Scotland's Mark on America Part 7
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Andrew's Society of Albany, N.Y., November 10, 1803; until at the present time, there is no city of any size or importance in the country that does not have its St. Andrew's Society, or Burns or Caledonian Club, which serves to keep alive the memories of the home-land, to instil patriotism toward the adopted country, and to aid the distressed among their kinsfolk. There are now more than one thousand of these Societies in America, including the Order of Scottish Clans (organized, 1878) a successful fraternal, patriotic and beneficial order, with more than one hundred separate clans, and the Daughters of Scotia, a rapidly growing order for women of Scottish blood, organized in 1898.
CONCLUSION
"It is the knowledge that Scotsmen have done their share in building up the great Republic that makes them proud of its progress and inspires them to add to its glories and advantages in every way.
Scotsmen, as a nationality, are everywhere spoken of as good and loyal citizens, while Americans who can trace a family residence of a century in the country are proud if they can count among their ancestors some one who hailed from the land of Burns, and it is a knowledge of all this, in turn, that makes the American Scot of to-day proud of his country's record and his citizens.h.i.+p and impels him to be as devoted to the new land as it was possible for him to have been to the old had he remained in it. In America, the old traditions, the old blue flag with its white cross, the old Doric, are not forgotten, but are nourished, and preserved, and honored, and spoken by Scotsmen on every side with the kindliest sentiments on the part of those to whom they are alien. Americans know and acknowledge that the traditions and flag and homely speech have long been conserved to the development of that civil and religious liberty on which the great confederation of sovereign republican States has been founded. In the United States, Sir Walter Scott has more readers and quite as enthusiastic admirers as in Scotland, and if Americans were asked which of the world's poets came nearest to their hearts, the answer would undoubtedly be--Robert Burns."
LIST OF PRINc.i.p.aL AUTHORITIES REFERRED TO
_Appleton_. Cyclopaedia of American Biography. New York, 1887-89.
6v.
_Bingham_. Early History of Michigan. Lansing, 1888.
_Breed_. Presbyterians and the Revolution. Philadelphia, 1876.
_Campbell_, The Puritan in Holland, England, and America. New York, 1892.
_Ca.s.son_. The Sons of Old Scotland in America. New York, 1906.
_Charlton_. The Making of Georgia. Savannah, 1905.
_Craighead_. Scotch and Irish Seeds in American Soil. Philadelphia, 1879.
_Dinsmore_. The Scotch-Irish in America. Chicago, 1906.
_Dyer_. Early American Craftsmen. New York, 1915.
_Ford_. The Scotch-Irish in America. Princeton, 1915.
_Green_. The Scotch-Irish in America. Worcester, 1895.
_Hanna_. The Scotch-Irish. New York, 1902. 2 v.
_Harrison_. The Scot in Ulster. Edinburgh, 1888.
_Jones_. History of Georgia. Boston, 1883.
_Kelly and Burrage_. American Medical Biographies. Baltimore, 1920.
_Lewis_. Great American Lawyers. Philadelphia, 1907-09. 8 v.
_Maclean_. Historical Account of the Settlements of Scottish Highlanders in America Prior to the Peace of 1783. Cleveland, 1900.
_National Cyclopaedia, of American Biography_. New York, 1898-1906.
16 v.
_Parker_. History of Londonderry, New Hamps.h.i.+re. Boston, 1851.
_Register of the Privy Council of Scotland_. Edinburgh, v. 8, 9.
_Reid_. The Scot in America and the Ulster Scot. London, 1911.
_Roberts_. New York-Boston, 1904.
_Ross_. The Scot in America. New York, 1896.
_Scotch-Irish in America_. Proceeding of Scotch-Irish Congresses.
_Scots Magazine_. Edinburgh, 1768-1774.
_Slaughter_. History of Bristol Parish. Richmond, 1879.
_Smith_. History of the Colony of Nova Caesaria or New Jersey.
Burlington, 1765.
_Smith_. History of New York. Philadelphia, 1792.
_White_. Southern Presbyterian Leaders. New York, 1911.
Scotland's Mark on America Part 7
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