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7th April 10, 11:03 AM
#1
In an earlier post, Todd, I did not mean to imply that the plantation folk thought of themselves as "Irish" as in natives, but that they had no connection or communication with their former homeland and, if they did think of themselves as Scots, they did not think of themselves as Highland Scots. The Gaelic was quickly lost, even among those who came in from the Southern Isles.
Rex,
My apologies; I should have been a bit more clear in making that explanation for general purposes. In the US, there is a common myth that to be "Scots-Irish" is to be half-Scottish, half-Irish, and is still quite common, so that you will find folks who are Evangelical Protestants wearing green on St. Patrick's Day and espousing the romantic "Irish Rebel" mythology that the Irish-American community loves over here, but whose ancestors no doubt manned Derry's Walls and fought with William at the Boyne! 
Of course, we're drifting towards "The Troubles" now, so I'll try to reign my thoughts in.
T.
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7th April 10, 11:11 AM
#2
 Originally Posted by cajunscot
Rex,
My apologies; I should have been a bit more clear in making that explanation for general purposes. In the US, there is a common myth that to be "Scots-Irish" is to be half-Scottish, half-Irish, and is still quite common, so that you will find folks who are Evangelical Protestants wearing green on St. Patrick's Day and espousing the romantic "Irish Rebel" mythology that the Irish-American community loves over here, but whose ancestors no doubt manned Derry's Walls and fought with William at the Boyne!
Of course, we're drifting towards "The Troubles" now, so I'll try to reign my thoughts in.
T.
Ahhhh, says he as the light brightens. Thank you, Todd. Well explained. In Scotland we look across the water to the NA continent and see much of that "romantic mythology" you refer to. The extreme value of this forum is that -- sometimes -- myths can be separated from realities to everyone's acceptance and benefit.
Rex
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7th April 10, 11:34 AM
#3
 Originally Posted by ThistleDown
Ahhhh, says he as the light brightens. Thank you, Todd. Well explained. In Scotland we look across the water to the NA continent and see much of that "romantic mythology" you refer to. The extreme value of this forum is that -- sometimes -- myths can be separated from realities to everyone's acceptance and benefit.
Rex
Indeed, Rex. I dealt with it on an almost daily basis when working as a genealogy librarian at my local public library. 
T.
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7th April 10, 11:46 AM
#4
 Originally Posted by cajunscot
Rex,
(snip)you will find folks who are Evangelical Protestants wearing green on St. Patrick's Day and espousing the romantic "Irish Rebel" mythology that the Irish-American community loves over here, but whose ancestors no doubt manned Derry's Walls and fought with William at the Boyne! 
(snip)
T.
OMG, they're on the wrong track there! But how to inform them without making them militant in the other direction?...? Better leave well enough alone unless they start contributing to the "Widows and Orphans Funds" AKA the "Making Widows and Orphans Funds" -which now that I've said it are supposedly things of the past.
And yes, the Scots Irish migration included Hugenots, Border English, and other protestant groups who had sought refuge in Ulster. There aren't many heroes of the Frontier and Wild West era who were not descendants of them. They say Boone was not but I think that just needs work.
Last edited by Lallans; 7th April 10 at 01:15 PM.
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7th April 10, 11:53 AM
#5
 Originally Posted by Canuck of NI
OMG, they're on the wrong track there! But how to inform them without making them militant in the other direction?...? Better leave well enough alone unless they start contributing to the "Widows and Orphans Funds" AKA the "Making Widows and Orphans Funds" -which now that I've said it are supposedly things of the past.
And yes, the Scots Irish migration included Hugenots, Border English, and other protestant groups who had sought refuge in Ulster. There aren't many heroes of the Frontier and Wild West era who were not descendants of them. They say Boone was not but I think that just needs work.
Boone was of English Quaker stock, although his neighbors were certainly of Ulster-Scots blood, although as we've already discussed, to be "Scots-Irish" is to really be a mixture of different ethnic groups. Also, The Scots-Irish were an "invisible" immigrant group that quickly became Americans as soon as they began to push west, thus confirming somewhat Turner's Frontier Thesis of American history.
T.
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7th April 10, 12:00 PM
#6
[deleted accidental double post}
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