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Scotch-Irish Epic
Reference 001A
THE SCOTCH-IRISH EPIC
The following is a short account of where the Scotch-Irish started out from,
where they traveled to, and then settled in, America. Source: "The Scotch-Irish:
A Social History" by James G Leyburn. Ulster, one of the four traditional
"kingdoms" or Provinces of Ireland, was only 20 miles across the north channel
from Scotland. In 1603, a laird of northern Ayrshire (Scotland), Hugh
Montgomery, learned that Con O'Niell was in prison. O'Niell was a chieftain with
large tracts of land in County Down, and County Antrim. Montgomery proposed to
O'Neill a bargain. He could effect the escape and pardon of O'Neill, if in
return, O'Neill would grant him half of his lands. The escape and pardon was
achieved, but the granting of lands to Montgomery, was denied by King James.
Montgomery sought the aid of another Ayrshire laird, James Hamilton, who had
great influence with the King. With a new agreement drawn, giving each of the
two Lairds a third of O'Niell's property, but had conditions, "that the lands
should be planted with British Protestants, and that no grant of fee farm (ie
freeholds) should be made to any person of "mere" Irish extraction." In 1609,
the two Scots, Montgomery and Hamilton, began to induce tenants and other Scots,
to come over as farmer-settlers. Within 10 years, the population of the
Plantation of Ulster, had reached around eight thousand. The assignment of lands
to Scottish undertakers, was to have a permanent effect on the character of
Ulster. Despite every vicissitude, including terrible massacres and bloody war,
the Plantation gradually grew strong and proved to be a success. If one cause
more than any other can be singled out for its success, it would be the
presence, the persistence, and the industry of the Scots. Back in Scotland,
there was an increasing hardship occasioned by the spread of a form of land
tenure, called the feu, which had the effect of dispossessing many farmers of
their traditional lands. They were attracted to the generous lands visible by
the naked eye across the channel from the shores of south western Scotland. Any
Scot who had the inclination might now take the short journey by boat across to
Ulster and there, on easy terms, acquire a holding of land reputed to be far
more fertile and productive than any he was likely to know in his own country.
Economic distress in the Lowlands and economic opportunities in Ulster were the
predominant causes for migration during the first fifty years after the
plantation scheme had begun in 1610. In the Lowlands a positive fever for
emigration swept. Ships were traveling back and forth with the frequency of a
ferry. >From 1634 onward to 1690, life for the colonists of Ulster was to
consist of a series of crises, some of them so prolonged and severe that the
very existence of the Scottish settlements were threatened. The trouble had two
causes: religious exactions from England and native uprisings. Under the Jesuits
the Irish people had become fervently Catholic; to them the Protestants of
Ulster were heretics as well as interlopers although in fact Scotland had
originally been settled by people from Ireland called "The Scotti" from which
the country took it's name. The native Irish resented the intrusion of Scottish
(and English) settlers on their ancestral lands, and their resentment exploded
in 1641 in bitter insurrection. Between 1717 and the Revolutionary War some
quarter of a million Ulstermen came to America. By the time the Great Migration
began in 1717, a few Ulstermen were present in at least half of the American
colonies, often alongside immigrants who had recently come directly from
Scotland. It was when Ulster developed, in rapid succession, two new industries
that the pinch came. Both woolen and linen manufacture grew apace in the closing
years of the seventeenth century, bringing remarkable prosperity to North
Ireland and arousing uneasiness among English competitors. Belfast, had arisen
from the swamps of the Laggan Valley, giving Ulster a sheltered seaport for her
growing trade. The competition of Irish cloth seemed unendurable to English
cloth interests. At the Kings command, Irish Parliament in Dublin passed the
Woolens Act in 1699, giving a crippling blow to the industry in Ulster. The
substantial leaders of Ulster had put their primary economic faith in
manufacture and trade, and their success in life now depended upon two unknown
and uncontrollable factors: the arbitrary acts of the English Parliament and the
ups and downs of the foreign market. A third and more immediate economic cause
stimulated the first great migration of 1717. This was the suffering caused by
rack-renting. The land question assuredly played a large part in driving
Presbyterian Ulsterman to take the drastic step of removing to America. From
rack-renting, whole villages lost their Protestant element by migration to
America. The final blow was a succession of calamitous years for farmers. During
the 'teens, there were six years in succession that were notable for
insufficient rainfall (1714-1719). The first migration, then was touched off by
a combination of drought, rack-renting, diminished trade in woolen goods,
depression, and also religious discrimination and "persecution." When the fourth
successive year of drought ruined the crops in 1717, serious preparations began
to be made for a migration. Ships were chartered, consultations were held,
groups were organized (usually whole congregations led by their minister), and
property was sold. More than five thousand Ulstermen that year made the journey
to the American colonies. There were but two real drawbacks--the dangers of an
ocean crossing (especially for woman and children) and the expense of that
passage. The practice of indenture has long been a familiar device and greatly
despised . There were five great waves of emigration, with a lesser flow in
intervening years: 1717-1718, 1725-1729, 1740-1741, 1754-1755, and 1771-1775. In
1717, at least 5000 Ulstermen left Ireland. Jonathan Dickinson reported from
Philadelphia in 1717, that there had arrived "from ye north of Ireland many
hundreds in about four months," and that during the summer "we have had 12 or 13
sayle of ships from the North of Ireland with a swarm of people." The second
wave was so large, that not only the friends of Ireland, but even the English
Parliament became concerned. In the Pennsylvania Gazette it was reported "that
poverty, wretchedness, misery and want are become almost universal among them;
that...there is not Corn enough rais'd for their subsistence one year with
another; and at the same time the trade and manufactures of the Nation being
cramp'd and discourag'd, the labouring people have little to do, and
consequently are not able to purchase bread at its present dear rate; That the
taxed are nevertheless exceeding heavy, and money very scarce; and add to all
this, that their griping, avaricious landlords exercise over them the most
merciless racking tyranny and oppression. Hence it is that such swarms of them
are driven over into America." The third wave marked, on the American side, the
first movement of Scotch-Irish in any numbers beyond the confines of generous
Pennsylvania to the southwest. Following the path through the Great Valley, many
Ulstermen now went into the rich Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, whose southern
extremity opened out toward North and South Carolina. The second wave had so
well established the Scotch-Irish in the south eastern tier of counties in
Pennsylvania, that their influence, even in political affairs in the Quaker
commonwealth was becoming impressive. Famine struck Ireland in 1740, and was
certainly the principal occasion for the third large wave, which included
numbers of substantial Ulstermen. An estimated 400,000 persons died in Ireland
during 1740-1741; for the next decade there was a tremendous exodus to America.
