| ON May 28, 1863 the News
Letter reported the emigration of a large number of cotton
weavers from Lisburn on the Old Hickory for the United States.
The newspaper said 253 emigrants including women and children
had assembled at Lisburn station at 11.30 in the morning. They
were accompanied by an "immense number of friends and
neighbours, and by many inhabitants of the town who desired to
take a last farewell of the honest and industrious people that
were going out from amongst them to seek their fortunes in a
foreign land."
The News Letter said the "leave taking was very affecting."
The emigrants were accompanied by members of the Lisburn
committee which had been involved in efforts to prevent the
unemployed hand loom weavers from starving.
"Hands were warmly pressed. old friends were caught in
hurried parting embraces, and many a tear started unbidden to
the eye of those who were present. The train left the station
at half past eleven o'clock and shortly before noon arrived in
Belfast, where a large number of carts and lorries, kindly
sent by Mr J Richardson, were waiting to convey the emigrants
and their luggage from the railway to the quay."
The procession passed through the centre of the town
presenting a depressing spectacle to onlookers.
"The carts were laden with the boxes and trunks that
contained almost all that hard times had left the weavers.
Upon theme was placed the bedding they still possessed and
higher still were their wives and little ones, for whose sake,
it may easily be supposed, much more than their own, they were
leaving behind theme their mother country - a mother that had
denied them even a bare supply of food - and were going to
seek employment in a far distant land." '
The News Letter reporter was clearly moved by the sad
spectacle and, in particular, by the children as they clutched
their band boxes containing their valuable treasure which they
were anxious not to leave behind.
"Some of the little ones were too young to know how-great a
change they were making, and looked, with wonder painted on
their faces, 'at the large warerooms and shops that lined the
streets through which they passed, "he wrote.
The emigrants exuded a confidence_ that "the future could
not be much worse than. the past, and might be a great deal
better when the persevering and industrious men who walked by
their side, their fathers, husbands and_ brothers, would go
along with them.
A crowd of between 3,000 and 4,000 had gathered on the
quays to watch the emigrants sail away on the Old Hickory
which had brought a cargo of flour, a gift from the people of
Philadelphia, to the distressed in Ulster. As the vessel
pulled away from the quay there were hearty cheers from
bystanders, "and many a prayer was audibly uttered for a
prosperous voyage and a happy future."
The News Letter reporter added; "The emigrants responded
with all the warmth of Irish hearts to the farewell from those
on shore. It is seldom that a scene so impressive has been
witnessed in this town as that at the departure of Old
Hickory."
The America to which the Lisburn weavers were headed was in
the throes of a bloody civil war which in May' of 1863 showed
little sign of resolution.
The Old Hickory would have to run the risk of interception
by Confederate warships which frequently crossed the Atlantic
into British waters. Earlier in the year - in February -- the
News Letter had carried a report concerning a meeting in
Southampton between the Federal sloop Tuscarora and the
Confederate steamer Nashville.
The incident had prompted the Times to declare that "these
miserable belligerent ships that go steaming about within our
ports have become a nuisance. It is as if two potboys insisted
upon fighting out their quarrel in the Royal Exchange, to the
derangement of the business of the city. It might be supposed
that there were no international police regulations in the
world, and that we were not strong enough to protect our own
peace and quietness in our own harbours."
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