Abstract In 1880, the British and Canadian governments proposed a trial colonization scheme to transplant western Irish crofters to Manitoba. Proponents initially viewed these immigrants as idealized Britons whose traditional agrarian values would redeem the West from the perceived threats of modernization, socialism, and ethnic heterogeneity. However, as the “New Ireland” project was debated, perceptions shifted dramatically; the settlers were increasingly othered and stereotyped as lazy, disloyal, and unsuited for modern farming. This failure revealed deep-seated anxieties regarding racial hierarchies and the definition of Britishness and Irishness. In doing so, the scheme’s rise and fall challenges assumptions, past and present, surrounding Whiteness, borderland and settler colonial studies, privilege, and the construction of historical narratives.
Timothy S. Forest (Sun,) studied this question.