Although my background is almost all German and English, I’ve always wanted to find a bit of Irish in me. This is because my husband was born in Cork City and after numerous visits I’ve fallen in love with Ireland. For years I searched in my family tree for an Irish ancestor and finally, about a year ago, I found one. My 5th great-grandparent, William Jack, was born in Ireland. It might only be a sliver but I’m at least 1/128th Irish!
It might only be a sliver but I’m at least 1/128th Irish!
William is a bit of an elusive character. According to the Daughters of the American Revolution he was born in Belfast around 1745. However, that may not be where he was from but rather where he left from. William Jack was likely “Scotch-Irish” and a descendant of Scottish immigrants who had settled, generations before, in the northern part of Ireland. Between 1717 and 1775 at least five waves of Scotch-Irish left the Ulster area, usually through the ports of Londonderry and Belfast.
The Scotch-Irish left Ireland for a number of reasons. The two main factors were the collapse of their lucrative linen-weaving trade and rack-renting. Rack-renting was the term used for onerous increases in their land rent. When the Scottish immigrants first came to Ireland, they were given long leases, typically 31 years, with low rents. After their leases expired, landlords often doubled or tripled their rents. Unable or unwilling to pay the increased rents, many chose to immigrate to America.
If William followed a typical Scotch-Irish migration path he probably sailed from Belfast and landed at Philadelphia.
If William followed a typical Scotch-Irish migration path he probably sailed from Belfast and landed at Philadelphia. He may have arrived during the 1754 to 1755 wave as a child or during the 1771 to 1775 wave as an adult. Whenever he arrived, he was living in Chester County, Pennsylvania, possibly with one of six Jack families there, when he enlisted in the Chester County militia on 6 August 1777.
“Our liberties are dearer to us than our lives. . .”
During the Revolutionary War , William enlisted for two months to serve as a substitute in the Elk Battalion Militia under Colonel Evan Evans. He likely helped deal with the Chester County Loyalists who were aiding the British army as they raided the county in search of supplies during the fall of 1777. Although it is unclear if William served longer than two months, the Elk Battalion was a patriotic regiment with the motto “our liberties are dearer to us than our lives, and we will spend the last drop of our blood in defense of them.”
After the war, William married Lucretia Geer. Her parents, born in Connecticut, were of English ancestry. From at least 1785 to 1790, William and Lucretia lived in Wayne Township, Mifflin County. From there, around 1797, they moved to Venango Township, Butler County. William died in Venango sometime after 1810 and left four children: two sons, Samuel and John; and two daughters, Anna, wife of Oliver Rosenberry (my ancestor), and Polly, wife of William Hale.
HI Pam, I couldn’t help but notice your last name. My GG grandmother, Ann Halloran, shows up in many records of her numerous children as Ann Holland. She was born in Clare, and we believe it was Quin, because of a baptismal record found. Her young family moved to IA, near Iowa City, where she was known as Ann Welsh, having married in New York to another Irishman. There are many Hollands in the area she lived, and I found that they are from Ireland too, but haven’t been able to confirm WHERE in Ireland they are from, and if they are indeed her relatives. Anyway, perhaps it is your husband who is Holland. Has he figured out his Holland origins? Thanks! \
Hey, I want to be Irish too and have been on this same quest! My likely Irish ancestors are the parents of my 5th great-grandmother Mary Ann [maiden name unknown] Davis. This Davis clan settled in Virginia in the 1700s sometime.
One thing I learned in the search was how often the Brits banished the Scots-Irish to the colonies as prison-labor, especially to the plantations in the south. Tens of thousands of ’em, and they’re pretty well documented.
Hi Pam,
I enjoyed reading your account because I have shared a similar feeling about my Irish ancestors. While my heritage is half Swiss, a fourth German, and a fourth British, I, too, have among the British ancestor two little slices of Ulster Scots-Irish: a 7th great grandmother who immigrated to New England in 1714 and a 2nd great grandfather who immigrated to Canada in 1849. Following your reckoning, that makes me 1/16 + 1/512th or 33/512ths Irish. I’m still working on finding the parents of the parents of my 1849 immigrant.