
As European settlers traveled to the New World, the Irish were ahead of the curve when it came to escaping the British Empire. Ireland was also a British colony, and its citizens were treated terribly. They were converted to Christianity, then a few hundred years later, non-Anglican religions were outlawed. Irish land was confiscated, their trees were cut down, and their priests executed. In the wake of this treatment, many Scots-Irish, particularly Presbyterians, fled to America to breathe freely.
By the time of the American Revolution, people of Irish heritage made up about 10% of the white colonial population. But they comprised between 25 and 50% of the Continental Army! They were serious about freedom from Britain. They filled roles from cooks to spies to officers to Founding Fathers. John Barry immigrated to Philadelphia as a teenager, and rose to be the first commissioned officer in the US Navy. Lydia Barrington Darragh served as a spy for the patriots. John Dunlap printed hundreds of copies of the Declaration of Independence within a day of its adoption. Nine of Washington's generals and eight signers of the Declaration were Irish. Read about these and other ethnic Irish patriots who served valiantly in the American Revolution, at Smithsonian.
(Collage credit: Sonja Anderson)






