The post that was up earlier today about the upcoming "Cleburne" movie got me thinking about how we categorize the Scotch-Irish and Anglo-Irish in this country and whether this is a twisting of how those people viewed themselves in the time period we as living historians address. Most Americans today who refer to themselves as "Scotch-Irish" usually only imply the "Irish" part of that. The actual history of "Ulster Scots" (the more period term from my reading), were Scotch Protestants, especially Presbyterians, who migrated almost exclusively to the 6 counties around Ulster and to Dublin in order to keep order against the native Catholic Irish. When many migrated to the Colonies and later the United States, they came to this country as Scots who had lived in Ireland, but maintained their Scottish heritage (mostly lowlander Scots). Many of the words associated with this period, "critter" instead of creature, "fixing," "thar" instead of there, "cracker" for a braggert, or "redneck" for a Presbyterian are all words from the Scots language - the Scottish Middle English language that is used in Scotland to this day - not Gaelic. A similar story follows the Anglo-Irish, who were encouraged to immigrate to Ireland with the promise of Catholic land in order to help rule and subdue the Irish. Men such as Aurthur Wellesley, otherwise known as the Duke of Wellington, certainly thought of themselves as Englishmen and not Irish, despite the place of their birth.
So, what sources has anyone found that would either reinforce this or dispute it? I think that we strongly over-emphasize the "Irish" part of both "Scotch-Irish" and "Anglo-Irish," and believe that both of those groups much more strongly associated themselves as Scottish or English than Irish. The accounts I have read that mention this point that way, but I will be the first to admit that I have seen only a small group of them. Can anyone else provide some insight or discussion?
So, what sources has anyone found that would either reinforce this or dispute it? I think that we strongly over-emphasize the "Irish" part of both "Scotch-Irish" and "Anglo-Irish," and believe that both of those groups much more strongly associated themselves as Scottish or English than Irish. The accounts I have read that mention this point that way, but I will be the first to admit that I have seen only a small group of them. Can anyone else provide some insight or discussion?
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