knoxcotn-digest Tuesday, March 6 2001 Volume 01 : Number 185

 

 

 

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Date: Mon, 05 Mar 2001 15:26:49 -0500

From: "Billie R. McNamara" <knox@tngenweb.org>

Subject: Re: [KnoxCoTN] Old phone directories

Nancy, this is WONDERFUL! Thank you!

May we turn it into a Web page and give you credit for typing?

At 01:24 PM 3/5/01 -0500, Tenc@aol.com wrote:

>At Billie's suggestion, I am going to transcribe two old directories from The

>People's Telephone and Telegraph Company. The names are listed by exchange,

<snipped>

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Date: Tue, 06 Mar 2001 10:14:22 -0500

From: "Billie R. McNamara" <knox@tngenweb.org>

Subject: [KnoxCoTN] Billy Kennedy's lecture text

Mr. Kennedy graciously gave me a copy of his lecture in Dandridge last

night with allowance to share it here. Please realize this is his

copyrighted material and CAN NOT be distributed beyond this list without

his express permission.

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Lecture by journalist-author BILLY KENNEDY - Dandridge (Tennessee), Roanoke

(Virginia) and Cumberland Gap Centre, Middlesboro (Kentucky) March, 2001.

- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Heroism was a distinct characteristic of the Scots-Irish immigrants who

settled on the American frontier in the 18th century and the raw courage

shown by this dogged, determined people in very difficult circumstances

helped shape the fabric of the United States as an embryonic nation and,

ultimately, as the world power it is today.

Forging a civilisation out of a wilderness was a real challenge for the

tens of thousands of Ulster Presbyterians who landed on American shores in

different waves 200-250 years ago, and how well they succeeded in moulding

a decent, law-abiding society, from the eastern New England seaboard

states, into the Appalachian region, south to Texas and Mississippi and

west towards California on the Pacific coastline.

The Scots-Irish heroes, and the heroines (the wonderful womenfolk who made

the family, the home and Christianity the cornerstone of frontier life!)

have become enshrined in American history, not just US Presidents,

statesmen, soldiers and churchmen, but the many plain ordinary citizens

whose quiet, unselfish deeds were worthy of note and a shining example to

others.

The outstandingly high level of achievement by so many luminaries from the

Scots-Irish diaspora in states like Tennessee, Virginia, Pennsylvania,

Kentucky, North Carolina, Georgia, South Carolina and Texas must be

measured against the great suffering and pain first families endured during

early formative years on the frontier.

Faith and Freedom were the cherished watchwords of the doughty Scots-Irish

Presbyterians, and these ideals kept them going as they moved during the

17th century Plantation years over the short sea journey from Scotland to

Ulster, and then trekked arduously across the Atlantic on the adventure

into the great unknown of the frontier lands of the `New World'.

God-fearing Scots-Irish, or Ulster-Scots, combined in their ideals: a total

reverence for the Almighty, a deep devotion to their families, sincere love

of country and passionate belief in their liberty. Generally as a people

the Scots-Irish stayed true to the four main cornerstones of life: God,

Country, Family and Liberty, although there were some, as in every

community, who did not attain these standards.

The Scots-Irish were well-prepared for establishing settlements on the

American frontier. They had endured, for more than a century life in the

harsh, rugged and, in parts, hostile countryside of the north of Ireland

and by the time they reached America had survived wars, sieges, famines,

drought and religious persecuation. They were a people certainly not

deterred by the dangers they faced in their new environment, and most found

the wide open spaces to their liking.

Indeed, largely due to past experiences in lowland Scotland and the north

of Ireland, Scots-Irish fared much better than other white ethnic groups

like the English, Germans, Welsh, Dutch, Scottish highlanders and

Scandinavians in resisting hostilities of the native American tribes; in

fending off English, French and Spanish colonial predators and oppressors

and in pushing the frontier south and west to its outer limits.

The Scots-Irish effectively set parameters of life in many cities and towns

along the western frontier of 18th century America, and with close

identification to church, school and home they were able to lay foundations

for a civilised society, which placed total emphasis on a belief in God and

in the liberty of conscience and democracy.

Celebrated Northern Ireland historian-folklorist the Rev W. F. Marshall

summed up their work ethic and commitment to a cause: "The Scots-Irish were

the first to start and the last to quit. Vigour and grit of the race were

seen in their pioneering instinct."

