The Starving Times: Voices from the Irish Famine: Book 4 continues the journey of ordinary Irish families caught in the greatest catastrophe ever to strike Ireland: An Gorta Mór, the Great Famine of 1845-1852. In this volume, we turn our attention to County Waterford, to the Kelly family; blacksmiths, farmers, sons, daughters and people whose names were not written in official histories, yet whose suffering, courage, and endurance formed the unspoken fabric of a nation forever changed.
By August 1845, whispers of a strange blight drifted across Ireland. Farmers noticed blackening leaves, a sickening rot, and a smell rising from the fields like decay from a graveyard. Within weeks, the potatom the staple food of millions, collapsed into putrid sludge. What followed was not simply crop failure, but a slow, suffocating disaster that struck hardest the people who had least. The Kellys of Waterford were among them.
Thomas Kelly, a respected blacksmith, his wife Maire, and their six children lived a quiet, hardworking life near the River Suir. Their forge was more than a workplace; it was a gathering point for neighbors, a place of warmth and iron, laughter and skill. Like many rural families, they relied on the land to survive, even while their trade tethered them to the community. But when the blight returned year after year, when food vanished, when fever swept the countryside, their world began to crumble.
In this book, we follow the Kellys as they navigate hunger, heartbreak, and impossible decisionsm decisions forced upon countless Irish families. The famine did not strike in a single moment. It crept into homes, emptied cupboards, stole strength, and claimed lives one by one. For the Kellys, as for so many, survival came at a terrible cost.
Their journey leads them to the Dunbrody famine ship, one of the infamous "coffin ships" that carried desperate Irish families across the Atlantic. These ships were overcrowded, unsanitary, and often deadly. Yet they also represented hope, a distant promise of survival, escape, and renewal in America. This volume chronicles the harrowing voyage, the friendships formed at sea, the sickness that stalked every deck, and the courage needed simply to endure each day.
Upon reaching New York, Tom and Mary Kelly confront a new world full of hardship, prejudice, and relentless labor. Their story mirrors that of hundreds of thousands of Irish immigrants who arrived with nothing but grief, determination, and the will to live.
But The Starving Times is not merely a tale of tragedy. It is a testament to the strength of the human spirit. It is the story of families who lost everything; homes, loved ones, entire communities, yet carried forward the memory of Ireland in their hearts. Through the voices of the Kelly family, this book honors all who suffered, all who fled, and all who survived. Their story matters. Their stories deserve to be heard. And in telling them, we remember.