The fourth exodus had two major causes: effective propaganda from America, and
calamitous drought in Ulster. A succession of governors of North Carolina had
made a special effort to attract to that province colonists from Ulster and from
Scotland. Governor Dobbs of North Carolina, (formally from Carrickfergus County
Antrim) declared that as many as ten thousand immigrants had landed in
Philadelphia in a single season, so that many were "obliged to remove to the
southward for want of lands to take up" in Pennsylvania. In 1717, when the
leases on the large estate of the Marquis of Donegal in county Antrim expired,
the rents were so greatly advanced that scores of tenants could not comply with
the demands, and so were evicted from the farms their families had long
occupied. During the next three years nearly a hundred vessels sailed from the
ports in the North of Ireland, "carrying as many as 25,000 passengers, all
Presbyterian." Thousands of the Scotch-Irish began their New World careers as
servants. In 1728, it was estimated that "above 3,200" persons had come from
Ulster to America in the previous three years, and "that only one in ten could
pay his own passage." Going to America" came to mean, by the middle of the
century, not launching out into a vast unknown, but moving to a country where
one's friends and relatives had a home. It offered the very exciting chance to
own one's own land, instead of holding it on a lease that might end in
rack-renting; it meant a heady freedom from religious and political
restrictions; it even promised affluence and social prominence to those who were
truly ambitious. Every group who went made it easier for others to follow and so
by 1775, probably 200,000 Ulstermen had migrated to America. The southern
provinces, Virginia and the Carolinas, were hardly considered, for the
impoverished Ulstermen would seen nothing attractive in a region of plantations
and slave-owning, where the Church of England was established. Maryland had been
founded for Roman Catholics, was principally a plantation colony, and now had an
Established Church; it was therefore not the place for Presbyterians who wanted
small farms. New York's governors were reportedly hard on dissenters, and her
lands up the Hudson were owned in great estates. Eliminating these, there
remained the Middle colonies and New England. Reports from Penn's settlements
were enthusiastic as to the quality of land and the treatment of colonists;
moreover, an invitation to settle there had come from the Secretary. The people
who entered America by the Delaware River, found a land of the heart's desire.
Their enthusiastic praise of Pennsylvania persuaded others to follow them, and
then still others, until by 1720 "to go to America" meant, for most emigrants
from Ulster, to take ship for the Delaware River ports, and then head west. For
the entire fifty-eight years of the Great Migration, the large majority of
Scotch-Irish made their entry to America through Philadelphia or Chester or New
Castle. With these towns as their starting point, and the western frontier their
destination, the immigrants, as they poured in found their path of progress
almost laid out for them by geography. The Great Valley lead westward for a
hundred miles or more; then when high mountains blocked further easy movement in
that direction, the Valley turned southwestward across the Potomac to become the
Shenandoah Valley. From the southern terminus of the Valley of Virginia, it was
a short trip, by the time the pioneers had reached it, into the Piedmont regions
of the Carolinas, where colonists were now warmly welcomed. Within this seven
hundred mile arc of back-country, therefore, from Philadelphia as far as the
upper Savannah River, most of the Scotch-Irish made their homes. It would have
been difficult to imagine anywhere, in the world of 1717, conditions more
attractive to discontented inhabitants of the Old World, than those which
prevailed in the province of Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania, among the last of the
original colonies to be founded, had by 1717 been proving for thirty years its
stability and prosperity, its practical liberality and hospitality. Nothing like
the generosity of its appeal was known in other colonies. Penn himself and his
friends, set forth to Europeans the advantages of his province. Pennsylvania
became the scene of an alternating and parallel movement of two peoples. The
Scotch-Irish went to one part of a river valley, Germans on the other; the next
year's arrivals advanced beyond the settlements to repeat the process. To the
three original counties of Pennsylvania, along the Delaware (Philadelphia,
Chester, and Bucks) the proprietors thought it wise in 1729 to add a fourth,
Lancaster. The Scotch-Irish followed the river valleys, keeping north of the
disputed border line of Maryland. The provincial government organized still
further counties as the frontier was filled up: York in 1749, Cumberland in
1750, and Bedford 1771, not to mention other counties to the north of
Philadelphia. Chroniclers speak of the Scotch-Irish, who arrived in Cumberland
during the decade after 1725 as folk "of the better sort...a Christian people."
It has been called the most important single Scotch-Irish centre in
America--"the seed-plot and nursery of their race..." Franklin County received
its first Scotch Irishmen between 1728 and 1740, and York, whose initial
settlers consisted of "families of the better class of peasantry," between 1731
and 1735. It is said that no Scotch-Irish family felt comfortable and truly at
home until it had moved at least twice!
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