In
  one interview in the early 1950's John Wayne described himself as 
'just  a Scotch-Irish little boy.'   John Wayne, or as he was known 
before his  fame, Marion Morrison, was born in Winterset, Iowa.  His family emigrated from County Antrim, Ireland, in 1799.  The Morrison family, like many Scots-Irish families in Counties Antrim and Donegal, were of Hebridean origin.  The Morrisons were Scottish Gaels that came to Antrim
 from the outer Hebrides.  Scottish Highlanders and Hebrideans were 
called Redshanks circa 1520 through the 1600s and many of them migrated 
to Ulster in the 1500s and 1600s.  They also emigrated to the Colonies 
very early and became part of the Scots-Irish society there. 
John
 Wayne's immigrant ancestor was Robert Morrison  born in 1782, son of 
John Morrison.  The Morrison family were active in  the United Irishmen 
movement and their decision to emigrate was brought  about by a British 
warrant issued for the arrest of Robert Morrison.
Robert Morrison and his mother arrived in New York City, in 1799.  Like so many Scots-Irish the Morrison family had a tradition of being strong willed, opinionated, and carried a well developed sense of right and wrong.  Following the path of other Ulster settlers, the Morrisons
  pulled up stakes many times and followed the frontier west.  The first
  wave of Ulster settlers headed west and south and people the Southern 
 Uplands and the hill country of Alabama, Mississippi, and Arkansas.  
The  Morrison were part of a second
  wave of Scots-Irish that moved along the rivers west into Ohio,  
Kentucky, Illinois, and Iowa.   They became the Mid West Scots-Irish.
John Wayne is arguably the most famous and most successful actor in history, quite an accomplish ment for a Scots-Irish boy from Winterset,
  Iowa.  He was a complex man, his family very Presbyterian, yet John  
Wayne often described himself as a 'cardiac Catholic.'  He lived his  
life as a Christian with noticeable Presbyterian focus and drive, yet  
his wife Pilar
  was Roman Catholic, as were all his children.   John Wayne himself  
converted to the Catholic Church officially just days before he passed  
away.
ment for a Scots-Irish boy from Winterset,
  Iowa.  He was a complex man, his family very Presbyterian, yet John  
Wayne often described himself as a 'cardiac Catholic.'  He lived his  
life as a Christian with noticeable Presbyterian focus and drive, yet  
his wife Pilar
  was Roman Catholic, as were all his children.   John Wayne himself  
converted to the Catholic Church officially just days before he passed  
away.
 ment for a Scots-Irish boy from Winterset,
  Iowa.  He was a complex man, his family very Presbyterian, yet John  
Wayne often described himself as a 'cardiac Catholic.'  He lived his  
life as a Christian with noticeable Presbyterian focus and drive, yet  
his wife Pilar
  was Roman Catholic, as were all his children.   John Wayne himself  
converted to the Catholic Church officially just days before he passed  
away.
ment for a Scots-Irish boy from Winterset,
  Iowa.  He was a complex man, his family very Presbyterian, yet John  
Wayne often described himself as a 'cardiac Catholic.'  He lived his  
life as a Christian with noticeable Presbyterian focus and drive, yet  
his wife Pilar
  was Roman Catholic, as were all his children.   John Wayne himself  
converted to the Catholic Church officially just days before he passed  
away.John and Pilar Wayne
 John Wayne's childhood home in Winterset, Iowa
John Wayne's childhood home in Winterset, Iowa© 2017 Barry R McCain

 
 
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