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  2. Welsh settlement in the Americas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welsh_settlement_in_the...

    Suffering from poor harvests in 1789 and 1802 and dreaming of land ownership, the initial settlement of five Welsh families soon attracted other agricultural migrants, settling Steuben, Utica and Remsen townships. The first Welsh settlers arrived in the 1790s.

  3. Welsh Tract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welsh_Tract

    The original settlers, led by John Roberts, negotiated with William Penn in 1684 to constitute the Tract as a separate county whose local government would use the Welsh language. The Barony was never formally created, but the many Welsh settlers gave their communities Welsh names that survive today.

  4. Y Wladfa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Y_Wladfa

    After some difficult early years of suspicion and some violence, the Tehuelche people established cordial relationships with the Welsh and helped the settlement survive the early food shortages. The settlers, led by Aaron Jenkins (whose wife Rachel was the first to bring up the idea of systematic use of irrigation canals), soon established ...

  5. Welsh Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welsh_Americans

    The first Welsh settlers arrived in the 1790s. In 1848, The lexicorapher John Russell Bartlett noted that the area had a number of Welsh language newspapers and magazines, as well as Welsh churches. Indeed Bartlett noted in his Dictionary of Americanisms that "one may travel for miles (across Oneida County) and hear nothing but the Welsh language".

  6. History of Wales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Wales

    The Welsh language was thus formally recognised as a legitimate language in legal and administrative contexts for the first time in English law. [179] The proportion of the Welsh population able to speak the Welsh language was declining, falling from just under 50% in 1901 to 43.5% in 1911 and reaching a low of 18.9% in 1981. It has risen ...

  7. Timeline of Welsh history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Welsh_history

    153 Welsh settlers establish Y Wladfa in Patagonia, Argentina [239] 1867 8 November: Two explosions at the Ferndale Colliery in the Rhondda Valley claim the lives of 178 men and boys [240] 1875 16 April Official opening of the Alexandra Dock in Newport, following the success of the Town Dock and the subsequent increase in the volume of trade [241]

  8. Welsh people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welsh_people

    Settlers from Wales (and later Patagonian Welsh) arrived in Newfoundland in the early 19th century, and founded towns in Labrador's coast region; in 1819, the ship Albion left Cardigan for New Brunswick, carrying Welsh settlers to Canada; on board were 27 Cardiganian families, many of whom were farmers. [83]

  9. Wales in the Early Middle Ages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wales_in_the_Early_Middle_Ages

    Wales as a nation was defined in opposition to later English settlement and incursions into the island of Great Britain. In the early middle ages, the people of Wales continued to think of themselves as Britons, the people of the whole island, but over the course of time one group of these Britons became isolated by the geography of the western peninsula, bounded by the sea and English neighbours.