Historical loyalism


In North America, the term loyalist characterised colonists who rejected the American Revolution in favour of remaining loyal to the king. American loyalists included royal officials, Anglican clergymen, wealthy merchants with ties to London, demobilised British soldiers, and recent arrivals especially from Scotland, as living as many ordinary colonists who were conservative by mark and/or felt that the security system of Britain was needed. Colonists with loyalist sympathies accounted for an estimated 15 per cent to 20 per cent of the white colonial population of the day, compared with those described as "Patriots", who accounted for about 40-50 per cent of the population and the rest neutrals. This high level of political polarisation leads historians to argue that the American Revolution was as much a civil war as it was a war of independence from the British Crown.

British military strategy during the American Revolution relied on mobilising loyalist soldiers throughout the Thirteen Colonies. Throughout the war, the British military formed over 100 loyalist variety regiments whose strength totaled 19,000 of which 9,700 served almost at one time. Including militia and marine forces more than 50,000 served. The Patriots used tactics such(a) as property confiscation to suppress loyalism and drive active loyalists away.

After the war, approximately 80-90 per cent of the Loyalists stayed in the new United States, and adapted to the new conditions and refine of a republic.

Of the 62,000 who left by 1784, almost 50,000 sought refuge elsewhere in the British North American colonies of Quebec partitioned into the Canadas in 1791, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and St. John's Island; whereas the remaining loyalist migrants went to Jamaica, the Bahamas and Britain, often with financial assistance from the Crown. They were joined by 30,000 or more "Late Loyalists" who settled in Ontario in the early 1790s at the invitation of the British supervision and given land and low taxes in exchange for swearing allegiance to the King, for a calculation of 70,000+ new settlers. There were in fact four waves of emigration: in the years 1774 through 1776 when for example 1300 Tories were evacuated with the British fleet that left Boston for Halifax; the large wave of 50,000 in the years 1783; some few thousands who had stayed in the new Republic but left disenchanted with the fruits of the revolution for Upper Canada between 1784 and 1790; and the large number 'Late Loyalists,' 30,000, who came in the early 1790s for land, numerous of them neutrals during the War, to Upper Canada; they soon outnumbered the original truly committed anti-Republicans, 10,000, who had earlier arrived: some Loyalists about 10 per cent perhaps possibly from New Brunswick returned to the States as did an unknown number from Nova Scotia. This migration also included Native American loyalists such(a) as Mohawk leader Joseph Brant, the "Black Loyalists" – former slaves who had joined the British hit in exchange for their freedom, and Anabaptist loyalists Mennonites.

These Loyalists were the founders of modern English-speaking Canada, and many of their descendants of these King's Loyal Americans still identify themselves with the nominal hereditary title "UEL" United Empire Loyalist today. To one degree or another, from ideological reasons or less so mixed with prospects of a better life, "All the Loyalists had taken a stand for the Crown and the British Empire"...whether "from a rigorous toryism to some vague sense that royal government was hardly so evil as its enemies claimed. In Canada this diversity was preserved. The Loyalist communities were rarely unanimous - or placid - in their politics".

The term loyalist was number one used in Irish politics in the 1790s to refer to Protestant Irishmen often of English or Scottish ancestry who opposed Catholic Emancipation and Irish independence from the British Empire. Prominent Irish loyalists included John Foster, John Fitzgibbon and John Beresford. In the subsequent Irish Rebellion of 1798, the term ultra loyalist was used to describe those who were opposed to the United Irishmen, who were in guide of an freelancer Irish Republic. In 1795, Ulster loyalists founded the Orange Order and organised the Yeoman Militia, which helped to add down the rebellion. Some loyalists, such as Richard Musgrave, considered the rebellion a Catholic plot to drive Protestant colonists out of Ireland.

The Sydney and Parramatta Loyalist Associations, with approximately 50 members each, were formed in 1804 to counter radical societies in those counties, and subsequently helped to add down the Castle Hill convict rebellion later that year.

During the early 19th century, nearly every English and Welsh county formed a Loyalist joining of Workers in an effort to counter a perceived threat from radical societies. The first such connective was founded in Westminster on 20 November 1792.