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Date: Wed, 01 Mar 2000 13:50:35 -0800
From: Howard Ford <hf(a)gte.net>
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Subject: US Migration
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If anyone knows the author of the following would you please notify
the list. This came to me without author information. It may have
value for you in your genealogical research.
Howard Ford
- ----------------------------------------------------
I. Motivations of original colonial ancestors
A. THE ENGLISH
1. Social and economic dislocation, caused in part by pressure on
feudal
system by inflation resulting from vast amount of new gold and silver
introduced through Spain.
2. Political rivalry between a recently strengthen England and Spain.
3. Richard Hakluyt's "Discourse of Western Planting" provides an
intellectual rationale for colonizing both in Ireland and the New
World.
4. Religious upheaval in England encourages various groups to leave.
5. The success of Francis Drake leads englishmen to perceive of the
New
World as a land of instant riches, thus serving as a catalyst for
colonization.
6. Development of joint stock companies provides economic base for
colonization (think the Jamestown-Virginia Stock Co, pocahontas
timeframe).
7. Failure of the Spanish Armada gives English greater confidence.
B. THE NON ENGLISH
1. Blacks introduced, first as indentured servants, then as slaves,
after
1619.
2. Dutch and Swedes are incorporated as New York and New Jersey
become
english colonies.
3. Huguenots (French Protestants) permitted by English to settle
after
forced to leave France.
4. Lowland Scots settle in northern Ireland, then shortly after 1700
come
in large numbers to the English colonies, settling on the frontier and
becoming known as the "Scotch-Irish."
5. Germans, largely from the Panatinate, settle on the frontier at
same
time as the "Scotch-Irish" and become known as the "Pennsylvania
Dutch."
6. After 1750, significant numbers of Highland Scots are permitted to
leave
Scotland to settle in the English colonies, with the promise they
will
never fight against the (english) Crown.
II. MOVEMENT OF ANCESTORS AFTER MAJOR MIGRATION ACROSS THE ATLANTIC
OCEAN
A. Rather static habits of most settlers in the English colonies
throughout the Colonial Era.
1. Most colonists rarely moved more than 20 miles in their lifetime,
except for Scotch-Irish who moved often.
2. New England religious and social attitudes discouraged much
movement,
often required considerable preparation before moves were sanctioned.
3. Southern settlers who came from England found themselves oriented
toward England economically, socially and politically, and by 1776
more than 85% were still within thirty miles of the Atlantic coast.
4. "Pennsylvania Dutch" though settling most of the frontier from NY
South, rarely moved after selecting a permanent home.
B. Surge of interest in the West leads to settlement in Tennessee,
Kentucky, and the Ohio Valley after 1750.
1. Exploration shows great desirability of these areas.
2. Establishment of military roads such as Forbes Road and Braddocks
Road
opens the Ohio Valley during the French and Indian War, after 1754.
3. Development of Cumberland Gap and the Wilderness Road open
Kentucky.
4. Utilization of the Indian trails of the Great Valley of the
Appalachians brings settlers from Virginia and Maryland to Tennessee,
while North Carolinians use the river valleys of the Holston,
Nolichucky and French
Broad to the same part of eastern Tennessee.
C. Revolutionary War encourages western settlement.
1. Removal of indians from desired land often justified as part of
war
effort. 2. British policy which often discouraged settlement west
of Appalachians no longer operative.
3. Individual states, especially Virginia and North Carolina,
encourage
settlement to solidify their claims before 1778.
4. Land speculation rampant.
5. Western land utilized for land bounties given to Revolutionary War
soldiers. 6. Treaty of Paris of 1783 ending the Revolutionary War
almost doubles the area claimed by the U.S. when Britain agrees to a
Mississippi River boundary.
D. Western Movement escalates during the early national period.
1. Legislation such as the Northwest Ordinances of 1784 (deciding
that the
West will be admitted as states equal to the original 13 colonies),
1785
(providing for the surveying and orderly sale of western land) and
1787
(providing specific steps for establishment of territories, then
states)
encourages settlement.
2. Challenges to U.S. claims to land north and west of Ohio river by
Britain, and in the far south by Spain leads to heightened American
interest in Ohio and the "Yazoo Strip."
3. The clearing of Indian and British claims to the Ohio Country by
the
Treaty of Ft. Greenville and Jay's Treaty in 1795 and Pinckney's
Treaty,
in which Spain not only recognizes the American interpretation of the
Yazoo
controversy, but guarantees Americans the right to navigate the
entire
Mississippi River erased many of the impediments to settlement in
these
areas.
4. Eli Whitney's invention of the cotton gin 1793, making the growing
of
upland cotton commercially feasible at a time when European
technological
development has led to a major demand for a new source of fibers,
greatly
affects the nature and level of western settlement.
A) Southerners with land find a ready sale for it, at unheard of
prices,
which gives them the funds to go elsewhere.
B) Even though land suitable for growing of cotton will usually cost
between $15 and $50 per acre, many settlers from the Old South cling
to the
traditional pattern of going almost due west, because of the great
profits
that can be made from raising cotton.
C) Many southerners break the traditional pattern of settling almost
straight west of where they had lived before and go instead clear up
the
Ohio River Valley, settling in southern Ohio, Indiana or Illinois.
This is
largely because:
1) Slavery which almost everyone thought was dead, was revitalized
because
of the need for dependable cotton cultivators, many left the south
because
of an aversion to slavery;
2) Some left because they didn't like blacks, and because the
Northwest
Ordinances forbade slavery, they chose to go there;
3) Most who left the south and went to the Ohio Valley probably did
so
because they were guaranteed that they could obtain what they
considered
to be exceptional fertile land at no more than $1.25 per acre.
