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American Scottish History
Part 1


Got a story of a Scots ancestor?  Then do send it in for inclusion on these pages to Alastair McIntyre

  • The Barnum and Bailey Circus
    A complete book about the circus
  • War between the States
    A whole section on the War between the States and the many Scottish influences
  • Scots Descendants
    This is a page of mini bios of Scots descendants mostly in America. In here you can learn some of the background of people of Scots descent and how they contributed to the American way of life.
  • Scots and Scots Descendants in America
    by D. MacDougall, 1917
  • Historians and the Scottish-American Connection
    The links between Scotland and America stretch back over three centuries. Perhaps one can officially date them from 1650, when a group of Scots gathered in Boston to create the first Scots’ Charitable Society, an organization to aid fellow immigrants who had fallen upon hard times.
  • The Southern States of America
    Published in 1909. A 12 volume publication but only the first 3 volumes published here.
  • U.S. Representative Mike McIntyre
    A brief Biography
  • Counties
    This is where we list individual counties where we have some historical information.
  • South Carolina
    Some pictures from my time in South Carolina.
  • Donna Flood's Stories
    A collection of stories by Donna Flood on her Scots and Indian heritage.
  • Scots in the North American West
    A book about the period between 1790 - 1917
  • John Stewart's Memorandum
    An account of how the settlement of Greenbrier came into being.
  • Consulate General of the United States, Edinburgh, Scotland
    Their web site in Scotland.
  • Archiving Early America
    This is an excellent site with documents on early American history.
  • Westward Ho
    From 1860 to 1862, Pony Express riders carried mail n relays from St. Joseph, MO to Sacramento, CA.  Riders were out of "St. Joe" had only a brief gallop to the wide Missouri River where ferry boats conveyed them over the river.
  • Hood's Texas Brigade
    John Bell Hood was born June 29, 1831 in Bath County Kentucky.  His father, Dr. Julius Hood taught John the aspects of medicine from a young age but John was not interested in becoming a doctor.  He longed to go to West Point Academy and become a  cavalry officer so he could serve his country as his grandfather and uncle had during the Revolutionary War.
  • Sam Houston
    Houston was strongly criticized for his actions and military strategy of the Battle of the Alamo.  Some of his peers thought he was cowardly to Santa Anna but at the Battle of San Jacinto, he had mustered enough troops to defeat the Mexican army.  Houston was injured in the San Jacinto skirmish and was sent to New Orleans for treatment. Upon his return to Tejas, he was elected president of the new Republic of Texas.
  • Col. Thomas Peck Ochiltree
    An Unsung Hero - Col. Thomas Peck Ochiltree.
  • The Scots and their Descendants in Illinois
    By Thomas C. MacMillan, M.A., LL.D.
  • The Revolutionaries
    Cornwallis decided to divide his own force into three parts.  One would be left to guard Camden under Lieutenant Colonel Lord Francis Rawdon.  Tarleton and his 1,100 cavalry and foot soldiers would become a fast-moving hammer that would pursue Brigadier General Daniel Morgan and finally crush him against an anvil.  Cornwallis's third force, which would hover in North Carolina and intercept the rebels as they fled from Tarelton's onslaught.
  • Declaration of Independence
    About the Declaration and the Scottish influence.
  • A Friend's Soliloquy - 1943
    This poem was written in 1943, paying homage to all the boys who went to war.
  • Trails to nowhere and to everywhere
    In the early 1800's,  American history reveals the old west had lots of trails as the western migration continued to lead thousands of easterners west to explore the new frontier, seek their fortune, stake their claim,  homestead a portion of the large land grants that were available to them.
  • Reflections of a 20th century man
    I was born John William Fulks in Marceline, Missouri on November 6, 1920, the same day Warren G. Harding was elected president of the USA during the final days of Woodrow Wilson's administration. It was just 2 years after the end of World War I, the "war to end all wars" and only 8 years since the Titanic sank off the Newfoundland coast on April 15, 1912.
  • The Skidmore family of Braxton County
    He served as a private in the Virginia Militia and participated in the Battle of Point Pleasant October 1774 under the command of his brother, Captain John Skidmore.
