Scots-Irish Presbyterians ~ or Ulster Scots
Guilford Area Ulster Scot Presbyterian History
from the History of Guilford County, North Carolina,
by the Guilford County Bicentennial Commission
excerpt from “North Carolina Through Four Centuries,” by William S. Powell
Professor Powell’s brief discussion of Scots-Irish will satisfy some, but, for those who want to learn more, we suggest that you find a copy of:
The Scotch-Irish: A Social History, by James G. Leyburn;
published by The University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, NC.
This book gives an excellent and very detailed history of the Scots-Irish people.
- Rev. David Caldwell, D.D., & The Churches of Guilford County
- Buffalo Presbyterian Church, established 1756
- History of Buffalo Presbyterian Church, from Rev. Rankin’s book
- Buffalo Presbyterian Church, Members of the Congregation,
(Part One) from Rev. Rankin’s book - Buffalo Presbyterian Church, Members of the Congregation,
(Part Two) from Rev. Rankin’s book - Buffalo Presbyterian Church, Members of the Congregation,
(Part Three) from Rev. Rankin’s book - Alamance Presbyterian Church, established 1762
- Alamance Presbyterian Church History
- Alamance Presbyterian Church, Miscellaneous Records
- Bethel Presbyterian Church History
- Bethel Presbyterian Church, McLeansville, established 1812
- The Ulster Scots Website
- The Ulster Scots, by UlsterAncestry.com
- The Ulster Society
- The 1718 Migration website, about the migration to the New World
- The Scots-Irish from Ulster and the Great Philadelphia Wagon Road
- Ulster Scots dialect grammar
- Ulster American Folk Park, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland