6. Charlotte Grace O'Brien

1. O’Brien Emigrant Home, Queenstown, ca. 1876; 2. Charlotte Grace O’Brien 1842-1909; 3. St. Coleman’s Cathdral, Queenstown (Cobh, Co. Cork).

William Smith O’Brien
1803-1864
Charlotte Grace O’Brien (1845-1909) was the daughter of the Young Irelander, William Smith O’Brien, who was transported to Van Diemen’s Land (Tasmania) for his part in the unsuccessful 1848 Rebellion. She was responsible for a number of emigration reforms and the guiding spirit to the creation of the Mission. Critical of the overcrowding and overcharging in Queenstown emigrant boarding houses, O’Brien opened her own O’Brien Emigrants Home for 105 travelers at 7 The Beach, Queenstown. It was a daunting task for a woman of modest means who was almost profoundly deaf. The Home failed because it was boycotted by other boardinghouse keepers and local merchants, forcing her to order provisions from Cork. Concerned about conditions in steerage, O’Brien pressed for a reconfiguration of the sleeping accommodations in steerage that would give young women more privacy. In 1882, she travelled by herself on the Germanic to New York in order to investigate conditions aboard an emigrant ship and assess first-hand what the real circumstances were.

Archbishop John Ireland
1842-1906