IN this manner, during the early years of the
seventeenth century — from 1606 to 1611 — there was opened up a
field for emigration into which Scotsmen were to pour during the
succeeding half-century. The stream of emigrants must have varied in
volume from year to year, but probably never altogether ceased;
while the intercourse between the mother country and her sons in the
neighbouring island was, during the whole of that period, close and
intimate. Naturally, those counties which were nearest Scotland
received the greatest numbers of the emigrants, until Antrim and
Down contained districts as Scotch as Roxburgh or Wigtown—districts
of which thirty years ago, two centuries after the emigration, a
writer who knew the people well could say, these “are inhabited by a
population speaking as broad Scotch as is now to be met with in the
parent country, and who read and enjoy the poems of Ramsay and Burns
with as much zest as their brethren of the West of Scotland.” But,
although Down and Antrim received the greatest number of settlers,
the Scots also spread into every part of Ulster in which there was
good land to be had; or they took up their abode in the towns which
slowly began to rise round the new castle of Belfast; at Londonderry
and Coleraine, in the Londoners’ territory; and at Donaghadee, and
Newtown, and Bangor, and Lisburn, in the Scottish and English
settlements of Down and Antrim. Probably none of the colonies which
Scotland has sent out more deserves the support and encouragement of
the mother country than does this colony in Ulster, for in none have
the colonists had to struggle against greater odds. For more than a
century the Scots of Ulster were oppressed by laws which deprived
them of their civil and religious rights and crippled their trade;
while all through the centuries they have been crushed, as they
still are, by the presence of an inferior race, whose lower
civilisation makes all their ideas of comfort lower, and causes them
to multiply with a rapidity which ever presses on the means of
subsistence. Thus always facing up to the savage realities of life,
these Scots of Ulster are in character more akin to our common
forefathers of the seventeenth century, retaining more of their
stern Calvinism than the Scots of this generation in the mother
country. The establishment and growth of this Calvinistic Church in
Ireland is a remarkable chapter in the history of the Scots.
For two or three years after the “great settlement of
1610,” the colony went on increasing; and then its progress was
checked by rumours of a great plot among the natives to sweep away
the foreign settlers. Such a conspiracy did actually exist, and was
certainly a thing which might be expected; but it was discovered and
suppressed in 1615, before it came to a head. This danger past, the
settlement again made progress, the Government putting pressure on
the undertakers to compel them to fulfil the conditions of their
contracts, and fully plant their lands with “British” tenants. In
1618 the Irish Government instructed Captain Pynnar to inspect every
allotment in the six “escheated” counties, and to report on each
one, whether held by “natives” or “foreign planters.” The report
presents a very exact picture of what had been done by the settlers
in the counties inspected—Londonderry, Donegal, Tyrone, Armagh,
Cavan, and Fermanagh. Pynnar points out that many of the undertakers
had altogether failed to implement the terms of their agreements. On
the other hand, he reports the number of castles, “bawns,” and
“dwelling-houses of stone and timber built after the English
fashion,” and mentions the number of tenants, and the size and
conditions of their holdings. He states that “there are upon
occasion 8000 men of British birth and descent for defence, though a
fourth part of the lands is not fully inhabited.” Of these, fully a
half must have been Scots; and if there be added the great colonies
in Down and Antrim, there must have been an immigration from
Scotland of between 30,000 and 40,000 in these ten years. Pynnar
regrets that “many English do not yet plough nor use husbandry,
being fearful to stock themselves with cattle or servants for those
labours;” and states, that “were it not for the Scottish, who plough
in many places, the rest of the country might starve.” When we come
to the detailed report of each holding, it is easy to understand why
the Scots were doing the work of colonists so well—they were led by
men of energy, who were devoting their lives to the task. Pynnar’s
report also enables us to understand the new framework of society
which it was intended to build up in Ulster. James and his advisers
quite understood that to give a feeling of security to the new
colony, it was necessary to have fortified houses all over the
country, with a certain number of walled towns which should contain
garrisons. Every undertaker was therefore bound to raise a “castle
of stone,” which would certainly vary much in size and strength, but
which was at least to give to the small settlements as much
protection as did the “little towers and peels, such as are common
in our Borders.”
We have accounts of many of these castles, and of the
colony which was gathering around them.
