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  • 2018-09-22 (xsd:date)
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  • Does This Photograph Show Irish Slaves in the United States? (en)
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  • A photograph of men claustrophobically crammed into a mining lift has been shared and re-shared online with several contradictory and likely false descriptions, many of which are shaped by a political narrative. One instance of such is a Facebook post which presents the photograph with the assertion that it is a picture of Irish slaves in America, adding the racially charged retort All Lives Matter at the end: The concept of Irish slavery in America, as we discussed in a 2016 article, is a notion that conflates the indentured servitude and/or inhumane working conditions experienced by many Irish immigrants in the 1800s with the race-based, hereditary system of chattel slavery in early America, often with the effect of minimizing the plight of African slaves and their descendants. Regardless, this photograph was likely not taken in the United States. Speaking to claims that the photograph could be of miners in West Virginia, Appalachian Magazine expressed skepticism that the picture had its origins in America: One key example of something's not feeling right was the existence of what appeared to be clogs or sabot, wooden shoes common to working-class individuals and peasants in France and the surrounding Low Countries during the Industrial Revolution, on the feet of the women operating the lift as well as potentially some of the workers. This observation lends credence to the internet’s most popular theory on the backstory of the image, that it is a photograph of Italian workers in a Belgian mine around the turn of the 20th century century. Italian immigrants made up a large share of the workforce in Belgium's Wallonia mining region at that time, in part because of an arrangement between the governments of Italy and Belgium that developed in the early 1920s: While the exact date and circumstances of the photograph remain in dispute, the picture is not of Irish slaves in the United States because, from a factual standpoint, that form of slavery did not exist in America and because, from a contextual standpoint, the photograph does not appear to have been taken in the United States. (en)
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