Legendary origins Welsh Voyages and settlements in America are said to have taken place in the twelfth century, led by
Madoc the son of
Owain Gwynedd, and prince of the
Kingdom of Gwynedd. References to these voyages are found within
Medieval Welsh literature and
Welsh folklore, but are generally dismissed by modern authors. The Madog legend attained its greatest prominence during the
Elizabethan era (the
Tudors being of Welsh ancestry) when Welsh and English writers used it bolster
British claims in the
New World versus those of
Spain,
France and
Portugal. The earliest surviving full account of Madoc's voyage, as the first to make the claim that Madoc had come to America, appears in
Humphrey Llwyd 1559
Cronica Walliae, an English adaptation of the
Brut y Tywysogion. An additional aspect of the legend indicates that his settlers ultimately encountered the
Mandan, a Native American tribe, who acquired the ability to speak Welsh. In America, the first
governor of Tennessee,
John Sevier wrote to his friend Major
Amos Stoddard about a conversation he had had in 1782 with the old
Cherokee chief
Oconostota concerning ancient fortifications built along the
Alabama River. The chief allegedly told him that the forts had been built by a group of White people called "Welsh", as protection against the ancestors of the Cherokee, who eventually drove them from the region. Sevier had also written in 1799 of the alleged discovery of six skeletons in brass armor bearing the
Welsh coat-of-arms, a claim seemingly corroborated by
Thomas S. Hinde who stated that six soldiers had been dug up near
Jeffersonville,
Indiana on the
Ohio River with
breastplates that contained Welsh coat of arms, also in 1799. While no surviving archaeological or linguistic evidence of the Madoc voyages has survived in the New World, a number of legends connect pre-Columbian Welsh with certain American sites have are still extant. Such as the legends around
Devil's Backbone, located on the Ohio River at Fourteen Mile Creek near
Louisville, Kentucky.
Colonial-era migration .) The first modern documented Welsh arrivals came from Wales after 1618. In the mid to late seventeenth century, there was a large emigration of Welsh
Quakers to the
Colony of Pennsylvania, where a
Welsh Tract was established in the region immediately west of
Philadelphia. By 1700, Welsh people accounted for about one-third of the colony's estimated population of twenty thousand. There are a number of Welsh place names in this area. The Welsh were especially numerous and politically active and elected 9% of the members of the
Pennsylvania Provincial Council. In 1757, Rev.
Goronwy Owen, an
Anglican Vicar born at
Y Dafarn Goch, in the parish of
Llanfair Mathafarn Eithaf in
Anglesey and whose contribution to
Welsh poetry is most responsible for the subsequent Welsh eighteenth century Renaissance, emigrated to
Williamsburg, in the
Colony of Virginia. Until his death on his cotton and tobacco plantation near
Lawrenceville, Virginia in 1769, Rev. Owen was mostly noted as an émigré bard, writing with
hiraeth ("longing" or "homesickness") for his native
Anglesey. During the subsequent revival of the
Eisteddfod, the
Gwyneddigion Society held up the poetry of Rev. Owen as an example for bards at future eisteddfodau to emulate.
Post-Revolutionary migration During the
Eisteddfod revival of the 1790s,
Gwyneddigion Society member
William Jones, who had enthusiastically supported the
American Revolution and who was arguing for the creation of a
National Eisteddfod of Wales, had come to believe that the completely
Anglicized
Welsh nobility, through
rackrenting and their employment of unscrupulous land agents, had forfeited all right to the obedience and respect of their tenants. At the
Llanrwst eisteddfod in June
1791, Jones distributed copies of an address, entitled
To all Indigenous Cambro-Britons, in which he urged Welsh tenant farmers and craftsmen to pack their bags, emigrate from Wales, and sail for what he called the "Promised Land" in the United States. In 1900, there were 93,744 Welsh-born resident in the United States, more than half of whom were settled in Ohio, New York, and Pennsylvania. In those three states, Welsh immigrants tended to work in coal mining, slate quarrying, and metallurgy.
Ohio Welsh settlement in
Ohio began in 1801, when a group of Welsh-speaking pioneers migrated from Cambria, Pennsylvania, to
Paddy's Run, which is now the site of
Shandon, Ohio. The Welsh language was commonly spoken in the Jackson County area for generations until the 1950s when its use began to subside. As of 2010, more than 126,000 Ohioans are of Welsh descent and about 135
speak the language, with significant concentrations still found in many communities of
Ohio such as
Oak Hill (13.6%),
Madison (12.7%),
Franklin (10.5%),
Jackson (10.0%),
Radnor (9.8%), and
Jefferson (9.7%). ==Southern United States==