Ulster-Scot heritage

Renfro lineage, Scottish place memory, and Ulster-Scot migration in one careful frame.

This page presents a concise public heritage note for Dr. Rob and the Renfro family tradition. It connects Renfrewshire, Ulster, and North American migration language while using the preferred terms Scots-Irish, Irish-American, and Scottish-American.

Renfro family crest

Renfro family crest

Dr. Rob dressed in Scottish attire

Dr. Rob in Scottish attire

Ulster-Scots flag

Ulster-Scots flag

Lineage arc

From Renfrewshire to Ulster to America.

The public family story is presented as a respectful lineage arc rather than a rigid genealogical proof claim. Renfrewshire provides the Scottish place association. Ulster provides the historic migration and identity setting. North America provides the later civic language of Scots-Irish, Irish-American, and Scottish-American family memory.

Renfrewshire anchors the Scottish place-name memory connected to the Renfro family tradition.

Ulster-Scot identity developed through Lowland Scottish movement into Ulster, shaped by Presbyterian community life, work, language, and frontier experience.

In North America, many families carried Scots-Irish, Irish-American, and Scottish-American identities into civic, military, religious, and regional life.