To: SunkenCiv
Dad always told us we were Scotch-Irish. I happen to read a while back all that meant is we were Protestant Irish, but we were Irish. The designation was to separate us from Irish Catholics.
Did I receive accurate information?
17 posted on
07/18/2004 8:30:05 PM PDT by
dix
(Remember the Alamo, and God bless Texas)
To: dix
Scots-Irish are Lowland Scots (Lallans) that settled in Northern Ireland.
18 posted on
07/18/2004 8:34:13 PM PDT by
stands2reason
(Kerry/Edwards: TERRORISTS FLEE FROM BETTER HAIR!!!)
To: dix
Your information is accurate, except your ancestors were imported from Scotland to pacify the Catholic insurrection on the emerald isle. Scot Irish were highly favored immigrants to America, because they were known to be rugged, and facile with the gun, and not too interested in abstractions, and thus were deemed ideal as frontiersmen to pacify the Indians just as they had pacified the Catholic Irish. And that proved to be the case. President Jackson and George Wallace are two prominant Scot Irish American politicians. Perhaps 40 million Americans have some Scot Irish blood as a wild guess. Of course, the clan has been rather totally assimilated at this point. Oh the horror.
20 posted on
07/18/2004 8:42:11 PM PDT by
Torie
To: dix
Could be, but also some folks really are Scottish and Irish in origin. In part anyway. I've got that. :')
23 posted on
07/18/2004 9:16:03 PM PDT by
SunkenCiv
(Unlike some people, I have a profile. Okay, maybe it's a little large...)
To: dix
Yes, hence the term Orange Irish, as opposed to Green Irish (catholic) Northern Ireland was termed the Irish plantation. Great book on this titled *Born Fighting* by James Webb.
33 posted on
10/05/2013 10:34:44 PM PDT by
Conservative4Ever
(A pox on the House of Apple and the ios7 horse they rode in on.)
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