Picture
Celtic Poets Burns and Moore in Ballarat
_Writing from Melbourne, I can officially report that some truly wonderful resources for Irish studies can be found right here in south Victoria. Historically, the Irish made up approximately 15% of the Victorian population by the third quarter of the nineteenth century, the highest percentage in all of Australia. Given the astounding growth of Melbourne itself during the gold rush of the 1850s--within months of the gold discovery, its population had nearly doubled--this made it a particularly populous Irish center with all sorts of interesting global connections such as those to the similarly gold-crazy U.S. west coast. Irish, along with English, Scottish, Australian, German, and Canadian miners, were also involved in the defining event in the push for universal male suffrage for whites in Victoria, the Eureka uprising of 1854.

 
 
For any folks in the Richmond area with an interest in Irish, after a long time of much discussion and not much action, I've finally managed to get a beginner's class up and going. We are meeting every Tuesday night at 7:00 pm from now until May 3rd down in the Fan district, and the class is open to anyone with any level of Irish from absolute beginner to part-time dabblers. All are welcome to join the class at any time, even if time commitments prevent attendance every Tuesday.  For information, go to www.virginiagael.org