The early Scots-Irish settlers were willing, even eager, to go beyond the

"outer fringe of civilisation" and establish settlements on the frontier.

Their experience as colonists in Ireland had made them adaptable and

assimilative of the best traits needed for survival on the frontier and

their farming methods - the slash-and-burn clearing of farms, corn-based

cropping and the running of livestock in open woods - were techniques

ideally suited for the southern Appalachian backcountry.

Three hundred years have elapsed since the first Scots-Irish immigrants

landed on American soil and, in that time the enormous landscape they

inhabited has changed beyond all recognition, with political, social and

cultural perspectives of the population now increasingly diverse in what

has become a great melting pot of humanity.

Fundamentals of Faith and Freedom, so profound, meaningful and enriching to

the proud pioneering people from Ulster and lowland Scotland, were

permanently enshrined in the constitutional imperatives of the American

nation, and today they are testimony to all that was achieved in early

formative years of struggle and supreme sacrifice on the frontier. The

Declaration of Independence of July 4, 1776, which Ulstermen helped draw

up, contained fine Christian sentiments: "We hold these truths to be

self-evident, that men are created equal, that they are endowed by their

creator, with certain inalienable rights, that among them are life,

liberty, pursuit of happiness."

John Patterson MacLean, noted 19th century historian, said of the

Scots-Irish: "They practised strict discipline in morals and gave

instruction to the youth in their schools and in teaching Biblical

scriptures. To all this combined in a remarkable degree, acuteness of

intellect, firmness of purpose and concientiousness to duty."

From Pennsylvania through the Shenadoah Valley of Virginia to the

Carolinas along the Great Wagon Road they came; to Tennessee, Georgia,

Kentucky, on to the territories of Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma,

Kansas, Colorado and California. The Scots-Irish blazed the pioneering

trail in America for others to follow. They were a durable, determined

people with the special personal stamp needed to tame the wilds of the

frontier, and make it a place for civilised family life.

The Scots-Irish who settled on the American fontier through the 18th

century were of the people who moved across from lowland Scotland from 1610

in the Ulster Plantation. They made the short sea journey from Ayrshire,

Argyllshire, Renfrewshire, Lanarkshire, Dumfriesshire to principally

counties Antrim, Down, Londonderry, Tyrone, Donegal. In the passage of

time, many of them, because of religious persecution and economic

deprivation, faced the long arduous trek across the Atlantic.

North Carolina academic James G. Leyburn, in a social history of the

Scotch-Irish, described the Scots who moved to Ulster as humble folk with

ambition and qualities of character that made good pioneers. "Even

Presbyterian ministers who worked among them in Ulster were usually from

humbler walks of Scottish life, for The Kirk offered no sinecures for

younger sons of the gentry." Scots-Irish were a unique people and the

extent of their influence in the establishment of the USA after the

Revolutionary War was considerable. Scots-Irish are described as clannish,

contentious, hard to get on with, set in their ways. A Scots-Irish prayer

ran: "Lord grant that I may always be right, for Thou knowest I am hard to

turn."

As Presbyterians, this independent spirited people were non-conformist to

the E Established church of the day, the Anglican or Episcopalian code, and

during their 18th century settlement in Ulster they found great obstacles

raised to the means of propagating and witnessing for their Calvinist

doctrine and faith.

For about 100 years from 1610, the Scots worked the farms and the textile

industry with French Huguenots. They erected meeting houses for

Presbyterian form of worship, schools for their children's education. In

Presbyterian mindset, the church and the school are inter-twinned and this

was the case when the Scots-Irish arrived in Ireland, and subsequently in

America.

During the reign of Queen Anne, from about 1702, a High Anglican church

faction became dominant in government circles in London, enacting laws

which weighed heavily on the minds and consciences of the Ulster

Presbyterians. These laws required all officer-holders under the Crown in

Ireland to take sacraments of the established Episcopal Church and, as many

Presbyterians were magistrates and civil servants in towns like Belfast,

Londonderry, Lisburn and Carrickfergus, they were automatically

disqualified unless they renounced the Calvinist faith of their forefathers

in Scotland.

