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The People with No Name : Ireland's Ulster Scots, America's Scots Irish, and the Creation of a British Atlantic World, 1689-1764

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More than 100,000 Ulster Presbyterians of Scottish origin migrated to the American colonies in the six decades prior to the American Revolution, the largest movement of any group from the British Isles to British North America in the eighteenth century.

Drawing on a vast store of archival materials, "The People with No Name" is the first book to tell this fascinating story in its full, transatlantic context.

It explores how these people - whom one visitor to their Pennsylvania enclaves referred to as "a spurious race of mortals known by the appellation Scotch-Irish" - drew upon both Old and New World experiences to adapt to staggering religious, economic, and cultural change.

In remarkably crisp, lucid prose, Patrick Griffin uncovers the ways in which migrants from Ulster - and thousands like them - forged new identities and how they conceived the wider transatlantic community.

The book moves from a vivid depiction of Ulster and its Presbyterian community in and after the Glorious Revolution to a brilliant account of religion and identity in early modern Ireland.Griffin, then, deftly weaves together religion and economics in the origins of the transatlantic migration, and examines how this traumatic and enlivening experience shaped patterns of settlement and adaptation in colonial America.

In the American side of his story, he breaks new critical ground for our understanding of colonial identity formation and of the place of the frontier in a larger empire.

The "People with No Name" will be indispensable reading for anyone interested in transatlantic history, American Colonial history, and the history of Irish and British migration.

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RRP £35.00
Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691074623 / 9780691074627
Paperback / softback
941.607
14/10/2001
United States
English
research & professional /academic/professional/technical Learn More
A masterful reconstruction of the experiences of the Scots Irish migrants who transformed the culture of the eighteenth-century colonial frontier. Drawing creatively on research materials in Ireland and America, Griffin shows how these extraordinarily resilient people made sense of an expanding commercial world and managed to accommodate to rapidly changing social conditions without compromising their own hard-earned identity. -- T.H. Breen, Northwestern University This is a first-rate and timely piece of scholarship, offering a compelling new vision of transatlantic history and an equally com
A masterful reconstruction of the experiences of the Scots Irish migrants who transformed the culture of the eighteenth-century colonial frontier. Drawing creatively on research materials in Ireland and America, Griffin shows how these extraordinarily resilient people made sense of an expanding commercial world and managed to accommodate to rapidly changing social conditions without compromising their own hard-earned identity. -- T.H. Breen, Northwestern University This is a first-rate and timely piece of scholarship, offering a compelling new vision of transatlantic history and an equally com 1DBKN Northern Ireland, 1KBB USA, 3JD c 1600 to c 1700, 3JF c 1700 to c 1800, HBJK History of the Americas, HBLH Early modern history: c 1450/1500 to c 1700, JFFN Migration, immigration & emigration, JHMC Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography