An edition of Carolina Scots (1998)

Carolina Scots

An Historical And Genealogical Study Of Over 100 Years Of Emigration

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Last edited by Thurman E. Dalrymple
February 3, 2023 | History
An edition of Carolina Scots (1998)

Carolina Scots

An Historical And Genealogical Study Of Over 100 Years Of Emigration

  • 4 Want to read

Out of his experience of growing up in a typical Scottish family of the upper Cape Fear Valley in Eastern North Carolina in the 1940s and '50s, and of several years of study in Scotland in the '60s and '70s, Douglas Kelly has woven together the story of two cultures: Scottish Highland and Eastern Carolina. He combines colorful strands of cultural, linguistic, educational, political and religious history, with a careful genealogy of the first four or five generations of some sixty-five different family groups, who emigrated from the Scottish Highlands and Islands to the Cape Fear Valley of North Carolina and the neighboring Pee Dee Valley of South Carolina, from 1739 to the early 1840s. North Carolina is believed to have been the largest Scottish settlement anywhere in the world outside Scotland, and its emigrants have formed the backbone of large sections of both Carolinas for some 250 years. It may become a classic study of one of the original headwaters of Southern culture: Carolina Gaeldom, which sent an overflowing stream of hundreds of thousands of settlers into the Deep South and Southwest throughout the 19th century, thus profoundly shaping this huge region, and playing its part in making America what it is today. It has been hailed as the only major study so far of the early emigrations prior to the Clearances.

The story is made more real through over 100 photographs, maps and engravings from the period, chronicling the history of housing among these Scots from castles and huts in 18th century Scotland to still extant log cabins, upcountry mansions, slave quarters and old Presbyterian Churches in both N. and S. Carolina. There is also a unique appendix to Chapter III of Part I on the historic and current status of the Gaelic language in Carolina. (At one time it was the second language of the Cape Fear region). Help is provided throughout the genealogies on how to find more information, including rare and unpublished sources. The complete index lists more than 7,000 different names, in addition to place names and subject matter.

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Carolina Scots
Carolina Scots: An Historical And Genealogical Study Of Over 100 Years Of Emigration
1998, 1739 Publications, Brand: Seventeen Thirty Nine Pubns, Seventeen Thirty Nine Pubns
in English
Cover of: Carolina scots
Carolina scots: an historical and genealogical study of over 100 years of emigration
Publish date unknown, 1739 Publications
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 403-407) and index.

Published in
Dillon, S.C
Genre
Genealogy.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
975.7/80049163
Library of Congress
F265.S3 K45 1998

The Physical Object

Pagination
xv, 485 p. :
Number of pages
485

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL100703M
ISBN 10
0966296303
LCCN
99215227
Library Thing
1570300
Goodreads
1226492

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February 3, 2023 Edited by Thurman E. Dalrymple Edited without comment.
February 3, 2023 Edited by Thurman E. Dalrymple Edited without comment.
March 2, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot remove fake subjects
July 14, 2017 Edited by Mek adding subject: Internet Archive Wishlist
December 9, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page