Members of the Roman Catholic faith, who in the main constituted the native

Irish population in Ireland, also bore the brunt of the discriminatory Test

Act. However, in the administering of religion Roman Catholic priests were

at least recognised by the High Churchmen as being lawfully ordained. Not

so Presbyterian ministers, and right across the north of Ireland they were

turned out of their pulpits and threatened with legal proceedings should

they defy the Episcopal edict from London. Ministers had no official

standing; they were unable to sanctify marriage, to ofciate at the burial

of members of their congregations, confer baptism, and prevented from

teaching on any aspect of Presbyterian doctrine.

This was a narrow ill-thought-out piece of legislation which left the

Presbyterian population of Ulster, by then a highly significant section of

the community, deeply resentful and almost totally alienated from political

masters in the English Established church. It had the effect of making the

Presbyterian people speak increasingly of starting a new life in America.

Their protests were ignored and there was, from the pulpit to the pew, the

feeling that this might be the only way to ease the suffering.

The harsh economics of life in the north of Ireland in the early 18th

century was another salient factor which made immigration more appealing.

Four years of drought made life almost unbearable for the small peasant

farmers on the hillsides of Ulster and, with the High Church landlords

staking claims to exhorbitant rents (evictions were commonplace in Ulster

at the time!), and the textile industry in recession, movement of the

Scots-Irish to America began in earnest.

The 150-tonne Eagle Wing was the first passenger ship to set sail from

Ulster's shores to America, but the 1636 voyage from tiny Co Down port

Groomsport was aborted after heavy mid-Atlantic storms. Some 140

Presbyterians from both sides of Belfast Lough left Groomsport on September

9 for Boston. The journey ended in Carrickfergus Bay on November 3 with

ship's shrouds asunder, mainsail in ribbons and rudder badly damaged.

It was a traumatic experience for the voyagers who had completed

three-quarters of their journey when one of the Presbyterian ministers on

board the Rev John Livingstone advised that it was God's will they should

return home. The ship's captain was of similar mind, the ship was turned

around. The Eagle Wing journey, nothwithstanding its apparent failure, is

remarkable in that it took place 16 years after the Pilgrim Fathers landed

at Plymouth Rock after crossing the Atlantic on the Mayflower.

Between 1717 and the American Revolutionary War period, an estimated

quarter of a million people left the north of Ireland for the New World,

most of them Presbyterian stock. They sailed, in simple wooden sailing

ships, from Belfast, Larne, Londonderry, Portrush and Newry, arriving at

Philadelphia, New Castle and Charleston. The hazardous journey across the

Atlantic took an enormous toll on some, but despite health perils faced

through over-crowding, and lack of food and water, most reached their

destination to start a new life in more amenable surroundings.

In 1717 - the first year the ships were chartered for 5,000 men and women

to head to Pennsylvania, drought completely ruined crops on the Ulster

farmlands. Poverty in the homeland, and restrictions placed on dissenting

faith, by the ruling British Establishment of the day, made the promise of

a better life irresistable.

There were five great waves of Ulster Presbyterian emigration to America:

in 1717-18, 1725-29, 1740-41, 1754-55 and 1771-75. The Irish famine of

1739-41 had resulted in the death of 400,000 people and when the Ulster

settlers arrived in America in those years they set their sights beyond the

borders of Pennsylvania - along the path of the Great Wagon Road down

through the Valley of Virginia, the Shenandoah, and on to South and North

Carolina. Next to the English, the Scots-Irish became by the end of the

18th century, the most influential of the white population in America,

which by 1790, numbered 3,173,444. At the time, the Scots-Irish segment of

the population totalled about 14 per cent and this figure was much higher

in the Appalachian states.

The Scots-Irish totally assimilated into the mainstream of American

society. They were, of course, first Americans, and pioneered new

townships, after cutting their way through dense forests and traversing

formidable river and mountain barriers.

The Revolutionary War was a watershed for the contribution the Scots-Irish

made to American life and it is estimated that up to 75 per cent of this

disaspora back the patriot cause against the Crown. As many as 10 of the 56

signatories of the Declaration of Independence of July 4, 1776 were of

Ulster origin. John Hancock, President of Congress, was the best known - he

had family ties to Co Down. John Dunlap, who moved to America from

Strabane, Co Tyrone, printed the first copies of the Declaration, while

Colonel John Nixon, of Ulster grandparents, gave the first public reading

of the document in Philadelphia on July 8, 1776.

