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My name is Annie Ahern and I live in Queenstown,
Ireland, I am 9 years old. I live in a small cottage with my mother
and father and 6 brothers and 2 sisters. My father is a farmer however,
we are very poor. In a few days I will be leaving to go to America to
live with my Aunt Kate. She is a maid and works for a rich family. I
hope to be a maid too when I get there. Before I am allowed on board
the ship which I must go to a hotel were I can be checked for germs.
September 25, 1892
Our ship Indiana left Queenstown, Ireland about midnight and
we have a splendid wind carrying us on at a rate of 240 miles a day, or
knots as it is called at sea. I got very seasick, and vomited through
the night. We are assigned a bunk for each family; because I was traveling
alone I had to share a bunk with another family. The
bunks not only had to accommodate all the members of a family, but their
belongings as well.
September 26, 1892
The morning sun is shining across the water, and I feel much better today.
I met a nice couple this morning walking around the ship. Their names
are Mr. and Mrs. Davie; they have 2 sons named Theodore and Cody, and
3 daughters named Lisa, Marie and Erin, however only their sons are with
them. Their 3 daughter are in America with there aunt. The Davies’
plan on meeting their daughters when they arrive at Ellis Island.
September 27, 1892
It’s cold and raining and I am sick again. The ship has been rocking
back and forth since yesterday afternoon. All the small children on board
are sick. One little girl was running around and fell and hit her head.
Her father bandaged her head with an old cloth to stop the bleeding. I
hope she will be ok. The smell below the deck is overpowering. Not only
do passengers have to put up with the smells of disease, sickness and
unwashed bodies, but also the smell from the cargo brought over on the
voyage from Ireland. This grayish material, bird droppings, was used as
fertilizer in both Ireland and Scotland.
September 28, 1892
To pass the time I have been dancing with some of the other girls onboard
the ship. I leaned a dance called the jig, however the other girls dance
better than me. My clothes are dirty and I need to take a bath. Maybe
when I reach America I will be able to take a hot bath and have the use
of a stove. I spend so much time waiting in line to use one of two topside
cooking fires. (Imagine up to 300 people trying to cook on a pitching,
rolling deck.) If it rain we have no fires. We are lucky to get a drop
or two of weather and some bread to eat.
October 3, 1892
Today is the day we arrive in New York. I can see the Statue
of Liberty. Everyone is so excited.
I make my way across the gangplanks with lots of other people. The first
thing I need to do is go straight up a long set of stairs called the “Stairs
to the Great Hall”. There are several doctors and nurses at the
top. They are asking people several questions. I saw some doctor put a
big X with a piece of chalk on a man. I was lucky I made it through this
test.
Next came the medical exam, and I also made it through this test. After
you had been checked out by the doctors, you had to pass a mental exam.
Click here
to see chart. The doctors had you perform things that we think are
incredibly easy, but if you were an immigrant who had no education, the
tests were very hard. I had to put a puzzle together, it was hard but
I passed. After this was the legal test they asked questions such as:
What is your name? Do you have any relatives here? Do you have a criminal
record? Have you ever been to the United States before?
I passed all the tests and was able to go to meet my relatives.
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