Marriage Before Immigration
The stereotypical causes for Irish female immigration tend to be famine, poverty, or following family to America. However, low marriage rates appears to have influenced many women to leave Ireland. 19th century Ireland experienced a change in land tenure that had an adverse effect on marriage for women, especially women of the lower social classes. In post-famine Ireland, "Access to land was a life or death issue for the lower layers of the agricultural community...Those who had it held on to it. Those who were landless were locked out of the system...The pre-famine marriage system revolving around myriads of sub-divided, sublet plots became impracticable" (1). The change in land owning affected young single women just as much as men. In order for families to guarantee their land or their chances of accumulating land, arranged marriages were beginning to replace the more spontaneous marriage (2).
Due to this change in marriage culture, many young Irish women were finding it difficult to find husbands because, "Under the system of arranged marriages in 19th century Ireland, the bride-to-be brought a dowry to her marriage; ideally land or cash" (3). As a result, marriages grew fewer and fewer for women of the lower classes. As many poor women had neither land nor money, the existence of a dowry system, or lack of a dowry, acted as a "push" factor for young, single Irish women to immigrate to America.