In 1772, Ireland was still under the feudal system, where wealthy barons owned all the land and tenant farmers had to pay them rent. The Reverend William Martin spoke about this. Members of his church had been reduced to pov...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

In 1772, Ireland was still under the feudal system, where wealthy barons owned all the land and tenant farmers had to pay them rent. The Reverend William Martin spoke about this. Members of his church had been reduced to poverty because of the need to pay these excessive rents. He therefore proposed that they pool their resources, charter ships and sail to South Carolina where free land was available. Originally, just a few planned to go. But, as word spread, huge numbers joined the group. It eventually came to 467 families, or five boatloads. This book provides the history of these voyages, the names of the passengers, and documents the land they received and the places where they ultimately settled in South Carolina. The ancestors of the author were among the more than one thousand passengers who arrived on these five ships. Many of them joined the American Revolution and fought against the British when the Revolutionary War broke out three years later.

Similar Products

A Compilation of the Original Lists of Protestant Immigrants to South Carolina, 1763-1773From Ulster to Carolina: The Migration of the Scotch-Irish to Southwestern North CarolinaSouth Carolina History & Genealogy on DVD - 164 books - Ancestry, Records, FamilyScots-Irish Links, 1575-1725 (2 Volumes in 1)The Scots-Irish in the CarolinasUlster Emigration to Colonial America, 1718–1785The Scotch-Irish: A Social HistorySCOTS AND SCOTCH IRISH: Frontier Life in North Carolina, Virginia, and KentuckyScottish Emigration to Colonial America, 1607-1785Chasing The Frontier: Scots-Irish in Early America