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Facts about the Ulster Scots - Part
Three
Between 1717 and the American Revolutionary War years of
the late 1770s and early 1780's an estimated quarter of a million
Scots-Irish Presbyterian settlers left the Province of Ulster in the
northern part of Ireland for the new lands across the Atlantic. They
travelled in extremely hazardous conditions, in simple wooden sailing
ships from the ports of Belfast, Lame, Londonderry, Newry and Portrush
for the far-off berths of Philadelphia, New Castle (Delaware),
Charleston, Baltimore and New York. Huddled together with the most
meagre of belongings and money, they were a people forced to move
because of the severe restrictions placed on their faith by the ruling
British establishment of the day, and because of the economic
deprivations prevailing in their Ulster homeland.
The first ships in the main thrust of emigration to the
United States were chartered in 1717 and in that year, when drought
completely ruined the crops on the Ulster farmlands, 5,000 men and women
headed to Pennsylvania. There were five great waves of emigration to
America from Ulster in the 18th century: 1717-18; 1725-29; 1740-41;
1754-55 and 1771-75.
Poverty had taken its toll on many families and the
promise of a better life in a new world seemed irresistible. The Irish
famine of 1740-41 led to the third great wave of immigration to America
by the Scots-Irish. An estimated 400,000 people perished in that famine
and when the Presbyterian settlers arrived in America on that trek they
set their sights beyond the borders of Pennsylvania - along the path of
the Great Valley of Virginia (the Shenandoah region) and to South and
North Carolina.
The 1754-55 exodus resulted from appeals by colonists
drought in America to settle on new lands of Virginia and the Carolina
and from another calamitous drought in Ireland. In the last great wave
of 1771-75, land leases in Ulster were cited as the main reason for the
movement. Evictions were commonplace in Ulster at the time, and not
enough ships could be found to carry the throng of Presbyterians who
left the Province then.
Next to the English, the Scots-Irish became, by the end of
the 18th century, the most influential of the white population in
America, which, by 1790, numbered 3,173,444. At that time the
Scots-Irish segment of the population totalled about 14 per cent and
this figure was much higher in the Appalachian states of Virginia,
Kentucky, Tennessee and North Carolina. |