The Dynasty of Laurence Burke: Legacy of an Irish Immigrant
By Bill Christy
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About this ebook
“I departed the train at the end of the track in Salina, Kansas and with my knap sack and a suitcase started walking south toward the Santa Fe Trail. I was looking for unclaimed land suitable for farming. My savings were about gone and time was running out to find a suitable claim. I followed the Santa Fe Trail and joined a wagon train of merchants headed for Santa Fe. There was a spirit of good will between us that will never be forgotten. The fact that I was without funds never came up. I could earn my board by simply working my way helping others.”
In December 1933, an obituary was published in the Hutchinson, Kansas newspaper announcing the death of Laurence Burke. Laurence had died on December 18th, 1933 at age 84 years and 11 months. He died in his home on 6th Street, one block north of St. Teresa’s Catholic Church. Laurence was survived by his wife, Kate, and three sons William, Edward and George. Laurence was to be buried in the Bean Cemetery, Little River, Kansas. George’s wife, Mary Donnelly Burke, my grandmother, wrote Laurence’s obituary and ended the obituary with a statement from her heart: “Laurence Burke leaves many virtuous and good works faithfully performed and the ones who have been privileged to live near him for so many years are indeed the richer for the experience.”
There is ample documented evidence of Laurence’s character and published events to write a Biography of his life. This book however is a Historic Novel with Laurence Burke telling his own story.
Bill Christy
Bill Christy is a Korean War Army veteran, a retired certificated public accountant and a retired financial administrator in higher education. He is also a self-proclaimed history buff who is the author of two self-published family history books. The history books trace his mother’s lineage in a chronology of her Burke family heritage. After spending ten years in research and several trips to Ireland, the idea for writing Historic Fiction came about. His first published book is “Tommy de Burgh: A Soldier’s Legacy”. “The Dynasty of Laurence Burke: Legacy of an Irish Immigrant” is a Historic Fiction based on his great grandfather’s life. Bill makes his home in a small college town in central New Mexico.
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Book preview
The Dynasty of Laurence Burke - Bill Christy
THE DYNASTY OF
LAURENCE BURKE:
LEGACY OF AN
IRISH IMMIGRANT
By Bill Christy
Copyright © Bill Christy, 2014. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form without permission in writing from the author.
Red Mountain Shadows Publishing
Cover Design by Serena Clarke
Smashwords Edition
The Dynasty of Laurence Burke:
Legacy of an Irish Immigrant
By Bill Christy
Laurence Burke carved two large limestone posts and placed them at the entrance to his homestead. They guard the front of the home near the byway for all to see. Monuments to America, to the pioneer spirit, to the heart and soul of a young Irish lad who took the risk and followed a dream, Laurence Burke.
Forward
In December 1933, an obituary was published in the Hutchinson, Kansas newspaper announcing the death of Laurence Burke. Laurence had died on December 18th, 1933 at age 84 years and 11 months. He died in his home on 6th Street, one block north of St. Teresa’s Catholic Church. Laurence was survived by his wife, Kate, and three sons William, Edward and George. Laurence was to be buried in the Bean Cemetery, Little River, Kansas. George’s wife, Mary Donnelly Burke, my grandmother, wrote Laurence’s obituary and ended the obituary with a statement from her heart: Laurence Burke leaves many virtuous and good works faithfully performed and the ones who have been privileged to live near him for so many years are indeed the richer for the experience.
There is ample documented evidence of Laurence’s character and published events to write a Biography of his life. This book however is a Historic Novel with Laurence Burke telling his own story.
Introduction
Saint Patrick brought the four gospels of Christianity to Ireland. His conversion of the Irish was complete in the 5th century. The invasion of England in 1066 by the Norman Kings brought Catholicism to England and further to Ireland with the land grants to Norman English Lords. Lord William Burke received a grant in 1185, the Golden Valley in Central Ireland, Tipperary County. William built the largest Priory in Ireland, the Athassel Abbey along the River Suir. The invasion of Ireland by the Protestant King of England, William of Orange in 1660s transcended the Norman English grants and all the land reverted back to the King. He set out to remove all influences of the Papacy or other opposition to Protestantism from Ireland. Penal Codes were enforced against the Black (Catholic) Irish that disenfranchised them from Catholicism, land title, politics, education or professions. The King was determined to depopulate Ireland by starvation, deportation or other means.
Laurence’s father, Henry Burke rented a five-acre farm along the River Suir that saved the family from the famines with other crops and livestock. Laurence having completed the allowed education for boys was employed to teach in the Loughmore Male National School. Following his conscience, he began teaching additional education to Black Irish children wanting secondary education. This was done in hiding and in direct violation of the Penal Codes. With the English closing in he was forced to immigrate to America in 1868. He made his mark in America. With hard work and honesty he found love, land and developed a family dynasty in Kansas, the heartland of America.
Chapter 1
Born Into Famine
I was named Laurence (Larry) Burke, born to Henry and Anna Ryan Burke on January 19th, 1849. Mother was delivered in our family home with the village midwife assisting. We lived on a five-acre rented farm just north of the village of Loughmore, County Tipperary, Ireland. The small farm was located between the railroad track and the river Suir. We were a surviving family of six, Mother, Dad and my three older sisters Julia, Mary and Ellen. My sisters Anna and Bridget had died in infancy leaving over ten years between my next older sister, Ellen and myself. Being the only son and the heir apparent brought hope, pride and lineal property right into the home, but no relief from hunger. The potato crop lay rotting in the fields for the second year in a row. Ireland was in the worst year of famine it had yet seen.
My family, Black Irish (Catholics), survived the famine because of the land we farmed. Catholics could not own land under the penal codes enforced by the English law but