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Irish immigrants
often entered the workforce at the bottom of the occupational
ladder and took on the menial and dangerous jobs that were often
avoided by other workers. Many Irish women became servants or
domestic workers, while many Irish men labored in coal mines
and built railroads and canals. Railroad construction was so
dangerous that it was said, "[there was] an Irishman buried
under every tie."
As Irish
immigrants moved inland from eastern cities, they found themselves
in heated competition for jobs. The audio recording, Immigrant
Laborers in the Early 20th Century, describes how West Virginia
coal operators fired union laborers and gave the jobs to Irish,
Italian and African-American workers because, [the] coal
company owned them. This competition heightened class
tensions and, at the turn of the century, Irish Americans were
often antagonized by organizations such as the American Protective
Association (APA) and the Ku Klux Klan.
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Over
time, many Irish climbed occupational and social ladders
through politically appointed positions such as policeman,
fireman, and teacher. Second and third generation Irish
were better educated, wealthier, and more successful than
were their parents and grandparents, as illustrated by
the Kennedy family. The first Kennedy who arrived in the
United States in 1848 was a laborer. His son had modest
success in this country, but his grandson, college educated
Joseph P. Kennedy, made the fortune that enabled the great
grandsons (one of whom became President John F. Kennedy)
to achieve great political success.
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