  • Tails of the Trails of the Smoky Hill River
    The old western frontier of the 1800's was a wild and woolly beginning of the western migration of settlers, those coming from the Eastern states to look for fortune and fame in the untamed territories.
  • Mexihoma
    Upon the conclusion of the Mexican War in 1848, the northern and western boundaries of Texas had not been settled with Mexico. No Man's Land is the Neutral Strip with metes and bounds as follows: One half degree south of the 37th parallel latitude and three degrees east and west of the East 103rd degree longitude, a rectangle of land bordered by Kansas on the north, Texas panhandle on the south, New Mexico on the west and the Ok. Cherokee Strip on the east.
  • Presbyterian Pioneers in Western Pennsylvania
    The Reverend Charles Clinton Beatty (c.1715-1772) was born in County Antrim, Ireland, to John Beatty, a British army officer, and Christiana Clinton, aunt of George Clinton, the first governor of New York.
  • Governor Patrick Henry
    Colonel Rogers Clark from Virginia, with Governor Patrick Henry's help, recruited Scotch-Irish and German frontiersmen from Southwest Virginia, and from Washington and Greene Counties Tennessee (then in North Carolina) and rafted his men 1000 miles down the Ohio River from Pittsburgh (Ft. Pitt), Pennsylvania (on right) in winter to make a successful surprise attack against British installations in present -day Illinois and Vincennes, in present-day Indiana.
  • Robert Forbes
    Is now living retired at Carbondale, where more than forty years ago he had his first experience in Kansas as a coal minor. Thus he was identified with Carbondale in the height of its prosperity as a mining center.
  • Longhorn Country
    No history of the cattle industry can be told without beginning with Texas and the Texas Longhorn. Texas was the original home of ranching and became the major blending pot for the evolution of the history-making Texas Longhorn breed of cattle.
  • Mississippi and Beyond
    Wilmington North Carolina situated on Cape Fear River, 20 miles from the Atlantic Ocean, is known for her harbor, accommodating the large ocean going vessels.  The city is located in a highly productive agricultural district of which many Scots settled centuries ago.
  • Remember the Alamo
    A cry of victory and defeat, heard around the world for centuries, the last fatal attempt by a handful of frontiersman trained only to hunt with a squirrel rifle and a Bowie knife who came from all parts of the eastern territories and gave their lives for freedom's call.
  • Judge Ochiltree
    David Ochiltree came to America in 1739.   Duncan Ochiltree came to America in 1739, no further record...As I read this record, I surmise that David and Duncan are Lord Ochiltree's two sons. There is no mention of Lord Ochiltree arriving in America.
  • The Chisholms
    For hundreds of years the Chisholm name has left significant marks in American History. Adam Chisholm, captured at Preston and was transported to American on the Elizabeth and Ann from Liverpool 29 June 1710.
  • The Old 300
    Although many cultures can stake a claim on the settlement of early Texas - mostly the Spanish, Indians and French - it was the Scots and others of Celtic descent who led the way in truly taming the wild territory and bringing it forward to a republic.
  • Civil War Notebook
    When 19 year old Daniel Chisholm joined the army, the United States was at war with itself.  Leaving his hometown of Uniontown, Pennsylvania in 1864, Chisholm fought with Army of the Potomac in the final campaign of the Civil War, as Gen. Grant pushed his superior numbers in bloody head-on collision with Gen. Lee's dwindling Confederate Army.  
  • A Western Tail
    No Man's Land", the "Neutral Strip". or Public Lands, as it was called variously, was a political and geographic paradox.  It was an ungoverned rectangle of land bordered by Kansas on the north, Texas on the south and New Mexico on the west, an the Cherokee Strip on the east.
  • Isaac Tichenor Goodnow
    A lot has been said of the new School Marm,  was she a pretty young girl from the East, how much learning did she have, she is too young to teach these kids and on and on and on. Most of the time, she would live in a Boarding House, or some family home, depending on what was available.  And sometimes she would be a spinster, or a married lady, or the teacher could be the minister of a local church.
