The initial
settlements in Pennsylvania were made in the south eastern counties in the vicinity of the ports of Philadelphia, Chester
and New Castle. As more and more families arrived, they moved further westward. The towns in the eastern region were inhabited
by the Quakers, who had founded the colony, and the Germans, who had begun immigrating to the colony in the early-1700s. Many of
the Ulster-Scots who were forced to emmigrate from Ireland because of the economic conditions in their homeland could make
the voyage only by entering into indentured servitude. The services of those individuals and families were most often
purchased by the wealthy Quakers, and therefore they settled in that region. As soon as they became freed of their obligations
they generally moved onward. The Ulster-Scots who had been able to finance their journey to America tended to move beyond the
already inhabited sections of the province and homesteaded in the frontier regions.
In the period from the year 1717 through the 1750s the "frontier" was
in the present-day counties of Berks, Lebanon, Lancaster, York and Adams. Through the 1760s and into the 1770s the
"frontier" was pushed north and westward with the acquisition of lands from the Indians and the erection of
Cumberland and Northampton Counties in 1750 and 1752 respectively. In 1771 Bedford County was formed out of
Cumberland. In the following year Northumberland County was formed out of Northampton. Then in 1773 Westmoreland County was
formed out of the western portion of Bedford. The erection of each new county points to the influx of settlers; as the frontier
regions were settled and became more and more crowded, the demand for conveniently accessible courts of law arose. When the
Pennsylvania Assembly saw that a particular region had reached a certain level of inhabitants and merited being separated into
smaller jurisdictional regions, it granted the requests and erected a new county.
Of course the
Ulster-Scots were not the only ethnic group which pushed into the
Pennsylvania frontier. There were quite a number of German
families who were also frontier homesteaders. The two groups
coexisted somewhat peaceably in the frontier primarily because
they were both outsiders in regard to the English. The
mountainous region in the centre of Pennsylvania was ideal for
the way of life of both groups and sufficiently distanced them
from the English in the eastern counties. The Germans sought out
good limestone based farmlands and they found them in the
Appalachian Mountains. The Ulster-Scots tended to find the
solitary isolation of the Appalachians ideal to their own
temperament.
The mountain
range known as the Appalachians stretches in a curving arc from
the northeast corner of the province of Pennsylvania, through the
south central region of that province and on southward through
Maryland, Virginia and into the Carolinas. At the time of the
initial waves of the Ulster-Scot migration it served as a natural
boundary line between the English colonies and the Indian lands.
Apart from a few instances in which the white settlers (for the
most part Ulster-Scots) violated the Indian treaties and moved
into the lands to the west of the boundary, the incoming settlers
tended to homestead in the great valley just to the east of the
Appalachian range. As the lands in Pennsylvania filled up, the
incoming settlers moved southward into Virginia and eventually
into the Carolinas. Then, in 1754 a new treaty was signed at
Albany, New York with the Indian sachems by which they granted
tracts of land to the Allegheny Mountains (which define the
western edge of the Appalachians) to the province of
Pennsylvania. With the prospect of new lands to homestead upon,
many residents of the established counties along with new
immigrants pushed into that region. In the 1768 New Purchase
Treaty, the Indians conveyed lands to the Pennsylvania Provincial
Assembly which lay to the west of the Allegheny Mountain Range.
Blair County in 1846. The remainder of this article will
dwell primarily on the settlement of the Ulster Scots in Blair
County.
Blair County was
part of the region that was opened up for homesteaders by the
Treaty of Albany in 1754. It was not until about 1768, though,
that the first settlers moved into the portion of that region
which would be given the name of Blair County in 1846. From 1768
until 1774 there were only a few families that had established
their homesteads in this collection of mountains and valleys that
lay between the Allegheny and Tussey Mountains. Then, between
1775 and 1779 there was a large influx of settlers. The period
from 1778 through 1782 was one in which the relations between the
Indians and the Euro-American settlers broke down and Indian
incursions into the region were increased. Many, perhaps half, of
the original pioneer settlers left Bedford County and few of them
returned. After the American Revolutionary War was over there
occurred a massive migration of people all over the eastern
seaboard. Once more settlers flooded into this region; included
among them were many Ulster-Scots.
The Ulster-Scots
and the Germans tended to stick to themselves and settled in
different valleys in the part of the region that would be
designated as Blair County. The Germans settled principally in
the Morrisons Cove and Indian Path valleys while the Ulster-Scots
built their homesteads in the Scotch, Logan and Sinking Spring
valleys. The German settlers tended to obtain their property
through legal means of warranting, surveying and then patenting
the land. The Ulster-Scots, on the other hand were known to
obtain their property by simply squatting on a certain tract of
land and hoping not to be ousted from it when the government
noticed. Quite a number of Ulster-Scot families settled in the
Sinking Spring Valley on the tract claimed by the Proprietors.
The Penn family had surveyed and set aside many tracts of land
throughout the province for their own private future use. Those
tracts were often homesteaded upon by the Ulster-Scots. They
sincerely (albeit erroneously) believed that since the
Proprietary family had invited them to emigrate from their
homeland with the prospect of lands to settle upon, then the
Proprietary Tracts were the lands they had been invited to. The
earliest tax assessment return that is still in existence in the
collection of records maintained in the Bedford County Court
House which separates the families settled on the Proprietors'
Lands is one taken in 1785. That return listed thirty-two
families residing on the Proprietors' tract of Sinking Spring
Valley. Some individual families were spread out in the other
valleys, including the Indian Path Valley, which encompassed much
of Old-Greenfield Township.
The period
between the year 1778 and 1782 was one of intensified
Indian/Euro-American conflict. The only Frankstown Township tax
assessment returns from the American Revolutionary War period
that are currently in existence in the Bedford County Court House
are for the years 1775, 1779 and 1782. It is difficult to know
whether any others simply did not survive, whether they were
removed by earlier researchers, or whether they simply were not
taken. The 1779 Frankstown Township Tax Assessment recorded many
of the residents as "absant", meaning that they had
left the region. Most of them moved eastward to the relative
safety of Cumberland County, and as already mentioned, did not
return to Bedford County. As the Indian attacks grew more
frequent and intense, the day to day government of the county may
have been affected; there might not have been much motivation on
the part of the tax assessors and collectors to travel about
through the region at their own personal danger.
Many, but not
necessarily all, of the families that fled from Bedford County
were Ulster-Scot. The Germans tended to cling to their farms more
so than the Ulster-Scots; they were more reluctant to give in to
the terrors of the Indians. The Ulster-Scots had been harassed
for so many centuries that they did not feel the same attachment
to the land as what the Germans did. The Ulster-Scots, though
ready for a fight at the drop of a hat, tended to move from one
location to another without any misgivings.
Prior to the Indian incursions and the outbreak of the
American Revolutionary War, as noted previously, the Ulster-Scots
and the Germans tended to separate themselves from each other
somewhat. Following the Revolution, as more families came back to
this region, the two ethnic groups began to intermingle more. The
war, and the intermingling of men of different ethnic backgrounds
in the armed forces, probably helped to bring the people closer
together.
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