This, for instance, is a description of the
settlement made in East Donegal by one of the most energetic of the
Wigtownshire undertakers: “Sir W. Stewart, 1000 acres, called
Rumaltho. A large and strong court 80 feet square and 14 high, four
flankers, fair strong castle of same materials three and a half
stories high. A large town of forty-five houses, and fifty-seven
families, all British, some having estates for years. A church begun
of lime and stone, built to setting on of roof. A water-mill for
corn. This is a market town, and stands well for the good of the
country and the King’s service.” In County Armagh here is another
very Scottish name: “Arch. Acheson, 2000 acres. A castle begun 80
feet long, 22 wide, now two stories high. Planted with British; in
toto, 29 tenants, with undertenants, making 144 men with arms. Has
also built a town called Clancurry, wherein dwell 29 British
tenants, each having a small parcel of land—in the whole making 173
men armed.’’ The Achesons— there were two brothers among the
“planters”—were from the neighbourhood of Edinburgh. Archibald was
afterwards raised to the Peerage, and took his title from his
property of Gosford, in East Lothian. His descendants are still
Earls of Gosford. The brothers of that Sir James Hamilton who had
“planted” in Down along with Sir Hugh Montgomery, also turned out
most enterprising colonists. One of them, John, settled in Armagh
beside the Achesons, and along with them founded “the flourishing
colonies of Markethill, Hamilton’s Bawn, and Mullabrack.” They
assisted, too, in the settlement County Cavan; Sir James “had built
a very large strong castle of lyme and stone, called Castle Aubignee,
with the King’s arms in freestone over the gate. This castle is five
stories high, with four round towers for flankers. “It stands upon a
meeting of five beaten ways which keep all that part of the
country.” He had “settled” “forty-one families, which do consist of
eighty men-at-arms.” Of the fortified towns, the “Londoners” were
bound to erect two—Londonderry and Coleraine; and grants were given
to undertakers to build forts on selected sites, round which it was
intended to raise towns, like that which Lord Chichester was
building round the Fort of Dungannon.
The only county in which the Scottish settlers failed
to take firm root was Fermanagh, for there, by 1618, when Pynnar
reported, a large number of the Scottish proportions had been sold,
and were held by Englishmen. The result is seen in the small number
of Presbyterians in comparison to Episcopalians to be found at the
present day in County Fermanagh.
It is strange to turn from these records, nearly
three centuries old, to the political map of to-day, and compare the
one with the other. It makes the reader feel how brief a period
three centuries are in the history of races, and how little races
change in the course of centuries. For the North of Ireland is now
very much what the first half of the seventeenth century made
it. North Down and Antrim, with the great town of Belfast, are
English and Scottish now as they then became, and desire to remain
united with the countries from whom their people spring. South Down,
on the other hand, was not “planted,” and it is Roman Catholic and
Nationalist. Londonderry County too is loyalist, for emigrants
poured into it through Coleraine and Londonderry city. Northern
Armagh was peopled with English and Scottish emigrants, who crowded
into it from Antrim and Down, and it desires union with the other
island. Tyrone County is all strongly Unionist, but it is the
country round Strabane, which the Hamiltons of Abercorn and the
Stewarts of Garlies so thoroughly colonised, and the eastern
portion, on the borders of Lough Neagh, round the colonies founded
by Lord Ochiltree, that give to the Unionists a majority; while in
Eastern Donegal, which the Cunninghams and the Stewarts “settled”
from Ayrshire and Galloway, and in Fermanagh, where dwell the
descendants of the Englishmen who fought so nobly in 1689, there is
a great minority which struggles against separation from England.
Over the rest, even of Ulster, the desire for a separate kingdom of
Ireland is the dream of the people still, as it was three centuries
ago. In many parts of Ireland, which were at one time and another
colonised with English, the colonists became absorbed in the native
population; but in Ulster, where the Scottish blood is strong, this
union has not taken place, and the result is the race difference
which is so apparent in the electoral statistics of the present day.
It is perhaps the stern Calvinism of these Scots, which still
survives, that has prevented the colony from mixing with the
surrounding people, and being absorbed by them as the Jews of the
northern kingdom became merged in the surrounding “heathen.” The
history of the Presbyterian Church is therefore an important part of
the story of the Scot in Ulster; in fact, for many years the history
of Ulster, as far as it has a separate history, is chiefly
ecclesiastical. It must be so; for this is a story of Scotsmen and
of the first half of the seventeenth century, and at that time the
history of Scotland is the history of the Scottish Church. Church
polity, Church observance, Church discipline, fill all the
chronicles, and must have formed the public life of the people. We
moderns may be extremely surprised and very much bored by the heavy
polemics of these old annals; but our wonder does not alter facts,
nor our disdain in all probability affect the souls of our pious
ancestors.
