1717-18. This first movement, so significant as a path-opener,
had as its immediate cause the years of drought; but it was the opinion
of Archbishop King and Dean Swift that not even the dire effects of bad
crops and high prices would have been enough to make the people move if
they had not had the added goad of rack-renting*, still such a novel
practice that it caused intense resentment. In a letter of 1718 to the
Archbishop of Canterbury, King summed up the causes and tried to
persuade his colleague to use his influence to arouse the English
conscience to a realization of the effects of what was happening. He
charged: "I find likewise that your Parliament is destroying the little
Trade that is left us. These & other Discouragements are driving
away the few Protestants that are amongst us. ...No Papists stir except
young men that go abroad to be trained to arms, with intention to return
with the Pretender. The Papists being already five or six to one, &
a breeding People, you may imagine in what conditions we are like to
be." . . .
In a sense, the emigrants of 1717 would
be explorers whose report on their experiences could guide those who
came after. The Ulstermen who went to Boston found unexpected
difficulties and a welcome that lacked warmth. Those who followed them
in the next two years were made to understand that they were not at all
welcome. The people who entered America by the Delaware River, on the
other hand, 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.
*Rack-rent was simply raising the rent on the land after the
period of the lease had expired, and renting to the highest bidder.
Lease terms in Ulster were usually 31 years, much longer than they had
been in Scotland, and were reasonable in the 17th century. As more and
more immigrants came in and land became scarce landlords could get more
for use of their land. However, the disposessed, who had been there for
a generation or two, were outraged.
1725-29. The second wave was so large that not merely the
friends of Ireland but even the English Parliament became concerned.
Parliament appointed a commission to investigate the causes of the
departures, for they had reached proportions that portended a loss of
the entire Protestant element in Ulster.
Letters
from immigrants themselves spoke of rack-rents as a determining cause of
this second wave; but the Pennsylvania Gazette mentioned these as only
one of the "unhappy Circumstances of the Common People of Ireland" that
had resulted in so great an exodus. An article in that journal (November
20, 1729) 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 Rate; That the Taxes 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."
1740-41. 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 1740-41; for the next decade there was a tremendous exodus to
America. This 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 opens out toward
North and South Carolina. Arthur Young, writing in 1779, estimated that
between 1728 and 1750 Ulster lost a quarter of her trading cash and
probably a quarter of her population that had been engaged in
manufacture. His comment, if accurate, suggests the caliber of men now
leaving the country.
*Not to be confused with the potato crop failure that was the
cause of the great Catholic Irish migration in 1845-47.
1754-55. 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. That two of these
officials were themselves Ulstermen lent persuasiveness to their
invitation and appeal. As drought ravaged the countryside, testimony of
Scotch-Irish success in American struck a particularly responsive chord
in hearts back home. ...
At this moment, however,
the Scotch-Irish pioneers had their first taste of real trouble with the
Indians. The French and Indian wars broke out in the colonies and were
to last for more than seven years. For the time being, these violent
disturbances effectively dried up the source of new immigration. More
than this, Ulster was just now undergoing a true economic recovery. Her
prosperity was so pronounced that the vacuum left by emigrants began to
be filled by arrivals of people from the south of Ireland and from
Scotland. Her population began to increase apace; indeed, it was the
pressure of numbers, combined with a new economic depression, that
caused the final large wave of migration.
1771-75. Young, writing in 1779, when the outbreak of the
American Revolutionary War had eliminated the possibility of further
emigration, said that the people of Ulster had by 1770 become very poor,
living chiefly "on potatoes and milk and oat bread," and that their
little farms had been divided and subdivided until "the portions were so
small they cannot live on them." More than this, the shipowners at the
ports of Belfast and Derry were in distress because their "passage
trade, as it was called," which had long been a regular branch of
commerce, was now cut off.
There was, however, a
special reason for the departure of this final wave. In 1771, 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 farms their
families had long occupied. This aroused a spirit of resentment so
intense that an immediate and extensive emigration was the consequence.
