West Country Diaspora: Some Transported Cornish Traits in a Nineteenth-Century Wisconsinite Mining Community
Keywords:
nineteenth-century Cornish dialect, enregisterment, mining communities, WisconsinAbstract
This paper attempts to examine the diasporic trajectory of West Country features, specifically Cornish speech, in the United States during the nineteenth century. The analysis is framed within the migratory waves of miners from the area of Cornwall and Devon who moved to the vast pockets of workable land in Wisconsin, Montana and ultimately California. These miner migrants settled and transformed the geography of the area as well as perpetuated a cultural bloodline still felt today in places such as Mineral Point (southwest Wisconsin). Evidence of Cornish talk during the 1850-60s, as gleaned by Copeland (1898), present in letters from Cornish migrants (Birch 1985-86) and later expected by Holway (1997-98), seems to be rich enough to be explored from a dialect survival angle. This paper examines this evidence from the perspective of surviving transported dialects overseas to determine whether a repertoire of Cornish linguistic traits was identified and employed in nineteenth-century Mineral Point, its perdurance and whether it fell in disuse. For this purpose, data gleaned from Copeland’s reports will be analysed qualitatively in light of nineteenth-century monographs on the dialect of Cornwall as well as contemporary studies in order to ascertain its authenticity and sociocultural weight. The paper seeks to contribute to research on the Cornish dialect and its diaspora beyond the boundaries of the old country.
References
Agha, Asif. 2003. The Social Life of Cultural Value. Language and Communication, 23: 231-273.
Barkan, Elliot. 2004. “America in the Hand, Homeland in the Heart: Transnational and Translocal Immigrant Experiences in the American West». Western Historical Quarterly, 35.3: 331-54.”
Bermejo-Giner, Maria G. & Michael Montgomery. 1997. “Regional British English in the nineteenth century: evidence from emigrant letters”. Ed. Thomas: 167–83.
Birch, Brian P. 1985-86. “From Southwest England to Southwest Wisconsin: Devonshire Hollow, Lafayette County”. The Wisconsin Magazine of History. Madison: Wisconsin Historical Society Press.
Bogart, D. 2005. “Turnpike trusts and the transportation revolution in 18th century England”. Explorations in Economic History: 1-30.
Carew, Richard. 1602. The Survey of Cornwall. London: S. S. for John Jaggard.
Copeland, Louis Albert. 1898. “The Cornish in Southwest Wisconsin”. Collections of the State.
Ewart, Shirley & Harold J. George. 1998. Highly Respectable Families: The Cornish of Grass Valley, California 1854-1954. Grass Valley, California: Comstock Bonanza Press.
Gill, Alexander. 1619. Logonomia Anglica. London: Johannes Beale.
Görlach, Manfred. 1987. “Colonial Lag? The Alleged Conservative Character of American English and Other Colonial Varieties”. English World-Wide, 8.1: 41-60.
Historical Society of Wisconsin, v. 14. Ed. Reuben Gold. Madison: Democrat Printing Company: 301-334.
Holway, Chester P. & Larry A. Reed. 1997-1998. “A Visit to Mineral Point and Taliesin”. The Wisconsin Magazine of History, Vol. 81, No. 2 (Winter, 1997-1998): 108-120.
Ihalainen, Ossi. 1994. The Dialects of England Since 1774. The Cambridge History of the English Language: English in Britain and Overseas: Origins and Development, Vol 5. Ed. Robert Burchfield. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 197–274.
Jago, Frederic W. P. 1882. The Ancient Language and Dialect of Cornwall. London: Truro.
Kytö, Merja. 2004. “The emergence of American English: evidence from seventeenth-century records in New England”. Legacies of Colonial English: Studies in Transported Dialects. Ed. Raymond Hickey. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Montgomery, Michael. 1998. “In the Appalachians They Speak like Shakespeare”. Language Myths. Eds. Laura Bauer & Peter Trudgill. London: Penguin.
Puttenham, George. 1590. The Arte of English Poesie. London: Richard Field.
Rowe, John. 1953. “A Cornish Farmer in Ontario”. The Agricultural History Review, Vol. 1, No. 1: 44-4.
—. 1959. “Cornish Emigrants and America”. Bulletin (British Association for American Studies), No. 8: 4- 11.
Rowse, Alfred L. 1969. The Cousin Jacks: the Cornish in America. New York: Charles Scribner & Sons.
Schwartz, Sharron P. 2006. “Bridging «The Great Divide»: The Evolution and Impact of Cornish Translocalism in Britain and the USA”. Journal of American Ethnic History, 25.2/3: 169-189.Wolfram, Walt & Natalie Schilling-Estes. 1995. “Moribund Dialects and the Endangerment Canon: The Case of Ocracoke Brogue”. Language, 71.4: 696 – 721.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 René Tissens

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authors who publish with this journal agree to retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal. Also, authors will retain the rights on their work, even if they will be granting Gaudeamus a non-exclusive right of use to reproduce, edit, distribute, publicly communicate and show their work. Therefore, authors are free to engage in additional, independent contracts for non-exclusive distribution of the works published in this journal (such as uploading them to an institutional repository or publishing them in a book), as long as the fact that the manuscripts were first published in this journal is acknowledged.