Before glancing at the building up of the
Presbyterian Church of Ireland, it is necessary to note two acts of
legislation which much aided the consolidation of the Scottish
colony. In 1613, after an interval of twenty-seven years, a
Parliament met at Dublin, to which were summoned members from many
northern towns, such as Dungannon and Coleraine, which were
certainly then boroughs rather in embryo than in reality. This
Parliament repealed a law of Queen Mary, which was intended to
prevent the Scots from settling in Ireland; the Scots thus aimed at
being the Western Islesmen, who infested and plundered Northern
Ulster. Two years later there met a convocation of clergy, which,
proceeded to draw up a Confession of Faith for the Episcopal Church
of Ireland, as an establishment separate from that of England. The
Irish clergy were at this time strongly tinged with Puritanism, and
the result was that a Confession was adopted much more Calvinistic,
and therefore nearer that of the Scottish Church than was the
Thirty-nine Articles. The formation and growth of the Presbyterian
Church was also much aided by Archbishop Ussher, the Primate of
Ireland. Ussher is remembered as the most learned Englishman of a
learned age; but better worth recording even than his learning is
his broad-minded toleration. Unlike his contemporary, Archbishop
Laud, he was incapable of rage against men who differed with him
about mere forms, and ever ready to recognise the great realities in
which they agreed.
He steadily prevented all persecution of
Presbyterians by Episcopal bishops, and treated the Scottish
preachers as friends and fellow-Christians.
There is in the Manuscript Room of the Advocates’
Library in Edinburgh a quaint narrative of the history of the early
days of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, which tells how a
revival of religion spread through the Scots of Ulster. Its
deception of the first settlers is not flattering. “In years there
flocked such a multitude of people from Scotland that these northern
counties of Down, Antrim, Londonderry, &c., were in good measure
planted, which had been waste before; yet most of the people, as I
said before, made up a body—and it’s strange, of different names,
nations, dialects, tempers, breeding, and, in a word, all void of
godliness, who seemed rather to flee from God in this enterprise
than to follow their own mercy.” Probably the narrator blackened the
characters of these first settlers for the purpose of heightening
the effect of the mighty change which came over them. In several
cases the “plantationers” came accompanied by clergymen. Both
Hamilton and Montgomery looked after the spiritual wants of the
emigrants in County Down, and a “minister” is stated to have
accompanied Lord Ochiltree who had hereditary connections with the
Presbyterian Church, his aunt having been John Knox’s second wife.
There is, too, a curious record of the Bishop of Raphoe’s
importation of clergy from Scotland. This northern see, now styled
Derry and Raphoe, was in the early years of the settlement filled by
George Montgomery', a brother of Sir Hugh, the great “planter” in
County Down. Bishop Montgomery held the lands assigned to his see;
and we are told that he made “proclamation in the Scottish ports
from Glasgow south to Larggs, at how easy rents he would set his
Church lands, which drew hither many families.” The colony he formed
must have been considerable; for we find in 1612 that his successor,
Bishop Knox, who was living on Lough Swilly, at some distance from
any English garrison, obtains protection for himself and for “seven
ministers that he brought out of Scotland, who are hated by the
Irish.” The real founders of the Presbyterian Church of Ireland,
however, were clergymen who took refuge in Ulster, driven from
Scotland and England by the persecuting spirit then abroad against
the Puritans. These men were, therefore, of necessity strong
Calvinists. It must be borne in mind that the south-west of
Scotland, from which the Ulster Scots largely came, was during this
whole period intensely Presbyterian; it was the district from which
in the succeeding generation came the “Westlan’ Whigs” who fought at
Bothwell Brig, and which produced the martyrs whose graves are still
visited at Wigtown, and in the quiet upland kirk-yards of New
Galloway and the “clachan” of Dairy. The first minister to come
seems to have been Edward Brice, an Edinburgh graduate, who settled
at Broad Island in Antrim, in 1613. He had been minister of Drymen
in Stirlingshire, but was driven from his charge by Archbishop
Spottiswoode. Echlin, Bishop of Down, following the example of the
Primate, made no difficulty about recognising Brice. Others, both
Scottish Presbyterians and English Nonconformists, followed— among
whom one of the best known was Robert Blair. He had been a professor
in Glasgow, but disapproving of the prelatic changes going on in
that University, he accepted the invitation of Hamilton, Lord
Clannaboye, and settled at Bangor in Down, in 1623. The story of his
ordination by Bishop Echlin shows how the spirit of Ussher was
reflected in the other bishops. Blair objected to the “sole
ordination” of the bishop, whereupon Echlin rejoined, “Will you not
receive ordination from Mr Cunningham and the adjacent brethren, and
let me come in among them in no other relation than a Presbyter?" In
this way Blair’s scruples were respected, and the law which imposed
ordination by the bishop of the diocese satisfied. When divines of
opposing Churches could thus agree, verily the old chronicler was
right in declaring that the “golden peaceable age ” had returned.