  • John Andrew Howell
    The history in verse by John Andrew Howell was written at the beginning of the 1900's...and as the reader follows along, read carefully and grasp the meaning of the messages as they were seen from this very specially gifted person.
  • The Titanic
    A unique poem by John Andrew Howell.
  • History of Webster County in Verse
    Another poem by John Andrew Howell
  • Juliette Gordon Low
    Founder of Girl Scouts of the U.S.A., was born October 31, 1860, in Savannah, Georgia, and died there January 17, 1927.
  • Scots-Irish
    This article was originally published in The Irish At Home and Abroad journal of Irish genealogy and heritage (volume 2 #1, 1994/1995). Published four times yearly.
  • The Alamo - James Bowie
    James Bowie was a descendant of the Maryland Line of Bowies who originated in Stirlingshire, Scotland. Known for his famous "Bowie knife" and a sometimes reckless adventurer, Jim Bowie is now immortalized as one of the true folk heroes in early Texas.
  • General and Mrs Custer
    General Custer and his brother, Tom and his   wife, Libbie (Elizabeth Bacon Custer), were of Scottish ancestry. General Custer is of the Wilson-Ochiltree families.
  • Medal of Honor
    Scots-Irish that won this distinguished award.
  • Clans of the Ponca
    Yes, there was, of course, great intermarriage between the Scots and my mother's people. The Native culture is as strong as the Scots and the two people were compatible. I will try to elaborate.
  • Henry Van Deman Faris
    Of Kanopolis, is a Kansas around whom center many associations of territorial and pioneer times. He is by five years the oldest living pioneer in Kansas west of Salina. He has been continuously identified with Ellsworth County more than half a century.
  • Scottish-American Military Society
    The Scottish American Military Society was founded and chartered in North Carolina April 12, 1981, as a non-profit organization.
  • The Scottish-American History Club
    This is part of the Illinois St Andrew Society site and contains a number of their newsletters which go out every quarter. I was totally amazed at the amount of information they contained about Scottish-Americans. I  highly recommend you visit this site as there is some great reading which I just know you will enjoy.
  • Scots and the American Indians
    An interesting account of the connections between the Highland Scots and the American Indians.
  • The Indian Territory 1861 - 1865
    This is an account by Thomas F. Anderson "of the part taken by our Southern Indians in the war between the States, but have to depend on memory. Strange to say, my recollection of what took place under my observation in the war with Mexico in 1845 and '47, is more vivid than that of our last war. But few dates are remembered". The Scots and Scots-Irish were very involved in this account which is why we've included it.
  • James Britton Bailey
    Britton Bailey was a straight shooting pioneer who endured many hardships. In stature he was a large man, feared and respected by the Indians and his neighbors. One of the "Old 300"
  • Neil McLennan
    Early settler, was born on the Isle of Skye in 1777. He immigrated in 1801 to North Carolina with numerous family members and friends; in 1816 they moved to Florida.
  • Thomas Spalding
    Known as Georgia’s Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Spalding was born at Frederica (on St. Simon’s Island, Georgia) on March 25, 1774. His ancestors were from the Highlands of Scotland, and were among the band of hardy warriors which Oglethorpe brought to Georgia to form a bulwark for the New Colony against the Spaniards in Florida.
  • General Lewis Lawrence Griffin
    Around 1810, a young man named Lewis Lawrence Griffin settled in Twiggs County. The very poor native Georgian would become president of the Monroe Railroad and the founder of the city of Griffin.
  • Bios on Our Scottish Ancestors in KANSAS
    A collection of around 30 bios on folks of Scots descent in Kansas.
  • Teddy Roosevelt
    The Rough Rider President of the United Sates of America.
  • The Ringing of a Silver Bell
    Bell and Joe had suffered every insult from the weather as far as the drought was concerned.  The last hammer to fall was the loss of the well. She knew they could not survive without the precious water for them and for their livestock.
  • Judge Arthur MacArthur
    Father of General Arthur MacArthur and Grand-Father of General Douglas MacArthur
  • Millburn
    A small town in New Jersey, USA

Continue on to Part 2


E-text of the book "A New Voyage to Carolina", by John Lawson written c1700