Alec MacGillis has an article in the Washington Post that discusses the book American Nations by Colin Woodard that lends further support to the association of Scots-Irish heritage and the current Republican Party. They will be referred to here also as "Borderlanders." The people known as the Scots-Irish originated in the borderlands between England and Scotland where they became devout Calvinists. They immigrated to Northern Ireland and became the cheap labor for the British plantations, and trusty Protestant allies against the indigenous Catholic Irish. It is from Ireland that hundreds of thousands then immigrated to the USA, thus picking up the label Scots-Irish. They ended up settling in the Appalachian areas because their culture and religion made them unwelcome in the coastal lowlands dominated by the better-educated Anglican English.
MacGillis begins with this anecdote:
"Presumably, something other than a singular affection for the latest Republican presidential candidate had allowed McCain to outperform Bush in this neck of the woods. But still, why this exact outline of the anti-Obama vote? What was behind it?"
Woodard’s book provides the necessary background.
"The Midlands stretch from once-Quaker Philadelphia across the heart of the Midwest — German-dominated, open-minded and less inclined toward activist government than Yankeedom. Cavalier-founded Tidewater once ruled supreme but was hemmed in and saw its clout fade."
"The Deep South stretches to East Texas, long in tension but less so now with the Borderlanders, the feisty, individualistic Scots-Irish who scorned both the community-minded Yankees and the aristocrats of the Tidewater and the Deep South. The Borderlanders’ domain spans Appalachia, the southern Midwest and the upland South — the McCain stronghold described above."
Woodard takes the view that our history, past and present, is not easily understood unless one takes into consideration these regional differences.
"In Woodard’s retelling, the country was unified in spite of itself. The Revolutionary War was a true insurgency only in Yankeedom; meanwhile, New Netherland became a Loyalist refuge, the pacifist-minded Midlanders lay low, the Deep Southern planters calculated how best to preserve (and expand) their slave economy, the Tidewater split into two camps, and the Borderlanders wrestled over whom they hated more — the British or the coastal elites oppressing them."
Woodard provides us with a concise summary of our recent political history.
It would seem that culture is an enduring entity. Over two hundred years of living in the same country and initial characteristics persist. Thanks to Woodard and MacGillis for providing such illuminating information.
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