Al's
Most Recent
Merry
Christmas, y'all
Quote
of the day:
“We
are celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ, y'all, and that is all you
need to know.”
Al
Campbell
I
saw an item on Facebook about 21 ways that a “gentleman” should
behave...like rising when a woman enters the room, holding her chair,
helping her with putting on or removing her wrap, giving up your seat
to a woman (not pregnant) when it is standing room only. I have seen
lists like this before and I a couple of questions. Why have I never
seen a list of what makes a “lady”? Does age have any value? I
encounter “standing room only” frequently with the Four O'clock
Club meetings. I am 78...do I surrender my seat to a 20 year old
woman? What is my reward for behaving like someone else thinks I
should? If I do not follow the 21 “behaviors” should I feel
guilty? What ever happened to everybody is equal regardless of
gender especially in the workplace? Or is it ONLY in the workplace
where everyone is equal? My sense of fair play says that you can't
have it both ways. Someone help me with this.
Speaking
of tradition, here is a very brief history of the humanity that
populated the Appalachian mountains in the early days of this great
nation. Sometimes they are called Rednecks...and Crackers,
etc....But to me they are known as my ancestors...here they are:
A
Brief History of Rednecks
I
have been reading the history of the impact of the Scots-Irish in
America and naturally the author went back into the far past to trace
them out to present day. By the way it is Scots, not Scotch. Scots
are a people and Scotch is a whiskey. Anyway, the big movement came
right after James I became the King of Great Britain. Previously, he
was James VI of Scotland making him the first of the dual crowned
kings of Great Britain. It got started when James financed the
expedition to the new world led by Captain John Smith. But James'
real passion was religion. He could not abide Catholics and he began
a project to oust the Catholic landowners in Ireland and seize their
lands. The Catholic Irish had been in rebellion against England for
centuries and James saw this as a way of diluting them. This resulted
in many Catholic Irish Earls fleeing the Emerald Isle trying to
escape the wrath of the Protestants and Anglicans. To fill this
void, it was decided that a “plantation” in Ireland in an area
called Ulster would be formed. It consisted of six shires or
counties. To fill the void James and company decided to kill two
birds with one stone and offered land in Ulster to Protestant
Scottish lords with the stipulation that they would bring their
Scottish tenants with them. The waspish Scots would fight at the
drop of a hat over anything that interfered with their independence,
messed with the clans or their tight-fisted Presbyterian religion.
They were a hard-nosed bunch, especially the Borderers or those that
lived close to the border with England. As you might expect, the
disenfranchised Catholic Irish fought like hell to take their lands
back to no avail. The Scottish Lords indeed took the offer and
brought their Scottish tenants with them. There was a stipulation
that the Lords could not employ Irish tenants, they had to import
them from England and Scotland and they had to be English speaking
Protestants, moreover the landowners were banned from selling land to
the Irish. Whatever land that was left over was given to the
Protestant Churches of Ireland including any lands previously owned
by the Roman Catholic Church. James meant to castrate the Catholics
in Ireland, y'all. This influx put the Protestant Irish in a hard
way because they spoke Gaelic while everyone else spoke English. As
a result of this turmoil there were civil wars in England, Scotland
and Ireland. In 1630 many Ulster Scots went home because Charles I,
the king of England declared that the Church of Ireland had to use
the prayer book of the Church of England essentially making it an
Anglican church. That would change the way the fiery Scottish
Presbyterians practiced their religion. As I have said before, you
don’t pull on Superman’s cape or spit into the wind and you don’t
fool around with the Scots religion. In 1638 an oath was imposed by
King Charles I on the Ulster Scots binding them to never take up arms
against England not matter what. I don’t need to tell you what
kind of hell was raised after this outrage. By the way, it was King
Charles I presumptuousness that cost him his head as will be
discussed in a future lesson.
In
1641 the Irish Catholics rose up in an armed rebellion and the prime
target was the Plantation land owners. Many, many atrocities were
committed by the Irish on the Scottish land owners in retribution for
them taking Irish lands. In the 1690s a huge immigration of
Protestant Scots came over to Ulster during a famine and as a result
the Protestant Scots became the majority. The planters are known as
the Ulster Scots. The present partition of Ireland with Ireland and
Northern Ireland gets it roots from this era. Northern Ireland is
occupied by the progeny of British Protestants and wanted to keep a
link with England whereas the rest of Ireland are Catholic and want
independence. Later on, the Scots being fed up with restrictions on
their religion began heading west to America. They primarily landed
in Philadelphia. They were not welcomed by the high-bred plantation
owners on the Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina tidewater
and not by the snooty Puritans in the northeast so they headed
further west and settled in small clans in the Appalachian mountain
chain starting in western Pennsylvania and then south and west down
the chain into Virginia, the Carolinas and Georgia.
They
were encouraged in this endeavor because of their warlike nature they
would be a good match for the savage Shawnee and Cherokees and a good
match they were. There is a legend in my family on my father’s
side that one of my great-great uncles owned a huge chunk of land in
Maggie Valley, NC which is the very heart of Cherokee country, but he
could not hold on to it because of the repeated attacks by the
Cherokees. There are many reports of atrocities committed by both
the natives and the Scots. It is the roots of almost constants
turmoil, the love of fighting and an independent nature, especially
their religion, which the so-called Scots-Irish have in their hearts
and souls. Actually, the Scots-Irish are not a mix of Scots and the
Irish; it is Scots that immigrated to Ulster, Ireland before coming
to America and it is these Ulster Scots that are my ancestors on my
father’s side.
It
is known that nearly all the troops fighting for the Patriots in the
Revolutionary War in the south were Scots that came down out of the
mountains and using guerrilla type tactics like they use against the
Indians and against the staid and upright British to great effect.
They demonstrated their ferocity at the Battle of Cowpens where
Patriot General Daniel Morgan outmaneuvered the infamous British
Colonel Banastre Tarleton and would have annihilated the entire army
of British/Loyalists but some of them escaped the wrath of Morgan’s
wild-eyed mountain men.
But
there were no escapees at the Battle of Kings Mountain. This group
of Patriots was led by General John Sevier and was able to trap
British General John Ferguson and his army of Loyalists on the peak
of a mountain by surrounding the base. General Ferguson fought for a
while but then realized that there was no escape and surrendered.
The surrender was not accepted and the Patriots waded in and either
shot or hanged them all to a man.
This
massacre was brought about because about 2 months before Tarleton
killed 220 Patriots that had surrendered but were bayoneted by
Tarleton’s troops angering the Patriots and especially the mountain
men. My ancestry comes from the Holston Valley of Tennessee and the
mountains of Habersham County Georgia. That’s right folks; I am a
Redneck and/or a Cracker albeit a well read and well spoken one.
The
Scots proved their heritage again during the Civil War, some fought
in gray and some fought in blue but they fought with great zeal just
for the sheer joy of it.
This
epistle in no way covers everything that happened to the Ulster Scots
during this time period but it gives you and idea of the mold that
formed them.
Thanks
for listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
No comments:
Post a Comment