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From Ulster to the New World


Article # : 11248 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 5 / 1986  6,282 Words
Author : Richard K. MacMaster
Richard K. MacMaster is executive director of the Shenandoah Valley Historical Institute. With assistance from the National Endowment for the Humanities, he recently completed a study of the Ulster Scots in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia in the eighteenth century and their relations with other ethnic groups. He has published six books on eighteenth- century American history.

       President Woodrow Wilson once told an audience, half seriously, half in jest, that "no one who amounts to anything is without some Scotch-Irish blood." An American historian, Wilson knew of the widespread settlement of the Scotch-Irish, or Ulster Scots, in the New World. They had so many descendants that any American audience was sure to include many people with at least one Scotch-Irish ancestor. He was also well aware of his own heritage as his grandfather was born in Country Tyrone in Northern Ireland.
       
        Wilson was one of five American presidents with immediate ties to Ulster, the northern province of Ireland. Andrew Jackson's parents left there shortly before he was born. James Buchanan's father came from Derioran in Country Tyrone. Chester Arthur's father was born in a farmhouse which still stands in Cullybackey, County Antrim, and Grover Cleveland's grandfather also came from County Antrim. Ten other U.S. presidents, including Teddy Roosevelt and Richard Nixon, could claim a more distant Ulster Scot heritage.
       
        In fact, most Americans and Canadians can find an Ulster Scot on the branches of the family tree, even though they may identify themselves more with a different ethnic heritage. As Professor James Leyburn wrote in The Scotch-Irish: A Social History, Millions of Americans have Scotch-Irish ancestors, for when this country gained its independence at least one of every ten or fifteen Americans was Scotch-Irish. Already these recent newcomers had begun to intermarry with their neighbors, in a way that was to become characteristically American, with no particular concern about whether they were descended from Scots or Englishmen or any other national ... (1930 of 37494 Characters)
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