Scots Irish in the Revolution
I rarely point out the mistakes of others, but, as a
descendant of Rutherfords and Fraziers and other families of
Ulster Scots, I was afraid that many may believe this statement
contained in a family file sent to me. It was concerning an
enlistment in the Colonial Army during the Revolution:
"This was a dangerous move , as most of the population of Moore
County were Scots, who were loyal to the British King."
This is tragic misinformation. The following are exerpts from
lectures and books at Clemson University:
"The Scots-Irish settlers made superb frontiersmen in early
Colonial America. Their experiences over the previous few
centuries, first in the Scottish Borders and then fighting the
Irish Catholics in the north of Ireland had created a race of
hardy unyielding people who were ideally suited to clearing the
forests to build farms and pushing the borders further and
further west.
Their experience of religious discrimination in Ulster by their
Episcopal English landlords meant the Scots-Irish had no
hesitation in taking the side of the rebels in the War of
Independence. In the words of Professor James G. Leyburn "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".
No less a figure than George Washington 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 a third of the
revolutionary army. The Pennsylvania Line was made up entirely of
Ulster-Scots emigrants and their sons. The Battle of Kings
Mountain was a Scots-Irish battle where a militia of mainly
Scots-Irish Presbyterians defeated an English army twice its
size.
President Theodore Roosevelt 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"
The Declaration of Independence was printed by an Ulster-Scot,
John Dunlop, read in public by a first generation Scots-Irish
American Colonel John Nixon and the first signature came from
another Scots-Irish Presbyterian, John Hancock.
"One of the highest concentrations of Scots-Irish were in the
Carolinas and many, after fulfilling indentured service
contracts, had been forced to migrate over the Southern
Appalachians for new land. In 1772, it was Scots-Irish settlers
who formed the first independent government in America at Watauga
in what would become the state of Tennessee. They continued to
settle in the Appalachian valleys beyond colonial rule and,
although their loyalty was questioned by their adoptive country,
the settlers proved themselves vital in the American Revolution’s
victories at Cowpens and Kings Mountain. In addition, they
numbered many in the Regular Colonial Army. When the war was
going badly for the American colonies, then-General George
Washington expressed uncompromising confidence in the Scots-Irish
ranks of the American militias.
"If defeated everywhere else," said Washington, "I will make my
stand for liberty among the Scots-Irish of my native Virginia."
In fact, following the Revolution, a British Major-General
testified before a committee at the British House of Commons that
"half the Continental Army were from Ireland – Scots-Irish."
No Irishman, nor Scot, ever loved an English King. They were sent
here, or fled here, because of English persecution.
Posted by: Ronald Couch mcouch@cableynx.com