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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
Very few Europeans came to the Arkansas area during the years of French and Spanish rule, 1686 to 1803. The 1810 census of the Louisiana Territory listed only 1,062 non-Indian residents in the entire District of Arkansas. | *Very few Europeans came to the Arkansas area during the years of French and Spanish rule, 1686 to 1803. The 1810 census of the Louisiana Territory listed only 1,062 non-Indian residents in the entire District of Arkansas. | ||
*Immigration began in earnest with the cotton boom of 1818. Many families of '''Scottish, Scotch-Irish, and English''' descent moved overland from Virginia and the Carolinas through Tennessee and Mississippi or Missouri. | |||
*They often brought slaves with them. In 1860, African American slaves comprised over one fourth of the population. | |||
*About 1867, the rich land between the Arkansas and White rivers beckoned to large groups of '''Southern European emigrants'''. Many families from '''Poland''' settled in Pulaski County. A number of '''Italians''' located in the northwestern part of the state. | |||
In 1850 Father Thomas Hore led a group of over 1000 Irish Catholics from counties Wicklow and Wexford to Little Rock, Arkansas. The group split into six parts, and ended up settling in New Orleans; Little Rock and Fort Smith, Arkansas; Refugio, Texas; St. Louis, Missouri; and Wexford, Iowa. A list of 847 of the emigrants is available in:<br> | In 1850 Father Thomas Hore led a group of over 1000 Irish Catholics from counties Wicklow and Wexford to Little Rock, Arkansas. The group split into six parts, and ended up settling in New Orleans; Little Rock and Fort Smith, Arkansas; Refugio, Texas; St. Louis, Missouri; and Wexford, Iowa. A list of 847 of the emigrants is available in:<br> |
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