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  1. However, moonshine-making persists in the Appalachia region of Tennessee, a tradition carried on by the distant relatives of the 17th-century settlers. Although most Scots-Irish made a career of farming, several became involved in politics and went on to great things, including the establishment of great cities.

  2. Mar 17, 2022 · During the Revolutionary War, many of these Scots-Irish immigrants played a fundamental role in securing an American victory. At the Battle of Kings Mountain, which took place in 1780 near Kings Mountain, North Carolina, descendants of Scots-Irish immigrants to Tennessee and Virginia were instrumental in defeating the opposing Loyalist forces.

  3. Oct 16, 2009 · Gradually the Scots-Irish moved south to the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, which became a launching point for further migration to the Carolinas, Georgia, Tennessee, and Kentucky. Eventually, with so many Scots-Irish settling in the south, Charleston became the second most important arrival port (after New York) for ships from Ireland.

  4. "Scotch-Irish" was a name given to the people who came to America from about 1717 to 1775 by way of northern Ireland, or Irish Seaports on either side of the border of Scotland and England. Although many had lived in Ireland for decades, these folks did not think of themselves as Irish.

  5. As mentioned in the beginning of this article, the Scots-Irish culture thrived and evolved in the isolated mountains of East Tennessee and became something of an American curiosity around the turn of the 19th Century, when President Theodore Roosevelt wrote his book "The Winning of the West" and spoke highly of Scots-Irish accomplishments in the settlement of America.

  6. The Scots are often credited with being the forerunners of the western migration of America for by 1773 there were Scots in Kentucky and by 1779 they were across the Ohio River. Descendants of the North Carolina Scot settlers were pioneers in Tennessee and Missouri. Some Scots settled in Texas as early as the 1820s.

  7. Weller connects these qualities with Scots-Irish heritage. Documentary evidence confirms that early settlers of Appalachia were in fact from the Anglo-Scottish border area, according to David Newhall’s Encyclopedia of Appalachia (pp 253-55). It’s in the Scots-Irish Blood

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