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Immigration and Emigration
Wolverhampton and the Irish

Pub culture

Prejudice, disease and poverty encouraged the use of alcohol amongst the community.
Herbert Street
Herbert Street
© Wolverhampton Archives and Local Studies
Roger Swift describes the Carribee Island area as containing a profusion of beer shops and public houses. A parliamentary paper reported in 1852 that there were 35 public houses in the heavily Irish-populated Stafford Street district. Illegal ‘wabble-shops’ selling alcohol without a license were rife and difficult to police. The Rawlinson Report highlights the attraction of the pub culture and alcohol for the Irish. It includes a description of how, when turned out of public houses, many Irish confessed

"that the place in which they lived was in such a miserable state that they would rather remain out in the open air".

Unfortunately, drunkenness was often a precursor to public disorder.


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