The Great
Migration from Ulster to America began in 1717. In some instances Ulster families had immigrated to the New World before 1717, but
those instances were few and isolated. Not all of them succeeded. In 1636 a group left Ireland but had to return because of violent
storms enroute. A group of Presbyterian families from the Laggan had better luck in 1684 and safely accomplished their voyage.
Here and there, over the years individual families made the trip across the Atlantic Ocean.
Some families
left Ulster for religious reasons, but most left in response to economic hardships. The English Parliament began to impose trade
restrictions on the manufacture and sale of woolen articles in the late-1690s. Up to that time, Ulster had thrived on her wool
and linen industries and had prospered more than any other province in Ireland. The immigration of the Huguenots in the
1680s to Ulster had strengthened her already strong wool industry by introducing some new methods for the manufacture of linen from
flax. The prosperity Ulster was experiencing was seen as a threat by the English who, in 1698, petitioned the King to protect their
own interests. The Irish Parliament, at the King's urging, passed the Woolens Act in the following year. The Woolens Act prohibited
the exportation of Irish wool and cloth to anywhere except England and Wales. The Woolens Act resulted in a period of
economic depression throughout Ulster.
Coupled with the
economic hardships spawned by the Woolens Act, was a legal
practice known as rack-renting which was instituted in the
early-1700s. Rack-renting was the practice whereby a renter could
legally raise the rent when a lease had run out. Although that
practice does not seem unusual in this day and age, it was quite
a departure from the traditional during the Seventeenth and
Eighteenth Centuries. The traditional practice was for a lease to
run approximately thirty years with the option of being renewed
at the same rate. The renter would be inclined to improve the
property under the assumption that he would be able to reside
there indefinitely and then pass the lease on to his own sons.
Money was hard to come by and rack-renting forced many renters to
default on their payments. A widespread hatred of the practice
and those landlords who employed it swept through Ulster. Having
received favourable reports from others who had gone to America,
many families resolved to leave Ireland.
The thing that
finally led to the Great Migration came in the form of a severe
drought that stretched from 1714 to 1719. The drought affected
not only did food crops, but also hindered the growing of flax
and thereby adversely affected the linen industry. Lack of
sufficient grass for grazing, and the disease known as rot,
killed the sheep needed by the wool industry. It is often noted
in a broad statement that the Europeans immigrated to the New
World because of religious persecution, and that may well have
been the reason for some of them. But the Ulster-Scots came
primarily because of the droughts and the failing economy in
their homeland.
There were five
major waves of emigration from the Irish province of Ulster. It
should be noted that there were very few instances recorded of
any of the native Irish leaving their homeland; the Irish first
immigrated to the United States after the mid-1800s when the
failure of the potato crop caused widespread famine. The
emigrants who left Ireland prior to the American Revolutionary
War came solely from the province of Ulster. More than five
thousand people emigrated from Ulster in 1717-1718. Those
families sent back favourable reports, which helped to pave the
way for future migrations. Between 1725 and 1729 there was
another wave of emigration from Ulster, again induced primarily
by the suffering caused by rack-renting. During that migration it
was estimated that over six thousand people left Ulster in 1728
alone. In 1740 a major famine devastated Ireland and brought
about the third major wave of emigration from Ulster. The fourth
wave emigrated in 1754-1755, partly as a result of hardships
occasioned by drought and partly because of an effort made by the
governor of the province of North Carolina to attract settlers to
that colony. Governor Dobbs had left Ulster himself, and his call
was answered by many other Ulstermen. The last major wave of
emigration occurred between 1771 and 1775. At least twenty-five
thousand people are believed to have emigrated during this
period. That great wave of departure from Ireland was motivated
primarily by the eviction of so many families from county Antrim
when the leases on the estate of the Marquis of Donegal expired
and the settlers could not comply with the rack-renting demands.
Altogether, approximately 200,000 people, primarily of Scottish
descent and Presbyterian faith, left Ulster and sailed for
America between 1717 and 1775.
The Ulster-Scots
chose the colony of Pennsylvania as their destination in the New
World. When considering which colony to make their new homes in,
the Ulster- Scots really had only limited choices. The southern
colonies were not very enticing with their slave labour and
plantation system of agriculture. Nor was Maryland because it had
been established as a Roman Catholic colony. Although not
Catholic, New York had made it clear to earlier immigants that
she would not tolerate religious diversity. Of the choices
between New England and Pennsylvania, the earliest immigrants had
been made to feel unwelcome at Boston, the primary port of entry.
The single colony that welcomed the Ulster- Scots with open arms
was Pennsylvania. As noted previously, Governor Dobbs of North
Carolina invited fellow Ulster-Scots to settle in that colony,
but that was only after Pennsylvania had become overly crowded
with immigrants. In fact, that was one of the selling points the
governor used to entice settlers southward from William Penn's
colony.
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