Some of the interviewees on the project are pictured with those involved. From left: Margaret Farrell Egan, Paula Leavy McCarthy, Carolina Beacon, Nuala Gorman, Argentinian Ambassador to Ireland Her Excellency Ana Laura Cachaza, cathaoirleach of Westmeath County Council Cllr Aoife Davitt, Michael McCormack, Ms McCormack, Carmel Lynam, Michael Newman, Aiden Walsh, Adrian Roche, oral historian on the project, Melanie McQuade, heritage officer, Westmeath County Council, Peter Wallace, and chief executive of Westmeath County Council Barry Kehoe.

Oral history project sheds light on the story of emigration to Argentina

The centuries-old links between the midlands of Ireland and Argentina took centre stage at Mullingar Library recently as an event to mark the culmination of a unique historic project took place.

Her Excellency Ana Laura Cachaza, Ambassador of Argentina, was on hand as Westmeath and Longford County Councils jointly celebrated the completion of an oral history project focusing on the story of emigration to Argentina.

The project saw volunteers from both counties share stories about relatives who emigrated to 'The Argentine'. Funded by the Heritage Council and run by the Heritage Office and the Archives Service in Longford and the Heritage Office in Westmeath this heritage project captured powerful, personal stories from local families whose roots stretch from the heartlands of Westmeath and Longford all the way to Argentina.

Through conversations recorded by Adrian Roche of The History Trail memories once shared only around kitchen tables are now preserved in the archives of both local authorities. Mr Roche is an experienced oral history consultant, and he carried out interviews with groups of people from the two counties.

At the Mullingar Library gathering Ambassador Cachaza presented each participant with a copy of their interview during the evening event. For a century from the 1820s onwards, people from both counties, and other parts of Ireland, emigrated to Argentina with many succeeding in farming or business. The Longford-Westmeath Argentina Society is very active in keeping alive awareness of this story.

Chairperson of the Longford Westmeath Argentina Society Una Byrne said: “These stories are the threads that connect past, present and future. Recording our stories is not simply about preserving them, it's about understanding who we are.

“We weave together memory, identity and belonging. We are deeply grateful to the Heritage Council and both Longford and Westmeath County Councils for their support in making this project possible.”

Ms Byrne said the project is a unique resource: “The stories we celebrate today remind us that heritage is not something distant or forgotten. It's a living memory, carried on in families, in communities and in the bonds between places. This journey did not end in the past, it continues today and will continue into the future.”

Addressing the gathering Her Excellency Ana Laura Cachaza, Ambassador of Argentina, said she was delighted to participate in an event acknowledging “the many historic bonds between the two countries”.

“The tens of thousands of Irish who emigrated to Argentina during the 19th century, and the descendants of those Irish, are now more than half a million Argentinians who can claim Irish roots,” Ambassador Cachaza informed the group.

“This Irish history project adds to this history,” Her Excellency said, “to hear these stories from the descendants of those who emigrated to Argentina, not only tells the history of these people, but how this history shaped families, and that is why this bond is so alive.”

Adrian Roche of The History Trail outlined his part in the process of recording the histories: “The aims of the project was to capture and preserve reflections and stories of 10 people, five from Westmeath and five from Longford, to gather stories from family members who had immigrated to Argentina several generations ago.

“I was able to interview a group of three and four together, so that adds a few extra stories. Over 30,000 people emigrating from this area, so this is just a part of that history. There's still many, many stories to be discovered here,” Mr Roche said.

The interviews will now be deposited in the archives of the councils and will remain an important sources for present and future research.