The Presbyterians in
Ireland were largely Ulster Scots. During two and a half centuries after
the first plantation of Scottish Presbyterian colonies in Ulster, ca.
1606, they maintained a close connection with their homeland, while they
remained a race apart from their Irish and English neighbors. They were
hated by the Roman Catholics of Ulster, whose land they had usurped.
They were despised by the English, whose Government and Established
Church inflicted persecution upon them due to religious non-conformity.
The Ulster Scots kept their racial strain pure in matters of
intermarriage. They sent their sons to Scotland to be educated for the
ministry, etc. Many of them married there before they returned to
Ulster. Thus they remained under the influence of Scottish religion,
philosophy, and family ties to their early and some later generations.
While the Presbyterians who settled in Ulster were almost solidly
Scottish, there were many English Puritans of Calvinistic doctrine who
settled in Dublin and the South of Ireland. The English type of
Presbyterianism lacked the more severe theology and discipline of the
Scottish Church. Their congregations in Leinster and Munster were the
outgrowth of the English Puritans and Independents of the Commonwealth
period, left there without organization after the Restoration. These two
sects united in 1696 and developed the Southern Association of the
Presbyterian Church. This became the Presbytery of Munster and a part of
the General Synod.
Historians of Church and local affairs, and the genealogists, have
preserved a wealth of published and manuscript records regarding
Presbyterian families and individuals. The sources are listed in Volume
II, . . .
A few points which may puzzle genealogists will be clarified by a
brief review of the history of the Presbyterians and their problems, due
to the laws of the realm regarding dissenters from the Established
Church of Ireland. This will show that less than half of the
Presbyterian families were permanently settled in Ireland before 1650.
The Penal Laws and other Acts of Parliament, depriving Presbyterians of
religious and civil liberty, were during some periods more rigorously
imposed in Scotland than in Ireland, thus resulting in a large
emigration to Ulster. At other times the Ulster Presbyterians were more
severely penalized, causing several ministers and many Church members to
return to Scotland. At all times until well into the eighteenth century,
the religious laws and practices resulted in the entries of many records
of baptism, marriage and burial, in the Parish Registers of the
Established Church.
The first wave of Presbyterian settlers came to Ulster as leassees of
the numerous Scottish proprietors who were granted estates by James I,
1605-1625. By patent of 16 April 1605, the northeast quarter of County
Down was granted to Hugh Montgomery and the northwest quarter was
granted to James Hamilton. This represented two-thirds of the estates
forfeited by Con O'Neill, who later was forced to sell his remaining
lands to the benefit of Hamilton and Montgomery. The southern part of
County Down remained in Roman Catholic hands. The new proprietors were
required by the Crown to live on their estates, build houses, churches,
and bring English or Scottish settlers as tenants, able to bear arms for
the King, build houses and develop their land. Hamilton and Montgomery
brought emigrants from the Scottish counties of Ayre, Renfrew, Wigtown,
Dumfries and Kirkcudbright. They began coming in May 1606. By 1610,
Montgomery could muster 1,000 men for the King and in 1614, the two
proprietors mustered 2,000 men, representing about 10,000 Scotts settled
in County Down.
Sir Arthur Chicester received a large portion in the southern part of
County Antrim. In 1603, he was granted the "Castle of Belfaste" and
surrounding property. He soon afterward acquired land along
Carrickfergus Bay and to the north almost as far as Lough Larne. He at
first settled an English colony around Belfast, but before long the
Scottish settlers predominated throughout the lower half of County
Antrim. The upper half had been in the hands of the Macdonnell clan
since about 1580. Soon after 1607, the area was granted to Randall
Macdonnell who, in 1620, became the Earl of Antrim. Scottish tenants
also spread through his estates, being required to bear arms for the
King and develop the land.
The flight of the Ulster Earls of
Tyrone and Tyrcommel with their Chiefs who were confederates, on 14
September 1607, gave James I the opportunity to confiscate their lands
for past and present treason. The six counties of Armagh, Cavan,
Donegal, Fermanagh, Londonderry, and Tyrone, were escheated to the
Crown. This great confiscation, of some 3,800,000 acres, lead to the
carefully planned "Plantation of Ulster" between 1608 and 1620. Of this
land, about 1,500,000 acres were only partly fertile and largely bog,
forest, and mountain country. This was restored to the Irish Roman
Catholic natives. Extensive grants were reserved for the bishops and
their incumbents of the Established Church. Trinity College, Dublin, and
other Royal Schools received about 20,000 acres. Land was also set aside
for the corporate towns, forts, etc. The remaining half million acres of
the most fertile land was reserved for colonization by English and
Scottish settlers.
King James at first chose fifty-nine Scotsmen of high social standing
and influence and nearly as many Englishmen, together with fifty-six
military officers or "servitors" and eight-six natives, as undertakers
who were to receive estates of 2,000 acres of less, in all counties but
Londonderry which was reserved for the Corporation of the City of
London. Eventually, by 1630, some undertakers acquired as much as 3,000
acres, and estates in County Londonderry came into private hands.
. .
.
A rich source of genealogical information regarding Presbyterian
ministers and their families is the Fasti of the Irish Presbyterian
Church, 1613-1840. The records were compiled by the late Rev. James
McConnell, and revised by his son, the late Rev. Samuel G. McConnell.
