|
|
|
AND 
The
Campbells from County Cavan
By Brian McConnell (1)
In
the cemetary beside the United Church at Little Britain, Ontario stands
an impressive 8' tall stone place by the descendants of John Campbell
to his memory and the memory of his wife and family. John
Campbell was an Ulster-Scot whose grandfather William Campbell immigrated
with his wife Jennie Ferguson and several children to Upper Canada
from Belturbet, County Cavan, Ireland in 1848.
Little Britain, Ontario is a long way from the original home of the
Campbells near Inverary, Scotland. How this Campbell family
came to be there is a story which mirrors the story of countless other
Scots who now live in Canada but before arriving here lived in some
cases for several hundred years in the north of Ireland. Hence
they are called the Ulster-Scots or by some the Scotch-Irish.
It is about a 2 hour drive by car from Toronto northeast to the small
community of Little Britain nestled in a rural farming area with several
small nearby lakes. The area was largely settled by Irish and
Scots in the middle of the nineteenth century when the land was made
available by the Crown before the coming into being of a Canada. (2)
According to John Campbell who in his 81st year in 1950 spoke to his
grand-daughter Irma Wilson of how they came to be in Canada "our
family was chased out of Scotland (by the English) and then chased
out of Ireland (by the Irish)." In fact during the 1600's
England transplanted several hundred thousand lowland Scots and English
in the north of Ireland on lands previously held by rebellious Irish.
The Campbell family settled between Belturbet and Cootehill in County
Cavan, one of the nine northern counties which made up the old province
of Ulster.
Today County Cavan is in the Republic of Ireland, as it has been since
the partition in 1922 of Ireland into Northern Ireland, which consists
of the northern six counties of Antrim, Armagh, Down, Fermanagh,
Londonderry, and Tyrone and the Republic. Cavan, Donegal, and Monaghan,
the other three counties which were part of the old province of Ulster,
were made part of the Republic.
The distance across the sea from the northeast coast of County Antrim
to Scotland is about 13 miles at its narrowest points and Scots have
been travelling back and forth for time immemorial. The Campbells
were
following in the path of many others. Most of these Scots were
observers of the Presbyterian faith, being the Church of Scotland,
and to this day Presbyterians make up one of the largest groups of
Protestants in Northern Ireland.
William Campbell and his wife Jennie Ferguson departed from Belfast
for Upper Canada (now the province of Ontario) along with two of their
seven
children, James and John. The trip took about 6 weeks.
Other family followed and within a few years all of the Campbell family,
but for one son, Joshua, and an uncle, Lancelot Campbell, had arrived
in Canada. (3)
The 1840's were a difficult time throughout Ireland. Not only
was their the awful castrophe of the Potato Famine which effected
much of Ireland including County Cavan but also religious conflict
between Protestants and Catholics. In County Cavan the Protestants
were in the minority and made up at most 15% of the population.
The insecurity of this situation
encouraged the growth of Orange lodges. The Grand Orange Lodge
of Ireland was founded as a result of the struggle by Protestants
to survive in Ireland where the majority of the population was Catholic
and worship freely and to support the constitutional monarchy of the
British Isles.
In past years many immigrants to Canada and their descendants were
Orangemen and Orangewomen as reflected in the number of people arriving
from the British Isles. Three of Canada's Prime Ministers were
Orangemen, including Sir John A. MacDonald, Sir Mackenzie Bowell,
and John Diefenbaker. Premier Joey Smallwood of Newfoundland
who brought his province into Canada in 1949 was also an Orangeman.
(4) After arriving in Upper Canada the Campbells built large
log homes out of the virgin forest. Their efforts and those
of other settlers are recalled in the words of the Dominion Hymn.
DOMINION HYMN
Our Sires when
times were sorest,
Asked none
bu aid Divine.
They cleared
the tangled forest,
And wrought
the buried mine.
They tracked
the floods and fountains,
And won, with
master hand,
Far more than
gold in mountains -
The glorious
fruitful land.
William Campbell died in 1898 at the age of 85 and his wife Jennie
passed away in 1918 at the age of 84. The ancestors of their
children are now spread throughout Canada and the United States.
However, there are none of their family left in Ireland, nor in Scotland.
The lands that originally supported them were also the places that
they had to depart in order to make a better life for their families.
But, these
lands influenced who they became in the new world and never were forgotten.
That is why till this day their ancestors can think of themselves
as ULSTER-SCOTS or SCOTCH-IRISH.
(1) Brian McConnell is the great great grandson of William Campbell
(2) As discussed in "Centennial Church History of Little Britain
United Church, 1839-1939"
(3) Details found in "Campbell Family Tree" prepared on
occasion of Canada's Centennial by H. Louisa Campbell, grand-daughter
of William Campbell.
(4) See "The Sash Canada Wore: A Historical Geography of the
Orange Order in Canada" by Cecil J. Houston and William J. Smyth,
Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 1980.
Canada
Ireland
|