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In Search of Ulster-Scots Land
The Birth and Geotheological Imagings of a
Transatlantic People, 1603–1703
Barry Aron Vann
Drawing insights from geography, history, social psychology, sociology, and theology, Barry
Aron Vann investigates the ways in which Scottish Calvinism affected the sense of identity
and the migrations of native Scots first to Ulster and then to the American South.
Social and religious historians have conducted much research on Scottish colonial migrations to Ulster; however, there remains historical debate as to whether the Irish Sea in the
seventeenth century was an intervening obstacle or a transportation artery. Vann presents a
geographical perspective on the topic, showing that most population flows involving southwest Scotland during the first half of the seventeenth century were directed across the Irish
Sea via centuries-old sea routes that had allowed for the formation of evolving cultural areas.
As political or religious motivational factors presented themselves in the last half of that
century, Vann holds, the established social and familial links stretched along those sea routes
facilitated chain migration that led to the birth of a Protestant Ulster-Scots community. Vann
also shows how this community constituted itself along religious and institutional rubrics of
dissent from the Church of England, Church of Scotland, and Church of Ireland.
Within a century of the birth of this “Ulster-Scots Land,” five immigration waves to America served as conduits for diffusing significant elements of that culture to the upper American
South, where the Scots-Irish presence helped to form the cultural area referred to as the Bible
Belt. The resulting effects of this settlement are still observed in both public and private
spaces. It is from this lineage that families including the Adairs, Grahams, Seviers, Crocketts,
Voiles, Duncans, Boones, Morgans, McKarneys, McKameys, Collins, and Rogerses spilled
over the Appalachian Mountains to establish communities that still bear their mark. Vann
maps this significant portion of the South’s ethnic mosaic to show the genesis of the educational, political, and religious institutions that stem from Ulster Scots’ thought worlds. With
such deeply ingrained values, the southern Scots-Irish have influenced the region’s staunchly
conservative belief system, political ideology, and landscapes.
Barry Aron Vann is an associate professor of geography at Lincoln Memorial
University in Harrogate, Tennessee, where
he also serves as the founding director of
programs in Appalachian development
studies, geography, and social studies. He
is the author of Rediscovering the South’s
Celtic Heritage.
November 2007, 256 pages, 12 illus.
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