It took me a long time to figure out a curiosity that kept appearing on nineteenth century census returns that were connected to my ancestors. I knew full well that the patriarch of my family came from Nigg, Ross-shire, Scotland. However, when I searched the census returns of different decades, a pattern developed that indicated each of his children had been born in Ireland.
I thought perhaps the census taker had committed an error in transcribing the data since most of my early ancestors were listed as not being able to read or write. I later discovered that in the early waves of emigration that occurred as a result of the Scottish Highland Clearances, many of the uprooted families made it as far as Northern Ireland - which, for them was a long voyage, and settled there along with families and friends. Over time they were referred to as the Scotch-Irish.
The term stuck with them when most later emigrated to the New World.
Gary Ross
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