Potato And The Columbian Exchange

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The Colombian Exchange and the Potato
The Colombian Exchange is a phrase used to describe the exchange of cultures, languages, ideas, plants, animals and diseases between the Old World and the New World in 1492. It was a momentous event, changing the agriculture, ecology and culture of the Eastern and Western hemispheres. This event provided great benefit for Europe while the Native Americans were struck with catastrophe. Of course not all was bad in the Americas and not all was good in Europe. One object caused much controversy and chaos in Europe. The potato. This vegetable was a good change for Europe but as centuries passed some countries became overly dependent on the potato. One of those countries was Ireland.
The potato was a miracle …show more content…

The fungus would rot the potatoes and was poisonous to humans. If people ate the rotten food they would get sick and often whole villages would die from the sickness caused by the rotten food. The blight began in the early summer of 1845. That year one third of Ireland’s crops were destroyed. The next year the potato crops failed completely. Although the year of 1847 was blight-free, few potatoes were planted and the shortage was prolonged. Famine was approaching and with the British government so distant, they were unprepared and too slow to deal with such widespread disaster. As the famine went on, the poor’s food supplies dwindled and because potatoes were most peasant’s income many starved and died. People would work at disease-infested workhouses to try and get enough money to survive but with little medical care more and more died. To try and escape the misery in Ireland, some peasants would try to immigrate to other English-speaking countries. Ten of thousands of people would leave in substandard ships and only a few would make it to the designated …show more content…

He spent 100,000 euros on American maize, which was then sold to the poor. Other relief programs soon followed but the jobs provided were useless and were only used to justify payment. Workers were paid at the end of the week but by that time the workers had starved to death. The government’s help was useless. Robert Peel was kicked out of office soon after and Lord John Russell became the new Prime Minister. Russell abandoned the public jobs and sent Indian corn to Ireland. However the Irish had no money to buy the corn so Russell’s plans failed. The government realized their plan failed in 1847, long after the famine had begun, and made money available for loan and had soap kitchens established. These efforts were helped by local landlords and the

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