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Cornish Emigrants and America

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2011

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Extract

Among the immigrant groups which made a considerable contribution to the development of the United States and of the American way of life the Cornish people must be reckoned. Older accounts of the mining, camps of the Pacific Coast actually enumerate the “Cornish nationality” among the races that thronged to the gold and silver diggings. Yet, throughout the nineteenth century, British, census returns reveal that there were rarely more than a third of a million Cornish folk in the “old country”, and after 1861 their numbers declined. Yet this people impressed themselves upon the American scene, even on some of its most superficial observers, and this for a variety of reasons, apart from the local provincialisms created by geographic remoteness and physical difficulties of communication in the homeland until well into the “railway age”.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Association for American Studies 1959

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References

page 7 note 1 West Briton. 9 September, 1894 and 26 August, 1896.

page 8 note 1 West Briton, 11 December, 1873 (quoting Weekly Central City Register, 12 November, 1873) and West Briton, 21 August, 1890.

page 9 note 1 Notably Samuel James of St. Keverne (West Briton, 3 August, 1860 and 20 April, 1866).

page 9 note 2 Cornish Telegraph, 4 September, 1884. West Briton, 23 October, 1884 and 10 April, 1890.

page 10 note 1 West Briton, 6 February, 1863.

page 10 note 2 Notably in the Camborne district in 1893 (West Briton, 7 August, 1893).