If you have them, from what country and/or region were they? Pick all that apply. List all the ones where you can find ancestors. Feel free to mention places if you wish to reply with more details.
East Of England
East Midlands
Greater London
North East England
North West England
South East England
South West England
West Midlands
Yorkshire And The Humber
Scottish Borders
Scottish Highlands
Scottish Islands
Scottish Lowlands
Wales
Northern Ireland (Ulster Scottish)
Connaught, Ireland
Leinster, Ireland
Munster, Ireland
Ulster, Ireland (Native Irish)
Brittany, France
Channel Islands
Isle Of Man
Orkney Islands
Other
Unknown
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If you have them, from what country and/or region were they? Pick all that apply. List all the ones where you can find ancestors. Feel free to mention places if you wish to reply with more details.
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Well, I have British ancestors. This is not very common in Brazil, we don't have a big British community here, and the few Brits are concentrated here in São Paulo, I can count in the fingers of my two hands all the Brits that I know here, and they descend mostly from English and Irish. One thing good at least, is that here in São Paulo we have plenty of Pubs.
Well, my ancestors were mostly from Aberdeen, Scotland, but I also have ancestors that came from York and Lancaster, in Northern England.
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All my English ancestors that I know of have come from the town of Heanor in the Derbyshire county in the East Midlands of England. They came to Tamaqua, Pennsylvania in the mid-19th Century and that line mostly worked as masons, although my Great-Great Grandfather was the sheriff of Tamaqua at one point if what my mother says is correct. His parents would have been the immigrants from England. That's all the ancestry from Britain I know of, although I wouldn't doubt I have some distant old stock English, Scottish, or some other ancestry mixed with my German ancestors, but I haven't found any.
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Yeah it's true, thanks to Charles Miller, a great British-Brazilian. Other examples of great British-Brazilians are me and myself
Joking
As I said, we have a community here, but it's small. British-Brazilians are concentrated in the states of São Paulo and in a minor sense, Paraná. There are some festivals and some meetings (that usually happen in PUBs). I always go when I can, my British ancestry is my favourite.
One impact that the British had here in Brazil (in my state at least) are the railroads they built. There are even some villages that were founded by the English responsable for the construction of these roads.
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The list (accounts for about 75% of my ancestry):
Yorkshire (agnatic lineage is from South Yorkshire), Northumberland, Suffolk, Hampshire, Somerset, Devon, Co. Antrim, Donegal, Tyrone, & Cavan.
Suffolk, Hampshire and the general Ulster area account for the bulk in the pedigree.
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England:
1. Cornwall
2. Devon
3. Hampshire
4. Surrey
Ireland:
1. Derry
2. Various other Northwestern Coastal areas
Scotland:
1. Perthshire
2. Stirlingshire
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I voted for: East Of England; East Midlands; Greater London; South East England; Scottish Lowlands; Northern Ireland (Ulster Scottish); Connaught, Ireland; Leinster, Ireland; Munster, Ireland. Meant to also pick South West England but missed it somehow. I likely also have ancestry from some of the places I didn't pick and just don't know it.
I am slightly under half Irish (would be exactly half but for one Irish emigrant who had a Scottish father and another who married an Anglo-American). I don't know the origin of a couple of my Irish ancestors but from those I do, my ancestry breaks down as:
12.5% Mayo
6.25% Kilkenny
6.25% Cork
3.125% Tipperary
3.125% Westmeath
3.125% Louth
25% of my ancestry is Colonial American, with all but a few percents of that being of British Isles origin (some German, very minor Dutch). Although I haven't pinpointed exactly where most of it is from, English origins are predominant, particularly from the East of England. A lot of it is Scottish and Scots-Irish, too, however.
I know of a couple ancestors I have from Stirling. Surnames Liddell and Smith.
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They are from "Dunblane" apparantly. The surnames include: Makenzie (spelled McKenzie in the USA later on), Dawson, Carmicheal, Cairns, Stirling (I wonder if they are related to the founders?), and Wingate. If you take the Stirling surname back to the 1600s, it goes to Edinburgh, with Robert Stirling born there in 1611.
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