236 THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 
ADDITIONAL NAMES IN 1771. 
Hoar Solomons eee "tue 1 persons 
Nichols, Samuel seni. tee Ture ie 
ADDITIONAL NAMES IN 1774. 
Bla Nam IE Re 3 persons 
Brown Charles ac ee ee PERD 
Dixon; John ee pe koe EEE 0 ae 
DixSoni0baries Ne tr ee 6) 
Downing.) AMES, oe! a4 NN ee ne 
English | William ests eee eet ee 5 
Herril, sance Are REA EE She 
Hamilton, JAMES EN oe. 7. me cae ee SRE 
Lynds, Jacob..... ER ae een Le 2 
Morral :Carél oe fae Re RCE D 
Morrisons RODert. "00 1 
McCurde Alexander 1 6 
Scott, Joseph ee pe 4.75 oe ND Gi OP IR 
Staples, Sidney....... 
SIEVELS; JACODiee oe ae en ee 
Upham: slike...) REP ee 
Upham UNathan”. \ ec cou =. ER 
Weatherbie, Samuel.................. 
THE SETELING OF TRURO 
SECTION II. 
The three events which stand out most conspicuously in the his- 
tory of the reign of James the First of England are the translation of the 
Bible into English; the confiscation of the estates of the banished Earls 
of Ulster, in Ireland, and the settlement there, in place of the evicted 
Trish, of Scottish and English “undertakers;” and the persecution of 
the Independents in England and the oppression of the Presbyterians 
in Scotland. From the second of these events originated a race that 
is almost distinct in Britain, the people commonly known in America 
as Scotch-Irish, but more agreeably as Ulster Scotsmen. The Province 
of Ulster, including a fourth part of Ireland, is divided into the nine 
counties of Antrim, Down, Armagh, Londonderry (formerly Coleraine), 
Tyrone, Monaghan, Donegal, Fermanagh, and Cavan, and in this wide 
region was developed a race that, not Irish and somewhat different 
