<p><strong>This unique book captures the rise of New York''s passionately musical Irish-Catholics and provides a compelling history of early New York City.</strong></p><p><em>The Unstoppable Irish</em> follows the changing fortunes of New York''s Irish Catholics, commencing with the evacuation of British military forces in late 1783 and concluding one hundred years later with the completion of the initial term of the city''s first Catholic mayor. During that century, Hibernians first coalesced and then rose in uneven progression from being a variously dismissed, despised, and feared foreign group to ultimately receiving de facto acceptance as constituent members of the city''s population. Dan Milner presents evidence that the Catholic Irish of New York gradually <em>integrated</em> (came into common and equal membership) into the city populace rather than <em>assimilated</em> (adopted the culture of a larger host group). Assimilation had always been an option for Catholics, even in Ire