Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Records of the Scottish Settlers in the River Plate and Their Churches
I believe the very title of this book will prove the best Introduction. N o Scotchman or scoto-argentine with any traditional love for his country would be worthy of the name who did not desire to know something of the history of his fathers or his countrymen in these lands. Their efforts have made the land a far more pleasant one for him. One may question how far Scotch in?uence has been felt, but there can be no doubt what in?uence has been exerted has been for good. To Scotchmen who have arrived in recent years the presence of a church and schools, with their attendant social environment, cannot but be an appreciable force for good. The question naturally arises How did these buildings and this community come to exist, and what has been their history? This is the question it is proposed to answer in these pages. For years I have been in the habit of collecting papers and -making notes of interesting events in the history of the Scotch community. That history has been largely a religious one, for it is unquestionably the Presbyterian faith that has united Scotsmen into a community in these Republics.
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