Scotland:
The Scottish ancestors that I have found have been concentrated in two areas: the so-called Stewartry of Kirkcudbright (or Kirkcudbrightshire), now located in the region of Dumfries and Galloway, and the town of Paisley, located in Renfrewshire, west of Glasgow.
It would seem, to judge from the ones that I have been able to research, that these ancestors were largely the type that moved back and forth between Ireland and Scotland. Jane Graham, for example, who came with her husband and children to the States in the early 1870s, was probably born in Ireland, although she married in, and emigrated from, Scotland.
A good number of these moved about with the flow of employment and unemployment, and in the southwest corner of Scotland, that often centered upon the weaving industry. So, it was likely that when the Gargan's went from Ireland to Scotland at some point before the mid-1830s, it was in search of employment. It seems that Thomas Gargan (or Gerrigen, as he is noted in the 1841 census, or Gahagan, as his children are noted in the Latin baptismal records of the 1830s and 1840s, or Girgan, as the name is spelled on his wife's 1866 death certificate) moved to Gatehouse of Fleet in the Stewartry because of the mills that had been opened there at the end of the eighteenth century. The 1841 census notes that he is a "cotton spinner" and lived on (or at) Covengarden.
It has been noted that water-driven mills, such as operated at Gatehouse, were soon eclipsed by steam-driven mills as the Industrial Revolution gained ground. It might be supposed that Thomas Gargan and his wife, Isabella Carson, moved their family north to Paisley (sometime between 1856, when the last child, Andrew Kirk, was born in Gatehouse, and 1861, when they appear in the census taken in Paisley) so that they could find employment.
It may not have been terribly successful, however. Thanks to another's research, it is known that Isabella had to apply for poor law assistance in the early 1860s, at which point she noted that her husband was away (looking for a job, we might assume) and that both her parents and her in-laws were dead.
But the weaving industry was central. In the 1861 census, when they were living at 39 Back Sneddon Street in Paisley, the occupations for the various members of Thomas' and Isabella's family were as follows:
- Thomas, head of household, age 46, cotton spinner
- Isabella, wife, age 49, no employment noted
- John, son, age 25, cotton spinner
- Margaret, daughter, age 23, mill worker
- Thomas, son, age 20, cotton spinner
- Prudentia, daughter, age 18, cotton spinner
- William, son, age 16, cotton spinner
- James, son, age 14, cotton spinner
- Charles, son, age 10, student
- Andrew, son, age 4, student
Thomas, the 20-year old son in this census, married Jane Graham in 1864. They, and their children, followed the weaving and spinning trade across the Atlantic Ocean to New Jersey, where Clark, the big name in Paisley industry, had taken over a mill on the banks of the Passaic River in East Newark. Family history has it that he was brought over to become a supervisor at the mill. Whatever that particular truth, the Clark Thread Mill in East Newark featured prominently in the occupations of many family members for four generations.
USA:
The earliest ancestors of mine to reach America would have been the family of Franciscus Josephus Zengerling and Anna Maria Bense, probably some time in the 1840s (the 1900 census notes their son, Johann Joseph, claims to have arrived in 1840). The latest would have been my grandfather, Oto Comanzo, who did not arrive until the 1920s. In a way, the various family lines roughly echoed the broader ethnic trends of immigration: first, the Germans, then the Irish, and later on the Italians.
The various lines of Germans, Irish, and Scots came together in the city of Newark, New Jersey, throughout the course of the 1800s. It was an up and coming city in the nineteenth century, eventually becoming quite an industrial giant, although it had very quiet Puritan roots. Here are some Newark highlights culled from John T. Cunningham's Newark (revised and expanded edition, 1988):
- 18 May 1666: arrival of Connecticut Puritans according to
tradition.
- "Probably not more than 700 or 800 people lived in the
village of Newark in the 1730s."
- "Leather was Newark's prime industry from the start."
- Later considered the "father of industry" in Newark, Seth
Boyden arrived in Newark in 1815.
A census published in 1826 by town assessor Isaac Nicholls
notes 8017 persons, 17 factories, 3 distilleries, 2
breweries, and 1 grist mill.
- St. John's, built in 1828, is the first Roman Catholic
church.
- The Morris Canal is fully operational by 1832.
- Newark becomes an "official port of entry" in 1836 and
can receive foreign ships.
- Whaling is an industry operating out of Newark in the
1830s and 1840s.
- Railroads began to be developed in the 1830s.
- The 1840 Census notes a population of 17202 persons.
"Discovery of gold at Sutter's mill [in California] in 1848
turned men wild with greed and hope. Some two hundred
Newarkers joined an estimated 50,000 fortune hunters who
sailed from East Coast ports in 1848 and 1849."
The land for St. Patrick's Pro-Cathedral had to be bought
in secret in the late 1840s, because of anti-Catholic
feelings in the general population.
- The 1850 Census notes a population of 38894 persons.
- The train bearing Lincoln's body passes through Newark
on 24 April 1865.
"By 1870 more than one thousand men and women worked for
Clark Thread Company. Later, when the company opened
additional buildings in East Newark, Kearny and Harrison,
it hired thousands more."
"By 1870, [Newark tanneries] produced 90 percent of all
patent leather made in America."
The 1880 Census notes a population of 136508 persons, the 1890 Census 181830, and the 1900 Census 246070 persons.
- The last horse-powered street cars ran in 1893.