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  1. A HISTORY OF THE SCOTCH-IRISHANDTHEIR INFLUENCE IN KENTUCKY. ]BY •V[ELLIESCOTTHORTIN Athens, Ohio. In 1787 Historian John Hske, in writing about the Carolina frontier, noted that the Scotch-Irish from Ulster were more important and far more numerous than all the other elements in the population, and have played a much greater and more ...

  2. Mar 13, 2014 · 1310 S. 3rd St., Louisville, KY 40208 (502) 635-5083. Plan Your Visit to the Filson! To register or purchase tickets for our events, please visit our Events Page. The Research Library is open Monday through Friday, 9 am to 4:30pm; we are closed on the third Friday of each month. Appointments are not required, but feel free to reserve a seat ...

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  4. Jun 15, 2011 · The first relates to Ulster Scots, the Germanic language that would have been spoken by the earliest Scots-Irish settlers. Notably, this language is still heard in contemporary Northern Ireland, but is emphatically not spoken in Appalachia. This suggests that there was, for reasons that are unclear, much more pressure to speak “standard ...

  5. Limerick, Louisville, Kentucky was a neighborhood built by the Irish. At one point in time it was so densely populated by railroad workers from Co. Limerick, Ireland, that it seemed appropriate to ...

  6. Nov 9, 2009 · The path led more than 200,000 settlers—including many Scotch-Irish and German migrants from western Pennsylvania, Maryland, North Carolina and Virginia—to Kentucky by the end of the century. Ft.

  7. The Kentucky Irish American was a newspaper printed for the Irish in Louisville. Founded in 1896 in Limerick, it existed until 1968. However, Limerick as an Irish stronghold ended after the Louisville and Nashville Railroad in 1902 chose to move its shop to Louisville's Highland Park district, causing most of its Irish workforce to move with it.

  8. Nov 2, 2009 · All throughout this book, the writer makes it perfectly clear that it is only speculative that anyone was Irish, and my research indicates that we are English. My Kentucky Dunn relatives originated in Cornwall, England, and immigrated to Kent, Maryland in 1652, and migrated to Kentucky in 1791.

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