The Presbyterian Church rapidly strengthened, and
became powerful; and the more the bishops pushed things to extremes
in Scotland, the more were able men driven to take refuge in Ulster.
In 1626, a son of John Welsh of Ayr, and grandson to John Knox,
threw up the Chair of Humanity in Glasgow, and settled at
Templepatrick in Antrim, being ordained by his kinsman Knox, who had
succeeded Montgomery as Bishop of Raphoe. In 1630, he was followed
across by John Livingston, who was long a power in the North of
Ireland. Livingston’s story was similar to that of the others. He
had been minister of Torphichen, and was “silenced” in 1627 by
Archbishop Spottiswoode; being in Irvine during his wanderings, he
was induced to go over to Ireland, where Bishop Knox acted like the
Bishop of Down, and became a “Presbyter” for the nonce at his
ordination. In this way the Presbyterian Church of Ireland was
founded by the very stoutest of Calvinists.
Meanwhile the tide of colonists flowed on. Of course
there are no accurate statistics of the annual immigration, but all
the records of the time speak of the West of Scotland and the North
of Ireland as being united closely by daily intercourse. For
instance, in 1616 there is a return among the State Papers “showing
what impost was paid for wines brought into Ireland in Scottish
bottoms for the year ending March 1616, more than is paid for the
like quantity imported in English and Irish bottoms." Another proof
is found in the fact that the country people were in the habit of
crossing from Stranraer to Donaghadee, attending Newtown market,
selling their wares, and crossing to Scotland again the same
night. Some years afterwards, too, when Strafford’s tyranny had
driven many favourite ministers out of Ulster, the northern
Presbyterians were accustomed to cross over to the Ayrshire and
Galloway churches. “On one occasion, five hundred persons,
principally from the county of Down, visited Stranraer to receive
the Communion from the hands of Mr Livingston.”
The most exact account of the emigration is contained
in a very curious book of travels in Scotland and Ireland, by Sir
William Brereton, a Cheshire man, well known afterwards in the Civil
War. He states that he came to Irvine, in Ayrshire, on the 1st July
1635, and was hospitably entertained by Mr James Blair, and that his
host informed him that “above ten thousand persons have within two
years last past left this country wherein they lived, which was
betwixt Aberdine and Enuerness, and are gone for Ireland; they have
come by one hundred in company through this town, and three hundred
have gone hence together shipped for Ireland at one tide. None of
them can give a reason why they leave the country; only some of them
who make a better use of God’s hand upon them have acknowledged to
mine host in these words, ‘that it was a just judgment of God to
spew them out of the land for their unthankfulness!’ One of them I
met withal and discoursed with at large, who could give no good
reason, but pretended the landlords increasing their rents; but
their swarming in Ireland is so much taken notice of and disliked,
as that the Deputy has sent out a warrant to stay the landing of any
of these Scotch that come without a certification."
Thus was Ulster filled with Scotsmen, and the simple
forms of the Scottish Church established in the North of Ireland.
But the “golden peaceable age” of Archbishop Ussher could not last
long. In 1633, Thomas Wentworth, afterwards Earl of Strafford, began
his celebrated term of office as Lord-Deputy of Ireland, and with
him came Laud’s polity in matters ecclesiastic. The Calvinistic
Confession of Faith was altered; the bishops tinged with Puritanism
were deposed, and High Churchmen placed in their stead ; a High
Commission Court was established in Dublin; and conformity to the
Established Church was enforced by pains and penalties. Then
Wentworth’s hand fell heavily on the Presbyterians, laity and
clergy. Many of the latter had to flee and take refuge in Scotland,
where they again found churches, after that country revolted against
Episcopacy in 1637. Many of the laity, too, returned to the West of
Scotland, helping in this way to bind the two countries
together—Irvine, in Ayrshire, becoming a
regular place of rendezvous for the Ulstermen, both lay and
clerical. Wentworth viewed this intimacy with a jealous eye,
especially after Scotland had risen against Charles and placed an
army in the field. Then the Deputy’s hand fell yet heavier on the
Scots of Ulster. He imposed on every Presbyterian an oath of passive
obedience, long remembered as the Black Oath; he disarmed the Ulster
Scots as far as he could, and raised an army of 9000 men, largely
Roman Catholics, to overawe Ulster. Wentworth seems to have feared a
rising of the Scots; for in a letter to Coke, the English Secretary
of State, he states that there are 13,092 British men between
sixteen and sixty in Ulster, but congratulates himself on the fact
that they are badly armed. |