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Thursday, 14 March 2019

Scots Irish, Ulster Scots....true Americans...


Rednecks and Hillbillies – Great Americans......







When Jed Clampett and the Beverley Hillbillies first appeared on our television screens  in the mid 1960’s, I must confess that I had no idea what Hillbillies and Rednecks in fact were.    I also, totally incorrectly, believed that the Irish who immigrated to the United States during the Great Famine in the 1840’s were those who ‘made the greatest  contribution’ to present day America.

How wrong was I..................................

In fact, Rednecks and Hillbillies go way back before the famine of the 1840’ – back in fact to the middle of the 1600’s.

Hillbillies and Rednecks have a wonderful history in the Americas and I hope you will forgive me if I try to explain.........................

The history surrounding Ulster-Scots also known as Scots-Irish in the US begins as far as this post is concerned when in 1638 and 1641, in Scotland, the Presbyterians there signed a Covenant. They demanded to retain their Presbyterian form of church government and would not accept, under any circumstances, the Church of England as its official state church as ordered by the then monarch Elizabeth the First and the English government.



 
Many signed in their own blood and wore red pieces of cloth around their necks as a sign of their religious beliefs. They became known as ‘Rednecks’.  As a matter of fact, as late as1940,  at  least one Scottish Presbyterian minister insisted on wearing a red clerical collar.

They were banned from all public office because of their refusal to become part of the ‘new’ Church of England and swear allegiance to Elizabeth, the then Queen of England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland in her capacity as ‘Protector of the Faith’.   Things became so hard for them that tens of thousands moved to Ulster in Northern Ireland.  

Others, though few at this stage, sailed to the new world and took up residence in the United States.   The land in the Province of Ulster, Northern Ireland had been confiscated from the Catholic Irish and basically granted freely to those in the Queens favour.

In Ulster, the Scottish Presbyterians were regularly harassed not only by the English but also by the nationalist Irish whose lands had been dispossessed.    The ‘new’ Ulster landowners also hated them.    Their Presbyterian churches were regularly burned down by their enemies and many were forced to travel by boat on Sundays back to the Scottish mainland   to   attend services.    Thousands were killed by the cruel sea..

When The Test Act of 1704 was passed into law by the English it caused even more  hardship to the Presbyterians, as marriages conducted by their ministers were now deemed by the government to be void and invalid. They were also further barred from worshipping in their churches, running schools or holding any form of public office.

At that time, they also became known as 'Blackmouths' due to the fact that in the summer they would eat blackberries during services in the hedgerows and fields.  They were a hardy set of people through necessity…..  

Oddly enough the Irish Catholics were also known as ‘blackmouths’ for the same reason that they too had to hold their services in the hedgerows and woodlands….

Many of the former Scots were involved in the Linen trade weaving and when the English placed additional tariffs on the Ulster industry, they found the situation totally untenable.

The earlier trickle of immigrants to America now became a flood……………….

The first small group of families had begun sailing to America in the 1690’s but by 1740 over a quarter of a million men, women and children had left. Their Presbyterian ministers sailed with them and as they had the basis of a well organised church with them, Presbyterianism began to spread rapidly across America.

Many moved to the South and mountainous regions. They wore red or orange neckerchiefs to signify their origins and became known as Rednecks. The later arrivals, after the Battle of the Boyne in 1690, when King William of Orange (King Billy) beat King James (the Irish/Jacobites), the men from the mountain regions became known as the ‘Billies from the Hills’, later changed to ‘Hillbillies’.




It is likely that even before the film Deliverance and the portrayal of the supposed Hillbillies in it, they have always been ridiculed.   However, their true history and bravery is magnificent and present-day America owes so much to those who carved their way across the continent during the Frontier years.

A few lines before I name names..................

Their hatred of the English because of the religious bigotry against them back home in Scotland first, then in Ulster made them ideal candidates to take the rebel side in the War of Independence against the Crown.

As one learned gentleman (ProfessorJames G.Leyburn) said of them "They provided some of the best fighters in the American army.  Indeed there were those who held the Scots-Irish responsible for the war itself".

George Washington himself once said "If defeated everywhere else, I will make my last stand for liberty among the Scots-Irish of my native Virginia".

The Scots-Irish provided 25 Generals and about one third of the rebel army.

The Pennsylvania Line was made up entirely of Scots-Irish emigrants and their sons. At the battle of Kings Mountain, a militia of mainly Scots-Irish Presbyterians defeated an English army twice its size.

President Theodore Roosevelt once said of the Scots-Irish "In the Revolutionary war, the fiercest and most ardent Americans of all were the Presbyterian Irish settlers and their descendants".

Probably my greatest shock of all during my reading was yet to come.

The Declaration of Independence was printed by an Ulster-Scot, John Dunlop and it was first read in public by a first generation Scots-Irish American, Colonel John Nixon. The first, and largest, signature on  the document came from another Scots-Irish Presbyterian, John Hancock.




Over the coming decades, the Scots-Irish gradually lost their identity and embraced America. The name fell out of use for almost a century until the arrival of the Catholic Irish during the Great Famine in the 1840’s.  Those refugees were known as Catholic Gaelic Irish and the Presbyterians reintroduced the name Scots-Irish.

The ‘new’ arrivals, the Catholics tended to congregate in Catholic Irish communities in New York, Chicago and Boston whilst the Scots-Irish population  spread  throughout  America  in particular  the Mid-West and Southern States.   With the promise of ‘better free land further West’, they would move off in large numbers, and colonise vast expanses of land.   Once again after a number of years, they would move off again.  

And so it continued..............


 



Nine of the men who died at the Alamo were actually born in Ulster, whilst Davy Crockett, William Travis and Jim Bowie were all first, second or third generation Scots-Irish as were many others.







Famous Scots-Irish Americans include Andrew Jackson, Davy Crockett, Sam Houston, Stonewall Jackson, Woodrow Wilson and others.  John Wayne, Willie Nelson and Elvis Presley are among many, many other famous American stars of film, stage and music.


Today there are about 27 Million Scots-Irish Presbyterian Americans and 17 Million Catholic Irish Americans – although many from a Protestant background regard themselves as Irish-Americans.

As I always thought that ‘the Irish in America’ were those who had sailed there during the Great Famine in the 1840’s, I feel that I must confess how wrong I was.    They too may well have produced some ‘great Americans’ but without a shadow of doubt the ‘true greatness’ was provided by the Presbyterian Scots-Irish or Ulster-Scots - whichever is preferred.

Hurray for the Rednecks and Hillbillies..................they deserve it.

I do however take a little pride in the fact that I can claim just a little connection.....John F. Kennedy was one of ours.................



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