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How Scots-Irish rascals made America

 
 
Reply Mon 9 Apr, 2012 09:27 am
Apr. 06, 2012
How Scots-Irish rascals made America
By KAREN F. MCCARTHY | The Free Lance-Star (Fredericksburg, Va.)

NEW YORK

It was with some surprise that I happened upon the little known story of mass migration of Protestants from Ireland to America in the 1700s, 150 years before the Catholic Irish arrived on Ellis Island. It was even more surprising to find that they have had more influence over the creation and character of the nation than the Irish of New York, Boston and Chicago - the Irish of Kennedy repute.

My search for this lost chapter of the Irish Diaspora took me from Dublin to Belfast and into some of the remotest regions of the South. It was a journey on which I discovered the extraordinary contribution these intrepid migrants made to American culture and character.

I learned why they produced America legends like Davy Crockett, Edgar Allen Poe and Stephen King, why they became Second Amendment traditionalists, politically conservative, and devoutly Christian. I discovered what led them to invent country music and America's biggest spectator sport. I also learned what few Europeans understand: why no presidential hopeful seems to be able to win the White House without some help from their Southern enclaves.

From the beginning the Scots-Irish were a different breed. Hardworking, religiously devout Presbyterians, they arrived in the north of Ireland in the 1600s as the behest of King James I of England, who was keen to colonize the country. Despite constant fighting with the Irish, they managed to set up a thriving, merchant colony and celebrated their ability to freely practice Presbyterianism, far from the interfering Anglican bishops of England.

Yet, not 100 years later they were setting sail on brigantines for the New World, driven off the land by the English government's tax hikes, rack-renting and religious persecution when their linen industry grew too competitive and their religious practices too independent.

On those ships they brought their expectations for a warm welcome in a Protestant country. But it was not to be. Their sheer numbers and feisty nature overwhelmed Boston, prompting one man to cry, "There are more Irish than people here."

And so, partly bribed and partly coerced, they tumbled down the Appalachians into the welcoming arms of the Virginia and Carolina colonial governors who were only too happy to have hardy settlers buffer them from the Indians.

They lived in a wilderness beyond the reach of government, forced to elect their own leaders and become their own law. Subject to Indian attacks, they could only rely on themselves to protect their homesteads and feed their families. This environment, filled with hardworking, hard-fighting people with an aversion to religious restriction, government interference and taxation, was unlike anything in the more settled northern colonies. From it a completely different character and culture evolved.

In Virginia, they produced country music legends like the Carter family and Ralph Stanley. Elsewhere, singers like Hank Williams emerged embodying the contradiction at the heart of the Scots-Irish - a poet who could move people to tears with his sincerity, yet terrify them with his violent self-destructive streak.

Richmond was the chosen home of Scots-Irish writer Edgar Allen Poe, father of American Gothic and predecessor to kinsman Stephen King, whose stories were influenced by the horrors from the frontier that were creeping into Southern folklore.

North Carolina is also home to Junior Johnson, the notorious Scots-Irish moonshine runner and race car driver, whose rebellious outrunning of the law was part of a tradition that eventually gave rise to NASCAR, America's biggest spectator sport. But North Carolina didn't just produce rascals, it gave America James E. Webb, who put the first man on the moon.

Their feisty nature, partly derived from being under siege from the Irish, the English, the Native Americans, and the Yankees, has resulted in an entrenched militarism that has filled the ranks of the U.S. military, and given the nation warriors like Stonewall Jackson, George Patton and Jim Webb.

Their championing of governmental non-interference has entrenched them in conservative American politics and produced a long list of Scots-Irish presidents who have left a defining mark on American society: Andrew Jackson, Woodrow Wilson, Harry Truman, among others.

Perhaps the Scots-Irish strong sense of their own culture and identity was reinforced by their history of fighting the Irish, the Indians, the Civil War and the subsequent exploitation at the hands of carpetbaggers, but whatever the reason, their history in Ireland and in America has shown: leave them alone, give them a fair shake, let them feed and defend their own family, worship their own way, entertain to their own liking, and they'll keep their spirits high, work hard, play hard, and mind their own business. Three hundred years later, it seems Scots-Irish culture is America's way.

ABOUT THE WRITER

Karen F. McCarthy is a political/war journalist, documentary filmmaker and author of recently released the book "The Other Irish: The Scots Irish Rascals Who Made America." Readers may send her email at [email protected]. She wrote this for The Free Lance-Star in Fredericksburg, Va.

This essay is available to McClatchy-Tribune News Service subscribers. McClatchy-Tribune did not subsidize the writing of this column; the opinions are those of the writer and do not necessarily represent the views of McClatchy-Tribune or its editors.


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Reply Mon 9 Apr, 2012 09:47 am
@BumbleBeeBoogie,

I heard the Scots in America started the Ku Klux Klan.

Really, those guys!
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