Immigration from Ireland to Canada In the 1920s, immigrants from Ireland to North America were forced to look for better opportunities after the conclusion of major European wars due to employment opportunities and poverty. When the European people finally ceased to rely on Irish food during the war, investment in Irish agricultural products declined and the boom period ended. After the economic boom there was a recession, and unemployment was the result. Two thirds of Ireland's population depends on potato harvesting as the main source of income. More important is food.
Many Irish immigrants first came to Canada, landed in Quebec, Montreal or Halifax, and even went out to the United States, as the passage from the UK to Canada was much cheaper than in the United States. However, since about 1840 most immigrants left from Ireland to the US port. Most Irish Catholic immigrants engaged in a specific agricultural occupation in the 18th century but in the next century they are often in the center of the city such as Boston, New York, Philadelphia, or their premature workers I stayed where I might be. The textile town is very easy to use. Immigrants are poor, but are usually not as poor as immigrants with famine. Many people feel that it is easy to make roads and canals like Yili. Nevertheless, it is difficult for most of them, especially for Catholics, and they are often themselves minorities and subject to discrimination in most Protestant countries.
At the end of the nineteenth century, a major change in Canadian immigration patterns began to appear. Numerous Irish and southern European immigrants have established a new Roman Catholic community in Canadian English. In the west of Canada, immigrants of important eastern Orthodox from Eastern Europe and immigrants of Mormon and Pentecost from Americans and Ireland arrived. From 1919 to 2020, five Protestant sects in Canada (English British, British British, Baptist, congregation, Methodist, Presbyterian) cooperated in "forward movement". The goal is to raise funds and strengthen the spirit of Christianity in Canada. The campaign triggered British nationalism by linking donations to the victory of the First World War and emphasized the need for funds to immigrate to Canada. This event centered on Ontario was a major economic success and raised more than $ 11 million in funds.