Irish - American Presidents
George Washington County Cork
James Madison County Clare
Andrew Jackson County Antrim
James Polk County Donegal
James Buchanan County Tyrone
Andrew Johnson County Antrim
Ulysses S. Grant County Tyrone
Chester Arthur County Antrim
Grover Cleveland County Antrim
Benjamin Harrison County Down
William McKinley County Antrim
Theodore Roosevelt County Donegal
Woodrow Wilson County Tipperary
John F. Kennedy County Wexford
Richard Nixon County Antrim
Gerald Ford County Monaghan
Jimmy Carter Northern Ireland
Ronald Reagan County Tipperary
William Clinton County Fermanagh
Irish-American Texans
IRISH. Natives of Ireland were among the first settlers in
Spanish-ruled Texas, and the story of the Irish in Texas is
in many ways coincident with the founding of the republic
and the development of the state. The heritage of the Irish
seems in retrospect to have peculiarly suited their migration
to a new land, for the English dominance of Ireland must have
been to the new colonists in Texas a close parallel to the
oppression they eventually found in the new country. It is
not surprising that as many as twenty-five Irishmen probably
signed the Goliad Declaration of Independence, that four
signed the actual Texas Declaration of Independence, and
that 100 were listed in the rolls of San Jacinto, comprising
one-seventh of the total Texan force in that battle.
Probably the first Irishman in Texas was Hugo Oconór, who became
governor ad interim of Texas in 1767. Though his national origins
are uncertain, Oconór was almost certainly Irish, as his name
suggests. His success in reinforcing San Antonio against raiding
Apaches was a notable contribution to the further settlement of
that region. Philip Nolan, a native of Belfast, Ireland, was
said to be the first Anglo American to map Texas. Whatever his
real mission in Texas, Nolan's activities so aroused Spanish
authorities that he was killed by a force sent to arrest him in
1801. James Hewetson and James Power, along with John McMullen
and James McGloin, were the first Irishmen to receive empresario
contracts from Mexico, successfully settling the areas now
comprising Refugio and San Patricio counties. Hewetson accompanied
Stephen F. Austin to Texas on his first trip in 1821, and many
Irishmen were counted in Austin's Old Three Hundred. De León's
colony at Victoria also included several Irish families, and it
should be noted that all of these contracts, except that to
McMullen and McGloin, called for the settlement of Mexican as well
as Irish families, specifically Catholics. Some writers have
maintained that the southern grants were made only to the Irish to
form a buffer zone of devout Catholics between Mexico and the
northern Anglo settlements, but it now seems clear that the
McMullen-McGloin colony was adjacent to the Power and Hewetson
colony only by sheer coincidence. During the days of the republic
the two colonies were on the frontier that saw the worst possible
hardships for settlers. In the Texas Revolution such Irishmen as
Francis Moore, Jr., John Joseph Linn, Thomas William Ward and the
four empresarios named above all played important roles. James
Power used his influence to seat Sam Houston at the Convention of
1836. Eleven Irishmen died at the battle of the Alamo and
fourteen were among those with James W. Fannin, Jr., at the Goliad
Massacre. Appropriately, Refugio and San Patricio counties were
among the first established in Texas after the revolution; the date
was March 17, 1836, Saint Patrick's Day.
The 1850 census listed 1,403 Irish in Texas; ten years later the
number was 3,480. Notable Irish-born Texans in the nineteenth
century included William Kennedy, whose book The Rise, Progress and
Prospects of Texas (1841) encouraged immigration to the new republic;
Richard W. Dowling, whose company of all-Irish Confederates
repulsed the Union fleet at Sabine Pass; Peter Gallagher, a Texas
Ranger and later an organizer of Pecos County; Samuel McKinney, an early
president of Austin College; and John William Mallet, first chairman
of the University of Texas faculty. Irish colonists in Texas endured
the same problems of education, farming, and economic hardship as did
other settlers, though perhaps with better success, considering their
proximity to hostile forces. The descendants of generations who had
long fought and died for their civic and religious liberties, the Irish
were quicker than most to recognize incursions upon their rights and to
defend against them. In 1980 572,732 Texans described themselves as of
Irish descent. The Irish were third among those claiming European
ancestry, following English and German.
See also SAN PATRICIO MINUTE MEN; SAN PATRICIO TRAIL.
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