Full bibliography

Riots in New Brunswick: Orange Nativism and Social Violence in the 1840s

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Riots in New Brunswick: Orange Nativism and Social Violence in the 1840s
Abstract
During the mid to late 1840s, dramatic riots shook the communities of Woodstock, Fredericton, and Saint John. Irish-Catholic immigrants fought Protestant Orangemen, with fists, club, and firearms. The violence resulted in death and destruction unprecedented in the British North American colonies. This book is the first serious historical treatment of the bloody riots and the tangled events that led to them. Scott See shows mid-century New Brunswick roughly awakened from the slumbering provincialism of its post-Loyalist phase by the stirrings of capitalism and by the tidal wave of Irish immigration that followed the potato famine. His main focus is the Loyal Orange Order, the anti-Catholic organization that clashed with the immigrants, many of them impoverished exiles. See presents an extraordinary profile of the Orange Order and concludes provocatively that it was a nativist organization similar to the xenophobic groups active at the time in the United States. Unlike other recent works on the Order, his book emphasizes the importance of the organization's specifically North American concerns, and questions the significance of its connections to Old World sectarianism. --Publisher's description
Series
Social history of Canada
Place
Toronto
Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Date
1993
# of Pages
x, 266 pages: map
Language
English
ISBN
978-0-8020-2944-7
Short Title
Riots in New Brunswick
Accessed
11/7/24, 12:02 AM
Extra
Book available at Internet Archive for readers with print disabilities: https://archive.org/details/riotsinnewbrunsw0000sees/mode/2up OCLC: 28499778
Citation
See, S. W. (1993). Riots in New Brunswick: Orange Nativism and Social Violence in the 1840s. University of Toronto Press. https://utorontopress.com/9781487580162/riots-in-new-brunswick/