In this book, Michael A. Gordon examines the causes and
consequences of the tragic and bloody "Orange Riots" that rocked
New York City in 1870 and 1871. On July 12 of both years, groups of
Irish Catholics clashed with Irish Protestants marching to
commemorate the victory of 1690 at the Battle of the Boyne that
confirmed the Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland. The violence of
1870 left eight people dead; the following year, more than sixty
died.
Reconstructing the events of July 12 in those years, Gordon
provides a riveting and richly detailed account of the riots. He
maintains that they stemmed from more than religious hatred or
generations of oppression in Ireland. Rather, both years bear
witness to a struggle between two profoundly different visions of
the promise of America: a re-creation of European social classes or
a form of life liberated from the constraints and stratifications
of the Old World. These visions were enmeshed n the turbulent
ideological and political confrontations arising from
industrialization and newly found immigrant power under New York
City's notorious mayor, William Marcy "Boss" Tweed. Gordon
concludes by showing how the riots sparked a reform movement that
toppled Tweed from power and led to the restructuring of city
politics in the 1870s.
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