5. Abrupt departure of many people from New England between 1800 and
1810.
a) Appeal of rich land in upstate NY, now free of most Indian claims.
b) Appeal of land in Ohio Valley, especially northern Ohio, Indiana
and
Illinois.
c) People moving from New England to Ohio Valley begin raising sheep
and
agri products, making it difficult for New Englanders with their
generally
poor soil, to compete.
d) Embargo Act of 1807 destroys the New England shipping industry and
the
New England economy sags considerably.
e) Much of the traditional New England resistance to individual
distant
settlement is fading.
f) The introduction of steamboats, whch make upriver navigation of
the
Mississippi and Ohio rivers practical, further enhances the economy
of the
area west of New England.
6. The LOUISIANA PURCHASE of 1803 almost doubles the land of the
United
States, establishes new opportunities for Americans in the far west,
and
entices many young men to settle, grow cotton, trade, trap and
explore.
E. ADDITIONAL FACTORS LEADING TO THE TREMENDOUS SETTLEMENT OF THE
FIRST 50
YEARS OF THE 19th CENTURY.
1. Canal boom of the 1820s, especially the extremely successful Erie
Canal
which drastically lowers the cost of east-west shipping.
2. Changing Indian policy which by 1816 encourages each Indian head
of
family to select 640 acres on which to live or move west of
Mississippi
River and by 1826 tells all Indians east of Mississippi they must
remove,
thus making much land available, especially for cotton production in
the
south.
3. The Adams-Onis Treaty in 1819 gives the U.S. Spain's claim to
Florida,
but also to the land north of the 42nd parallel (the northern border
of
California).
4. American settlement of Texas, beginning in 1823, which leads to
Texas
independence in 1836, admission to the Union in 1845.
5. Development of the railroad as a means of transportation and of
encouraging westward movement.
6. American interest in Oregon soars after 1841, with rapid
settlement of
the Willamette River Valley.
7. Mormons, dispossessed from their homes in Missouri and Illinois,
go
first to Iowa, then make a major migration to the Salt Lake Valley in
1847,
quickly expanding throughout the Great Basin.
8. The War with Mexico ends with the Treaty of Guadelupe Hidalgo
giving
the Southwest to the U.S.
9. The discovery of large amounts of placer gold in California leads
to a
major rush there in 1849 and statehood in 1850.
10. The Pacific Railway Act and Homestead Act in 1862 lead to a
further,
effective settlement of the west.
11. The CENSUS of 1890 OFFICIALLY declares that there is no longer a
frontier in the U.S.
III. IMPORTANT FACTS THAT MAY HELP YOU FIND WHERE YOUR FAMILY CAME
FROM OR
WENT.
A. RULE OF THE HARVEST. Before the 1850s (and McCormick's reaper)
families
rarely planted more than they could harvest, which was between 15-25
acres
per able bodied person who could help with the harvest. Finding out
how
many acres your family cultivated will help you know how many many
people were in the household.
B. IMPORTANCE OF HARDWOOD TREES. In both the North and the South,
conventional wisdom (and you thought it was a '90s soundbite!)
indicated
that land covered with hardwood trees was the best, while grassland
was to
be avoided. Despite the great difficulty of clearing land covered
with
oaks and maples, that was the land most likely selected by your
ancestors prior to the 1820s.
C. FAMILIES WHO MADE THEIR LIVING PIONEER FARMING rarely moved unless
they had enough means to live on for at least 2 years, or had someone
who would
provide for them this long. This is due to the fact that it took 2
years
to go through the process of converting a hardwood forest into an
economically viable farm. If your family moved, it usually meant they
had enough money to survive for 2 years without much add'l income, or
enough $ to buy an already improved farm. Few poverty stricken people
(PSP)moved west, but a fair number of PSPs moved east.
D. MOST SETTLERS BEFORE 1800 at least in the North, moved west during
the
winter, usually in January and early February. Expect your families
to
have moved then, not in the summer.
E. With a new notable exceptions, your ancestors MOVED ALMOST DUE
WEST,
rarely deviating more than a few degrees up or down.
F. IF YOUR ANCESTORS WERE IN NEW ENGLAND PRIOR TO 1700, expect them
to stay very close to the same site until 1800. By 1810, they will
most likely be
in upstate New York, by 1820 in northern Ohio, Indiana or Illinois,
and by
1850 perhaps in Iowa, Oregon, California or Utah.
G. TOWNS SETTLED BY NEW ENGLANDERS usually had streets running
north-south and east-west, while towns settled by Southerners often
placed less
emphasis on grid patterns.
TRAVEL ROUTES.
COLONIAL ROADS TO 1750. As one of the earliest east-west wagon roads,
the
Lancaster road linked Philadelphia to Harrisburg before 1730. A
connection
from Lancaster to Winchester, Virginia, in the early 1740s, created
what
was either called the Philadelphia Wagon Road or the Great Valley
Road. The
Fall Line Road crossed Virginia and the Carolinas, and eventually
into Georgia. By 1746, the Pioneer's Road had connected Alexandria
to Winchester,
Virginia, joining with the Great Valley Road. By 1748, the Upper Road
became an important wagon route for migrations into the Carolinas.
THE WAY WEST, 1775-1795. Daniel Boone's Wilderness Road was the route
for
thousands of settlers into Kentucky. Meanwhile the western
Pennsylvania
routes provided an overland access to the Ohio River. After the
Revolutionary War, western migrations on these routes continued to
increase.
_______
==============================
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