Katana VentraIP

Scottish colonization of the Americas

Scottish colonies and settlements in the Americas comprised a number of failed or abandoned Scottish settlements in North America; a colony at Darien on the Isthmus of Panama; and a number of wholly or largely Scottish settlements made after the Acts of Union 1707, and those made by the enforced resettlement after the Battle of Culloden and the Highland Clearances.

East New Jersey (1683)[edit]

On 23 November 1683, Charles II granted a charter for the colony of New Jersey to 24 proprietors, 12 of whom were Scots. The colony was to be split between an English settlement in West Jersey and a Scottish settlement in East Jersey. The driving force among the Scots was Robert Barclay of Urie,[6] a prominent Quaker and the first Governor of East Jersey.


Although the Quakers were an important force, making up all of the proprietors of East Jersey, the settlement was marketed as a national, rather than religious, endeavour partially because of persecution of the Quakers in the 1660s and the 1670s.


Scots began arriving in East Jersey in 1683 at Perth Amboy and spread south to Monmouth County. The city became the provincial capital in 1686.[7] During the 1680s, around 700 Scots emigrated to East Jersey, mostly from Aberdeen and Montrose, and around 50% of those travelled as indentured servants. From 1685, there was further emigration, albeit unsought by the emigrants, with the deportation of captured Covenanters. They were originally to have been placed in indentured servitude on arrival; however, they were declared by the courts to be free men, as they had not voluntarily indented. In the 1690s, the pace of Scottish immigration slowed by the opposition by William III of England and II of Scotland to those proprietors who supported James II of England and VII of Scotland and did not pick up again until the 1720s.


The initial immigrants to East Jersey were Quakers, Episcopalians and Presbyterians; by the 1730s, Presbyterianism had become the dominant religion.


Until 1697, every Governor of East Jersey was Scottish, who maintained great influence in politics and business even after 1702, when East Jersey and West Jersey were merged to become a Royal Colony.

Stuarts Town, Carolina (1684)[edit]

Although the Province of Carolina was an English colony in the early 1680s, Sir John Cochrane of Ochiltree and Sir George Campbell of Cessnock negotiated the purchase of two counties for Scottish settlement. These were intended, with the support of the Earl of Shaftesbury, the leader of the Carolina Proprietors, to provide a haven for Covenanters, as they negotiated a guarantee of freedom of conscience and autonomous control of their colony,[8]: 31–32  which extended from Charles Town towards Spanish territory.


Investors were encouraged that the colony might have its own government and "wee might haive Presbytery estaiblished".[9] Robert Baird, an Edinburgh merchant, was the company's cash-keeper in 1682.[10] Plans were interrupted by the aftermath of the Rye House Plot in England.[11] In 1684, 148 settlers arrived from Gourock to build a settlement at Port Royal, the site of former French and Spanish settlements. This was renamed by as Stuarts Town.[8]: 39 


William Dunlop recommended the purchase of slaves from Barbados and sold runaway slaves to the Spanish.[12] The Scots made an alliance with the Yamasee people. Once settled, there was frequent conflict, both with Spanish-allied Indigenous or American Indians and with the English at Charles Town. Historic Stuarts Town was destroyed in a battle with Spaniards from St. Augustine in August 1686.[13]

Darien, Georgia (1735)[edit]

Darien, Georgia, was a settlement created by Englishman James Oglethorpe and his aide Captain George Dunbar who brought in 177 Scots settlers to the Province of Georgia. It was named after the previous failed settlement on the Isthmus of Panama, though it was, for a time, also known as "New Inverness".[15]

Darien scheme

Darien, Georgia

Nova Scotia

East Jersey

Scottish Tobacco trade

Scottish Indian trade

Lowland Clearances

Highland Clearances

Former colonies and territories in Canada

English colonial empire

Armitage, David (1997). "Making the empire British: Scotland in the Atlantic world 1542–1707". Past & Present (155): 34–63. :10.1093/past/155.1.34. JSTOR 651126.

doi

Devine, T. M. (2017). A Scottish Empire of Enterprise in the East, c. 1700–1914. Springer. pp. 23–49. {{}}: |work= ignored (help)

cite book

Fry, Michael (2001). The Scottish Empire. Edinburgh: Birlinn Limited.

Insh, George P. (1922). . Glasgow, Maclehose.

Scottish Colonial Schemes 1620–1686

Landsman, Ned C. (2014). Scotland and Its First American Colony, 1683–1765. Princeton University Press., on East New Jersey.

Prebble, John (1969). The Darien Disaster: A Scots Colony in the New World, 1698–1700.

Reid, John G. (1981). Acadia, Maine, and New Scotland: marginal colonies in the seventeenth century. University of Toronto Press.

Sandrock, Kirsten (2015). "The Legacy of Scotland's Colonial Schemes". Medievalia et Humanistica (41).

Scotch Fort historic monument in Nova Scotia