Irish-Scots


Irish-Scots are people in Scotland who are of immediate or traceably distinct Irish ancestry. Although there has been migration from Ireland to Scotland for
millennias permanently changing the historic landscape of Northern Britain forever, Irish migration to Scotland increased in the nineteenth century, and was highest following the Great Famine. In this period, the Irish typically settled in cities and industrial areas.
In the 2011 UK census, 1% of the population in Scotland identified their ethnicity as being 'White - Irish'. However, with centuries of heavy Irish immigration to Scotland, it is generally believed to be over 1.5 million people may have some Irish blood, even if very distantly. The same census states the number of Catholics in Scotland as 15.9% of the population, of whom many have an Irish background.
Famous Irish-Scots include socialist revolutionary James Connolly, author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, left-wing politician George Galloway, actors Sean Connery, Brian Cox, Peter Capaldi and Gerard Butler, musicians Gerry Rafferty, Maggie Reilly, Jimme O'Neill, Claire Grogan and Fran Healy and stand-up comedians Billy Connolly and Frankie Boyle.
The term Irish-Scots should not be confused with Ulster-Scots, a term used to denote those in the Irish province of Ulster who are descended from Lowland Scots who settled there in large numbers during the Ulster Plantation and subsequently.

Background

Attitudes to the waves of immigration from Ireland to Scotland were mixed, as evidenced by the following quotations:
Report from the Scottish Census of 1871

Difficulties also arose due to differences between the largely Catholic immigrants and the predominantly Protestant native Scots population. Towards the end of the eighteenth century, before the Irish began arriving in large numbers it was reported that, in Glasgow, there were only thirty-nine Catholics, but forty-three anti-Catholic clubs.
In the UK census of 2001, the new category "Irish" was added to the list of white ethnic background. In Scotland, results showed that 49,428, fewer than 1% of the population, self-described as being of Irish background.
The Irish-Scots were instrumental in the formation of Hibernian F.C. in Edinburgh in 1875. There followed in 1888 in Glasgow, Celtic Football Club, and later Dundee United F.C., as well as numerous smaller teams. These football teams were originally formed to provide recreational facilities for the Irish immigrants.

Scots and Irish

The terms Scots and Irish, while they have a settled meaning today, are not always readily distinguished. Sellar & Yeatman's spoof history 1066 and All That highlighted the confusion that these words can cause when used to refer to the past :