Seventeen of the 42 US Presidents have Scots-Irish ancestry: Andrew

Jackson, James Knox Polk, Andrew Johnson, James Buchannan, Ulysses Simpson

Grant, Chester Alan Arthur, Grover Cleveland, Benjamin Harrison, William

McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, Harry Truman, Richard

Millhouse Nixon, James Earl Carter, George Bush Sen., William Jefferson

Clinton and George W. Bush.

James Buchanan, whose family came from Co Tyrone, said: "My Ulster blood is

my most priceless heritage."

John C. Calhoun, eminent 19th century South Carolina statesman, was

Vice-President for two terms; his father Patrick was a Co Donegal

Presbyterian. Charles Thomson, Continental Congress Secretary for 15 years

until 1789, left his Maghera, Co Londonderry homeland at the age of 10. He

was a close associate of George Washington and designed the first Great

Seal of America.

Statesmen, politicians, soldiers and frontiersmen. There was Davy Crockett,

born at Limestone, Tennessee, grandson of an Ulster emigrant from East

Donegal/North Tyrone, while Houston, born at Lexington, Virginia, was of an

East Antrim family. Their lifestyles and exploits centred on Tennessee and

Texas are legendary.

The men who founded Nashville in 1780 - John Donelson (Andrew Jackson's

father-in-law!) and James Robertson - were of Co Antrim roots, while

founding fathers of Knoxville were also of Ulster vintage - James White,

his grandfather was from Londonderry, and John Adair and George McNutt,

born Ballymena, Co Antrim.

There were illustrious churchman: Revs Samuel Doak, who raised the standard

for the Overmountain Men at the battle of Kings Mountain by taking

inspiration from the deeds of Gideon; Rev Joseph Rhea; Rev John Craig (his

Shenandoah Valley parish in the 1740s extended to thousands of miles!); Rev

William Martin, outspoken fiery Covenanter, and Rev William Tennant, of the

Princeton log cabin theological college.

Nine of the 189 men, mostly Texans and Tennesseans, who died at The Alamo

in March, 1836, fighting for the freedom and liberty of Texas, were born in

Ireland, mostly in Ulster, and many others in this gallant number, like

Davy Crockett, were first, second or third generation away from 18th

century Scots-Irish pioneering settlers who crossed the Atlantic on the

immigrant ships. Irish-born soldiers who died at The Alamo were: Samuel

Burns, Andrew Duvalt, Robert Evans, Joseph Mark Hawkins, James McGee,

Jackson J. Rusk, Burke Trammel and William B. Ward

Many Civil War soldiers of distinction on the Confederate and Union sides

were of Ulster-Scots origin: they included Thomas Jonathan `Stonewall'

Jackson, whose great grandfather John Jackson came from the Birches in Co

Armagh; J. E. B. Stuart, a great great grandson of Archibald Stuart from

Londonderry; Ulysses Simpson Grant, George Brinton McClellan and Ambrose

Everett Burnside.

Others of Scots-Irish roots were: Samuel Lanthorn Clements (author Mark

Twain% poet-playwright Edgar Allen Poe; 19th century farm machine inventor

Cyrus McCormick; Pittsburgh banker Andrew Mellon; songwriter Stephen

Collins Foster; Co Antrim-born James Adair, who in the mid-18th century

wrote the first authoritative book on native American tribes; James

Maitland Stewart, the Holywood film actor; frontier mountain man Kit

Carson, and William Clark, who, with Meriwether Lewis, led the great

expedition in 1804-06 from Mississippi over the Rocky Mountains to the

Pacific. The Clark-Lewis expedition, initiated by President Thomas

Jefferson, was remarkable in its exploration of soil, climate, plant and

animal life. Clark's Virginian family were of Ulster origin. The wealthy

Hearst publishing dynasty also traces its roots back to John Hearst, a Co

Monaghan Presbyterian who, along with 300 kinsfolk, sailed from Newry, Co

Down in 1764 for a fare of six shillings and eightpence each.

