The American Revolution From Scotland
The research that I have done on the Founding Fathers has
taken me to check out my own family history.
I have assumed for most of my life that I was from English
background. If my studies are correct,
my ancestor Richard Webster came from Glamis, Angus in Scotland. He supposedly was a schoolmaster and lived in
Cambridge, Maryland from about 1704 to 1744.
This knowledge has spurred me on to study the history of Scotland,
especially in terms of its impact on the Founding Fathers. An excellent book to give me that overview of
the country has been Scotland: The Story of a Nation by Magnus Magnusson. With some seven hundred pages, it has been a
long read but also an enlightening one.
There are nine Scottish signers of the Declaration of
Independence: Thomas McKean, James Wilson, George Ross, Matthew Thornton,
Edward Rutledge, William Hooper, Philip Livingston, George Taylor and Rev. John
Witherspoon. As I study more about
Scottish history especially from about A.D. 1600 onward, I am seeing many links between the Scots and
the desire for independence in America in what became the United States. Especially when one finds out that Rev. John
Witherspoon was a direct descendant of
John Knox of the Reformation, this is really worthwhile to dig into. When one
finds out that the American Revolution has been called a Presbyterian
revolution and that Scotland had a National Covenant, I had better check this
out.
Being from Maryland’s Eastern Shore, there are many place
names that have huge Scottish significance.
Queen Anne’s is the name of a county (where Charles Willson Peale the
painter came from). Little did I know
that Queen Anne had 18 children (only one of which survived infancy). A
major battle was fought at Preston in northern England where 2,000 Scots died
in battle. There was also a battle in
Worcester and Dunbar. A lot of these
names sound so familiar.
The
Whigs got their start in Scotland as a part of the Covenanters. The Declaration of Arbroath, signed in April
6, 1320 might have had something to do with another Declaration signed 456
years later.
This
is just the beginning of hopefully more articles on Scotland and her neglected
history.
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