the undergraduate Irish Studies minor at Hofstra University in Long Island, N.Y., is the current Peter O’Brien Visiting Scholar at the School of Irish Studies. Murphy was the Director of the Great Irish Famine Curriculum Project for the New York State Department of Education. The Great Irish Famine Curriculum (2001) won the Project Excellence Award from the National Council of the Social Studies in 2002. She has served as Vice-President of the New York State...

Podcast 5: Dr. Irene Whelan

December 04, 2017 00:00 - 57 minutes - 52.3 MB

Dr. Irene Whelan has taught at Manhattanville College since 1990. A native of County Galway on Ireland’s west coast, she was educated at the National University of Ireland - Galway and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where she studied with James S. Donnelly Jr., a leading historian of modern Ireland. Her dissertation on the evangelical movement in Ireland was published as The Bible War in Ireland: The ‘Second Reformation’ and the Polarization of Protestant-Catholic Relations, 1780-1840 i...

Podcast 4: Reading by Peter Behrens, Richler Writer-in-Residence, Concordia University

December 01, 2017 21:42 - 54 minutes - 49.6 MB

Peter Behren’s first novel The Law of Dreams won the Governor-General's Award, Canada's most prestigious book prize, and has been published in nine languages. The New York Times Book Review called his second novel, The O'Briens, "a major achievement." Carry Me, his third novel was published in February 2016. He is the author of two collections of short stories, Night Driving and Travelling Light. His stories and essays have appeared in The Atlantic, The New York Times, and many anthologies. A...

Podcast 3: Dr. Brad Kent

December 01, 2017 03:12 - 58 minutes - 53.4 MB

Brad Kent is Professor of British and Irish Literatures at Université Laval in Quebec City. In 2013-14 he was Visiting Professor at Trinity College Dublin in the School of English, and in the spring of 2018 he will be the C.P. Snow Fellow at the University of Texas at Austin’s Harry Ransom Center, where he was the Hobby Fellow in the spring of 2009. His recent publications include George Bernard Shaw in Context (Cambridge University Press, 2015) and The Selected Essays of Sean O'Faolain (McG...

Podcast 2: Marina Carr in Conversation with Emer O'Toole

November 22, 2017 04:22 - 1 hour - 58 MB

Marina Carr’s works consist of 13 plays including two for children, between 1989 and 2007. In 2015, the Opera Theatre Company toured Ireland with Carr’s contemporary translation of Rigoletto. In November 2016, she wrote an original oratorio for Wicklow County Council, bringing together choirs, solo singers, and the RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra. Her reimagining of Hecuba was produced by the Royal Shakespeare Company in September 2015, and her reimagining of Anna Karenina played for two m...

Podcast 1: Dr. Kevin Whelan

October 11, 2017 19:57 - 1 hour - 71.9 MB

Welcome to the very first edition of the Concordia Irish Studies Podcast! Kevin Whelan, Director of the Keough-Naughton Notre Dame Centre in Dublin, has been a visiting professor at New York University, Boston College and Concordia University. He is a prolific writer and editor of books and articles on Ireland’s history, geography and culture, including the bestselling Atlas of the Irish Rural Landscape. For many years, Kevin Whelan directed Notre Dame's annual Irish Seminar, the leading sem...