I have a Scots family who moved to Ireland sometime around 1851. They lived there until about 1858 when they returned to their homeland of Perthshire, Scotland.
Can anyone tell me what would take a family from Scotland to Ireland at the tail-end of the potato famine? Were there any special events at that time that would entice a family to go there to seek their fortune or perhaps to help rebuild Ireland? Was there a "great migration" of Scots to Ireland at this time??
What part of Ireland might they have gone to?? This is a huge brick wall for me!! I don't even know where to begin.
They had a total of 13 children. The first two were born in Scotland. The next 5 were born in Ireland. And then the last 6 were born in Scotland. All records I have found so far, (marriage, obits, death certs, etc.,) say the Irish births were in "Ireland". I have no idea
where in Ireland.
To compound the problem of finding them, their surname is
RICHARD, which of course brings up a zillion search results due to the fact the Richard is a common forename as well.
Later family were protestant - if thats a clue?? The father and his older sons were all millwrights after the return to Scotland ... what they did before that, I'm not sure although three previous generations, were all weavers.
Can anyone help before this family drives me crazy?

Thank you!!

P.S. I've also posted this in the Ireland thread... trying to tackle this from both sides!
www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=525849.msg3806624