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    • Who Were the Scotch-Irish Americans ... - Who are You Made Of?
      • It probably helped that the term Scotch-Irish implies that you aren’t really Irish, but really Scottish. So when the signs said “Irish Not Wanted” or “No Irish Need Apply” a Scotch-Irish man wasn’t really, truly Irish, but in actuality was of Scottish descent. And of course, most importantly, he was not Catholic.
      whoareyoumadeof.com/blog/who-were-the-scotch-irish-americans/
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  2. Apr 20, 2021 · It probably helped that the term Scotch-Irish implies that you arent really Irish, but really Scottish. So when the signs said “Irish Not Wanted” or “No Irish Need Apply” a Scotch-Irish man wasn’t really, truly Irish, but in actuality was of Scottish descent.

  3. Scotch-Irish does not actually refer to a collective grouping of both Scottish and Irish peoples. Scotch-Irish is another (sometimes considered pejorative) name for Ulster Scots, which were a group of ethnic Scots who settled in Northern Ireland as part of an English state-sponsored plan to colonize Ireland and dispossess its landowners.

  4. Scotch-Irish (or Scots-Irish) Americans are American descendants of primarily Ulster Scots people [5] who emigrated from Ulster (Ireland's northernmost province) to the United States during the 18th and 19th centuries.

  5. Research at Scottish Origenes has revealed 2 very different but quite distinctive male genetic markers shared in equal measure by the Scots and Irish ; R-M222 and I-M223. If you carry one of these markers then you are a true Scots-Irish (or is that Irish-Scot?).

    • Is a Scotch-Irish man really Irish?1
    • Is a Scotch-Irish man really Irish?2
    • Is a Scotch-Irish man really Irish?3
    • Is a Scotch-Irish man really Irish?4
  6. Dec 11, 2019 · Most British historians, to describe the ethnic group of Lowland and Borders Scots who migrated to Ireland as part of the Plantation scheme in the 1600s, use the term Ulster Scots. But who were these Scots and why did they leave their homes?

    • Is a Scotch-Irish man really Irish?1
    • Is a Scotch-Irish man really Irish?2
    • Is a Scotch-Irish man really Irish?3
    • Is a Scotch-Irish man really Irish?4
    • Is a Scotch-Irish man really Irish?5
  7. "To be Scotch-Irish is very common. Then I'll ask them, what does that mean, Scotch-Irish? And usually they'll think of… a grandparent or great-grandparent, one came from Ireland, the...

  8. The Scotch-Irish in America tells the story of how the hardy breed of men and women, who in America came to be known as the ‘Scotch-Irish’, was forged in the north of Ireland during the seventeenth century.