In the United States today an estimated 44 million people claim Irish

extraction. Of these, 56 per cent can trace their roots back to the

Scots-Irish Presbyterians who moved in the 18th century. There were many

daring exploits by this people who tamed the American frontier. They were a

people undeterred, God-fearing with a sterling work ethic and a stake in

life which unrelentingly pushed them towards new horizons.

A simple inscription at Greenville Presbyterian Church in the South

Carolina Piedmont region sums up the contribution of the Scots-Irish in

America: "Sacred to the memory of the Scots-Irish pioneers. From the home

land they brought their faith to enrich the South. Their brave hearts and

strong arms to subdue the wilderness."

- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

* Scots-Irish Chronicles by Billy Kennedy - Scots-Irish in the Hills of

Tennessee (1995); Scots-Irish in the Shenandoah Valley (1996); Scots-Irish

in the Carolinas (1997); Scots-Irish in Pennsylvania and Kentucky (1998);

Faith and Freedom: Scots-Irish in America (1999); Heroes of the Scots-Irish

in America (2000).

- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

Scots-Irish: Quotations:

* GENERAL GEORGE WASHINGTON said: "If defeated everywhere else, I will make

my stand for liberty among the Scots-Irish in my native Virginia."

* PRESIDENT WILLIAM McKINLEY said: "The Scots-Irish were the first to

proclaim for liberty in these United States. Even before Lexington,

Scots-Irish blood had been shed for American freedom. In the forefront of

every battle was seen their burnished mail and in the retreat was heard

their voice of constancy."

* Confederacy leader ROBERT E. LEE was once asked: "What race of people do

you believe make the best soldiers?" He replied: "The Scots who came to

this country by way of Ireland."

* PRESIDENT THEODORE ROOSEVELT said: "It is doubtful if we fully realised

the part played by this stern and verile people. They formed the kernel of

that American stock who were the pioneers of our people in the march

westwards. They were bold and hardy people who pushed beyond the settled

regions of American and plunged into the wilderness as the leaders of the

white advance. The Presbyterians were the first and the last set of

immigrants to do this. All others have merely followed in the wake of their

predecessors."

* PRESIDENT WOODROW WILSON once said: "The beauty about a Scotch-Irishman

is that he not only thinks he is right, but he knows he is right."

* Historian J. A FROUDE said: "The Scots-Irish had a system of religious

faith which has ever borne an inflexible front to illusion and mendacity,

and has preferred to be ground like flint than to bend before violence or

melt under enervating temptation."

* American historian the REV JETHRO RUMPLE said: "We have good reason to be

proud of the early pioneers from Ireland and Germany, others of English,

Welsh and Scottish descent. They laid the foundations of their homes. They

were men and women who suffered from conscience sake, or fled from

despotism to seek liberty unrestrained by the shackles of a worn-out

civilisation."

* 19th century American historian GEORGE BANCROFT said: "They brought to

America no submissive love for England; and their experience and their

religion alike bade them meet opposition with prompt resistance. The first

voice publicly raised in America to dissolve all connection with Great

Britain came not from the Puritains of New England or the Dutch of New York

or the planters of Virginia, but Scots-Irish Presbyterians. A paradoxical

fact regarding the Scotch-Irish is that they are very little Scotch and

much less Irish. They do not belong mainly to the so-called Celtic race,

but they are the most composite of all of the people of the British Isles.

They are called Scots- because they lived in Scotoia and they are called

Irish because they moved to Ireland. Geography and ethnology has given them

their name."

* Historian CHARLES WILLIAM DABNEY said: "Wherever the Scotch-Irish settled

in America they started schools. As the parsons were the best educated men

in they taught the youth as part of their ministry. In time, the schools

they started in their frontier congregations grew to be common schools for

all. Later some of them became academies and a few became colleges and

universities. In this way, Ulster Presbyterians did more to start schools

in the south and west than any other people."

* JAMES LOGAN, Ulster-born Provincial Secretary in Pennsylvania in the

early 18th century, wrote: "A settlement of five families from the north of

Ireland give me more trouble than 50 of any other people." Logan admitted

the Scots-Irish were "troublesome settlers and hard neighbours to the

Indians". Many settled on lands without bothering to secure legal rights

for it - they started the practice of squatting.

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End of knoxcotn-digest V1 #185

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