Monday, January 19, 2026
Irish Orphan Girls
By Susan G Mathis
In the 1870s, hundreds of Irish orphan girls, many between the ages of 13 and 16, left the only homes they’d ever known—city orphanages and asylums—and stepped into a world that demanded both obedience and resilience. Their destination—the grand houses and estates of America’s growing middle and upper classes. Their occupation—domestic servants.
Behind the lace curtains and polished silver of the Gilded Age, their hands made life run smoothly—and their quiet strength helped shape the households of a new nation.
The story of these girls began decades earlier, across the Atlantic. The Irish Potato Famine and its aftermath had devastated families and communities. Waves of Irish immigrants—many widowed mothers or orphaned children—flooded into American port cities like New York and Boston, hoping for work and food.
But life in these cities was harsh. The Irish were often despised, forced into overcrowded tenements, and paid meager wages. For the countless children left parentless by disease, accident, or poverty, the only refuge was the orphanage.
By the 1870s, these institutions were full of Irish children. Among them, teenage girls stood at a crossroads—too old to adopt easily, too young to live on their own. The answer, for many, was service.
At orphanages like The Irish Rose Asylum, daily life was built around routine and discipline. The girls learned not only reading and religion but also jobs that would secure their future employment like laundry, mending, and ironing, sewing and embroidery, cooking and serving meals, polishing brass and silverware, childcare and nursing.
By the time they turned thirteen or fourteen, many were deemed ready to go out into service. It was the most respectable—and often the only—path available to poor Irish girls in the Gilded Age.
In my newest novel, Irish Rose Orphans’ Christmas, seven young women are about to experience a Christmas that will change everything. As they experience Advent and prepare their hearts for a deeper calling, each young woman must face the truth of her past and the hope of her future.
Did you grow up around orphans? Next month, I’ll continue sharing about these children. Leave your answer or comments on the post below and join me on the 19th for my next post.
ABOUT IRISH ROSE ORPHANS’ CHRISTMAS:
Seven young women experience their last Christmas together before stepping into lives of service. United by trials and an unbreakable bond, they’ve pledged to remain “forever sisters.” But as the season of parting approaches, buried wounds rise to the surface. When Sister Rose invites the girls to prepare their hearts during Advent for a deeper calling, each young woman must face the truth of her past and the hope of her future. This Christmas, seven orphans will discover that no matter where life leads them, love and faith will go with them.
ABOUT SUSAN:
Susan G Mathis is an international award-winning, multi-published author of stories set in the beautiful Thousand Islands in upstate NY. Susan has been published more than thirty times in full-length novels, novellas, and non-fiction books. She has sixteen in her fiction line. Susan is also a published author of two premarital books, stories in a dozen compilations, and hundreds of published articles. Susan lives in Northern Virginia and enjoys traveling the world. Visit www.SusanGMathis.com/fiction for more.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)




No comments:
Post a Comment