The work was published by the Presbyterian Historical Society, Belfast,
1951.
. . .
Through the influence of John Knox, the foundations
of the Presbyterian Church were laid in Scotland and the first General
Assembly was called in 1560. James VI of Scotland who succeeded to the
English throne as James I, in 1603, was determined to strengthen the
Established Church in Scotland. Melville, the leading Presbyterian of
the time, was imprisoned in the Tower of London, and the General
Assembly was forbidden to function. Presbyterian ministers and their
adherents alike were severely persecuted by the bishops, to bring them
under Church control.
At the same time, King James was anxious for a large settlement of
English and Scots in Ireland. The latter came to Ulster for new land but
also for religious liberty, attracted by the tolerant attitude
maintained there by the bishops. The new Confession of Faith, sanctioned
by Parliament for the Plantation Settlements, reconciled the differences
between Anglicans and Presbyterians. It was Calvinistic in doctrine and
allowed Presbyterian ministers to serve as clergy in the parish churches
according to their own practices and beliefs. This encouraged the
Scottish ministers to follow their countrymen to Ulster.
In the first period, between 1613 and 1642, the outstanding ministers
in Ulster and the dates of their arrival were: . . . John M'Clelland,
after 1629, . . .
The easy cooperation of the bishops in Ulster changed after 1625, and
the ministers preached under increasing restrictions. This came about
through the influence of William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, over
Charles I. They were determined to tighten the control of the
Established Church and this was reflected in Ireland. . . .
To make matters worse, Wentworth (Earl of Strafford) was appointed to
the Irish Vice-royalty and arrived in Dublin in 1633. He and his
government began a reign of terror for Roman Catholics and Presbyterians
alike. He followed Laud's policy to the letter. The earlier "Articles of
Religion" were set aside and the ministers were required to adopt a
Confession of Faith embodying the Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of
England. He further ordered the Act of Uniformity to be enforced against
the ministers. This declared that every clergyman or minister
celebrating any religious service other than that of the Established
Church, every layman assisting at such a service and every person who
opposed the liturgy of the Church, was liable on the third offense to
confiscation of goods and imprisonment for life.
. . .
John
M'Clelland, of Newtownards, was deposed but continued to preach, and was
therefore excommunicated.
. . .
In 1636, Robert Blair, Robert
Hamilton, John M'Clelland and John Livingstone organized a group of 140
Scottish settlers to emigrate to New England. They set sail in
September, 1636, and when half way across, were driven back by storms.
The ministers, to escape arrest, fled to Scotland, accompanied by many
of their adherents. At this time Scotland had become a safe refuge.
The crowning blow to Ulster came in 1639 when the "Black Oath" was
imposed. The clergy were required to read it from their pulpits and the
people were forced to swear on their knees, if over age sixteen, to obey
the King's commands and to abjure and renounce the Covenant. The clergy
were ordered to report on every Presbyterian in each parish. Some
conformed. Landed proprietors such as the Hamiltons and the Montgomerys
betrayed their faith and joined the persecutors. Great numbers, who
could re-establish themselves in Scotland, returned there. As many as
500 at a time returned to Scotland for the Communion season.
This persecution and departure of many Scots from Ulster saved
hundreds of lives during the Rebellion which broke out in 1641. The
Roman Catholics, determined to exterminate the English, also hated the
Presbyterians for settling on their forfeited land. They tortured and
murdered thousands and drove others out of their homes to die of
privation. Reprisals by the settlers, and a Scottish army sent to
Ulster, were equally devastating.
The biographies of the ministers in the Fasti of the Irish
Presbyterian Church, gave the time and place of death of the
ministers who served during the first period, 1613-1642, and in some
cases later, with some records of their issue:
. . .
Ministers
who died while residents of Scotland:
. . .
John M'Clelland,
at Kirkcudbright, 1638; in Ireland, summer of 1644; died in 1650. He
married (1) Marion, daughter of Bartholomew Fleming, Edinburgh, who died
s.p. 1640; (2) Miss Isobel M'Clelland.
Following the Rebellion, after 1652, the Presbyterians came from
Scotland to Ulster in great numbers, owing to the unsettled conditions
while Cromwell was attacking the Scottish Royalists. Some, who had fled
Ulster during the early years of the Rebellion, returned after Scottish
forces made their safety more assured. When peace was established,
Cromwell at first held the Presbyterians suspect for having supported
the Royalist cause. After a little time they were allowed to flourish
and many of their ministers were permitted to preach under
ecclesiastical control of the new State Church. By 1658, there were
eighty congregations and seventy Presbyterian ministers organized into
five Presbyteries and a General Synod.
The Presbyterians who were in Ulster in 1659, if settled in one of
the counties of Antrim, Armagh, Donegal, Down, Fermanagh, Londonderry or
Monaghan, are listed in A Census of Ireland, circa 1659, edited
by Seamus Pender, Dublin, 1939. Records for the counties of Cavan and
Tyrone are omitted, due to the fact that the original documents were not
preserved. . . .
Following the restoration of Charles II, in 1660, he who had pledged
his loyalty to the Presbyterian Church when Scotland crowned him king,
soon after his father's execution in 1649, now betrayed his word. He and
his Parliament returned the Established Church to power. Its lands and
churches, taken by the Commonwealth Government, were restored to the
extent they were owned in 1641, and the bishops with their clergy
regained their positions. . . .