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." Froude gives an even larger figure: "In the two years
which followed the Antrim evictions, thirty thousand Protestants left
Ulster. ...
Throughout the fifty-eight years of the Great Migration, religious
liberty had been a motive only at the beginning. It is nevertheless
significant, both for Ireland and America, that those who left Ulster
were almost all Presbyterians. Members of the Established Church rarely
went, nor did Roman Catholic Irishmen. ...
All of the thirteen original American colonies received Scotch-Irish
settlers. By comparison with the main stream that flowed through
Pennsylvania, the Valley of Virginia, and the Carolina Piedmont,
however, Scotch-Irish settlement in other colonies was insignificant in
numbers. The strength of Presbyterianism in many of the colonies (New
Jersey, for example) was not, as might be supposed, evidence of
Scotch-Irish settlement, on the contrary, most of these churches had
been founded by English and Welsh Presbyterians and many by immigrants
directly from Scotland.
A clear distinction should be made at this point between colonists
from Scotland and those from Ulster, for the two have often, to the
complete distortion of events, been thought identical. It has already
been noted that by 1717 Scots and Ulstermen were two different
nationalities. Extensive emigration from Scotland to America occurred
during the eighteenth century, possibly a fourth or a fifth as large as
that from Ulster; but the reasons for Scottish emigration were distinct.
Before the union of the two Crowns in 1707, many Scots were exiled as
criminals and many more came as indentured servants or as merchants to
America. After the Union, since Scots had equal rights with Englishmen,
including the right of moving to the colonies, thousands came over to
escape the grinding poverty at home. Defeat of the Highlanders in 1746,
after the collapse of the Stuart cause, with the determination of the
government to "civilize" these people, caused a large exodus; and the
enclosure of lands, the dispossession of tenants, and the consequent
dissolution of ties of personal loyalty binding man to chief, sent
thousands of others to America. The pull from the colonies was, as
usual, the opportunity for a better life. At times during the nineteenth
century there came to be a positive "rage for emigration" throughout
both Lowlands and Highlands.
Scots in America from the first showed traits clearly different from
those of the Scotch-Irish. Scots were seldom explorers, Indian fighters,
or frontier traders; they played only a minor role as pioneers,
preferring to settle in the east and to carry on business enterprises.
Their greatest difference from their Ulster cousins, however, was seen
at the time of the American Revolution: whereas the Scotch-Irish were
usually ardent patriots and notable fighters in the cause of the
colonies, the Scots were, with notable exceptions, Loyalists faithful to
the Crown. Only in their Presbyterianism and a few of their traits of
personality did they resemble the Scotch-Irish. In North Carolina the
Highland Scots for a long while retained their Gaelic language and even
their Highland dress.
Children and grandchildren of the original Scotch-Irish settlers in
America were always among the leaders in the move to the new West; but
they were no longer Scotch-Irish in their social characteristics and
outlook. Just as they were likely to become Methodists and Baptists
instead of remaining Presbyterians, so they were likely to marry persons
whose background may have been English or German. The memory of Ulster
and its respectabilities and distinctions meant little or nothing to
these constant pioneers. They were Americans.
[The Scotch-Irish] moved immediately upon arrival to a region where
there was neither a settlement nor an established culture. He held land,
knew independence, had manifold responsibilities from the very outset.
He spoke the language of his neighbors to the East through whose
communities he had passed on his way to the frontier. Their institutions
and standards differed at only minor points from his own. The
Scotch-Irish were not, in short, a "minority group" and needed no
Immigrant Aid society to tide them over a period of maladjustment so
that they might become assimilated in the American melting pot. Like all
people, whether immigrants or stay-at-homes, they must have known
individual discouragement and disappointment; some may even have had a
heightened feeling of inner lonliness, a quality of mind Weber
attributes to most Calvinists who reflect upon the implications of the
doctrine of predestinatiion. But to the extent that their neighbors
shared similar experiences and attitudes, without pressure from other
Americans to be different, the Scotch-Irish were not ... marginal men.
They were, on the contrary, full Americans almost from the moment they
took up their farms in the back-country.