On Jan. 10, 1734, a sloop limped into Savannah in the new colony of Georgia. Sloops are small ships, and this one was bringing indentured servants from Ireland to New England. The ship had been battered in storms. Food ran out. When the ship landed, only 40 servants — 34 men and six women — were alive.
In a letter to the colony’s trustees, James Oglethorpe, the colony’s founder, told about the Irish survivors:
As they were likewise ready to perish through misery, I thought it an act of charity to buy them, which I did, giving five pounds a head.
Oglethorpe was not writing social history. He was explaining expenses to his board.
Accounting for the 40, Oglethorpe said that he gave one to each of the widows in the colony to do farm work. Others went to build a sawmill. Some contracts were sold at sweet rates to magistrates who were so busy with public service they were behind in improving their own lands.
In 1734, slavery was illegal in Georgia. Labor was in short supply. Neighboring South Carolina was the wealthiest of the North American colonies — its wealth built of the exploitation of enslaved Africans. From the beginning, wealthy people in Georgia lobbied to make slavery legal in Georgia.
The indentured servants were not the first Irish to arrive in Georgia. A few were among the original settlers who claimed land in 1732. But most Irish immigrants came as laborers. When Boston and New York took steps to limit Irish immigration, Savannah remained an open door.
The history books say later generations of Irish laborers helped build the canals around Augusta and the railroads that made Atlanta a city.
But I’m new here and still learning this place.
Happy St. Patrick’s Day.