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xi Acknowledgments My first thanks must go to David Perry and Gary Gallagher, who encouraged me to do this project. Since I began, their support and patience have been key to its successful completion. Other folk at the University of North Carolina Press, especially Cait Bell-Butterfield, John K. Wilson, and Ron Maner, have put a lot of work into the production and I am very grateful for that. Gallagher and one anonymous reader provided excellent criticism which helped me greatly improve the final product. Beyond the Press, numerous people have been helpful with suggestions, sources, and support along the way. Jimmy and Brendan Buttimer have always been supportive and great sounding boards for all things Irish in the South. Their work on Irish Savannah, which I draw on in places in this book, is exemplary scholarship. They are great colleagues as well as great friends. Stephen White from Charleston has been an excellent guide to the Irish element of that city as a very welcoming presence there when I began the project in earnest. David Brown of the University of Manchester has been a long-time fellow researcher in the “plain folk of the Old South” and our numerous conversations at conferences, on research trips, and at football (the real kind!) matches have always aided me in honing my arguments. Other researchers of Irish America and the American South who have provided research leads and analytical insight include, Donald Beagle, Bryan Giemza, Jerry Hackett, Brian Kelly, Frank Towers, Bryan McGovern, Kerby Miller, Randall Miller, Vernon Burton, Malcolm Smith, Mike Thompson, Susannah Ural, Robert Rosen, Christian Keller, David Dangerfield, Miles Smith, Patrick Doyle, Denis Bergin, Bruce Nelson, Matt O’Brien, David Sim, Robert Cook, Mitchell Snay, Andrew Heath, Enrico Dallago, Bernadette Whelan, Úna Bromell, Laura Sandy, Jamie Woods, Jeff Kerr-Ritchie, Fionnghuala Sweeney, Davy Kincaid, Jim Gannon, Donald Williams, and the late David Heisser. My graduate school mentor, E. Stanly Godbold, remains a good friend and a supporter of all my work. As always, numerous archivists and librarians, the historian’s friends as I call them, at all the archives listed in the bibliography have been very helpful . Some went above and beyond their duty to researchers. John Coski and Teresa Roane at the Brockenbrough Library at the Museum of the Confederacy were particularly so, as was Gillian Brown at the Diocese of Savannah. xii / Acknowledgments Paddy Fitzgerald, Christine Johnston, and Brian Lampkin of the Centre for Migration Studies at the Ulster American Folk Park were also very welcoming . Special mention must also be made of Brian Fahey of the Catholic Diocese of Charleston. He has been unfailing in fulfilling my numerous requests both in Charleston and from across the Atlantic Ocean. Here at Northumbria University my deans, department head, and research leads have always been encouraging of the project. I received ample support and research leave to help me complete this book. Many thanks then must go to Lynn Dobbs, Don MacRaild, David Walker, and Sylvia Ellis. Don and Sylvia as well as other colleagues in my department, especially James McConnel, Tanja Bueltmann, Mike Cullinane, Joe Street, Kyle Hughes, Michael Bibler, Randall Stephens, and Brian Ward, have aided my analysis of all things racial, diasporic, and southern. My Ph.D. students, Brian Langley, Craig McLaughlan, and Peter O’Connor, keep me on my toes and are always good for stimulating discussions of the Civil War. This project began in the United States, and colleagues at my former institutions of work have also played a part in supporting my effort, especially Nancy White and Mike Price at Armstrong Atlantic State University and Simon Lewis, Jason Coy, Marvin Dulaney, Amy McCandless, Lee Drago, Bill Olejniczak, Moore Quinn, Dale Rosengarten, Sam Hines, and Cynthia Lowenthal at the College of Charleston. Graduate assistant at the College, Charles Wexler, did some valuable research on my behalf. Sam Thomas of the T. R. R. Cobb House, Lieutenant Colonel William Bell, USMC, of the Citadel, and Bucky Hoffman of Huntersville, North Carolina, provided some important research on Irish Confederates for me and I thank them for that. Various folk provided accommodation on my travels and I want to recognize especially Catherine Clinton, John Lally, Michael de Nie, Andy Pelland, and Maureen Halliday for doing so. I was also fortunate to receive research fellowships from the Virginia Historical Society and the Filson Historical Club. I am grateful for those and hope this book reflects well on their support. Finally, I would like to thank my parents, Barry...

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