The American Nation A History of the United States, Combined Volume (14th Edition)

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Quakers and other persecuted
religious sects, among them
Mennonites and Moravians from
the Rhine Valley. The first sub-
stantial influx of immigrants into
New York after it became a royal
colony consisted of French
Huguenots. Immigrants more
readily risked the dangers of
migration when the alternative
to remaining in Europe was
persecution.
Early in the eighteenth
century, hordes of Scots-Irish
settlers from northern Ireland
and Scotland descended on
Pennsylvania. These colonists
spoke English but felt little loy-
alty to the English government,
which had treated them badly
back home, and less to the
Anglican Church, since most of
them were Presbyterians. Large
numbers of them followed the
valleys of the Appalachians south
into the back country of Virginia
and the Carolinas.
Why so few English in the
Middle Colonies? Here, again,
timing provides the best answer.
The English economy was
booming. There seemed to be
work for all. Migration to North
America, while never drying up,
slowed to a trickle. The result
was colonies in which English
settlers were a minority.
The intermingling of ethnic
groups gave rise to many preju-
dices. Benjamin Franklin,
though generally complimentary
toward Pennsylvania’s hard-
working Germans, thought
them clannish to a fault. The
already cited French traveler
Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur,
while marveling at the adaptive
qualities of “this promiscuous
breed,” complained that “the
Irish... love to drink and to
quarrel; they are litigious, and
soon take to the gun, which is the ruin of every-
thing.” Yet by and large the various types managed
to get along with each other successfully enough.
Crèvecoeur attended a wedding in Pennsylvania

The Middle Colonies: An Intermingling of Peoples 73

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YORK

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MASS.

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JERSEY

Long Island
PENNSYLVANIA

NORTH
CAROLINA

SOUTH
CAROLINA

GEORGIA

CONN. R.I.

English
Germans and Swiss
Scots-Irish
African Americans
Dutch
Scottish Highlanders
French

MAINE
(part of Mass.)

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Ethnic Groups of Eastern North America, 1750Although this chapter retains the historical
convention of referring to the coastal Atlantic as “English colonies,” the ethnic composition of the
region was much more complicated. To be sure, people of English ancestry predominated in New
England, the Chesapeake region, and the Carolinas. But the Hudson River valley remained chiefly
Dutch, and southeastern Pennsylvania remained German. Much of the western frontier was
populated by English-speaking people of Scottish and Irish ancestry. And in parts of Virginia and
the Carolinas, slaves of African descent were in the majority.


Scandinavian and Dutch settlers outnumbered
the English in New Jersey and Delaware even after
the English took over these colonies. William Penn’s
first success in attracting colonists was with German

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