Quote Originally Posted by FossilHunter View Post
Maybe you’re a German “braun” whose family moved to Scotland, and changed it to brown before moving to Canada!
That's interesting. I was aware of the German mass immigrations into New York colony and into Ireland. I was aware of the Scottish mass immigrations into Ireland, Canada and Australia. I've never heard of any mass immigrations of Germans into Canada.

What can you tell me about that mass immigration?

Quote Originally Posted by KiltedSergeant View Post
Brown is a sept of Clan Douglas, which is mostly the southwest of Scotland, somewhere about Dumfries, south of Glasgow, and the central lowlands (see Douglas, UK). That knowledge might be of some use.
Quote Originally Posted by Bruce Scott View Post
It is also claimed to be a sept of Clans MacMillan, MacDonald and Lamont, which is of no help at all unless you can trace your forebears to a particular location.
Thank you both. I was unaware that the Clan MacDonald and Clan Douglas also had Brown septs. I've also discovered (in the last day) that there's a Boyd sept of Browns.
The information doesn't lead me to an answer to my questions, but additional relevant information is always welcome.

Quote Originally Posted by Singlemalt View Post
If you did some searching on Canadian immigration websites you might find something that would state his place of birth. It is on my Grandparent's immigration records.
There wasn't any formal immigration back in the 1850s. Starting in 1803, ships sailing to North America were required to keep passenger lists ... but most of those have been lost. Here are a couple examples of what's available:
http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discove...?IdNumber=899&
http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discove...?IdNumber=900&

As you can see from the first example, the record doesn't show the age of this William Brown. There's no way to match him up, or rule him out, as being my great x2 grandfather. In addition, even if I could confirm that this was the correct William Brown, there's no point of origin for the ship.

In the second example, William Browne again lacks an age. This passenger record includes a point of origin and a destination ... both of which are in Ontario, Canada. I'm not entirely sure how one takes a ship from Hamilton to Preston, since Preston is straight inland from Hamilton. But that's the information available.

I asked about broader immigration trends, because the specific information I'd prefer wasn't available.

Quote Originally Posted by Bruce Scott View Post
Details of his birthplace may be on his Canadian marriage certificate.
That far back, few of the records have survived. Specifically, the disparate collections have a grand total of Canadian 36,000 birth, death and marriage records occurring between 1749 and 1917. In other words, most are missing ... including his.

This is the sort of thing the family genealogists have already gone looking for ... specifically because there's such a wealth of information on the marriage records.

Quote Originally Posted by cessna152towser View Post
Be happy that you have Scots ancestry, whether Highland or Lowland.
I suspect that you own a kilt that has a tartan which relates to your ancestry ... either a clan, or a district where your family has lived. I would also like to be able to wear a kilt that reflects my family's background.