I ask for a "bill of particulars" on the mistreatment of loyalists, provisionally positing in its absence a lack of true atrocity but rather a mere presence of perhaps harsh but superrficially rational measures to blunt the impact of enemy sympathizers, through humane means such as closing newspapers and imprisoning the most recalcitrant and likely to engage in espionage, for example.
What would you like Domer?
For example, the Congress in New York allowed the delegation there to smoke in order that the gentlemen could maintain their health. Why? Because a few floors down, in the basement, there was an overcrowded prison of loyalists chained to the walls, some dead, others dying in their own feces and waste. The smell was overwhelming.
George Clinton, Continental Congressman and First Governor of New York had a brilliant way of keeping taxes down. He seized loyalist estates and sold them.
2Here's a list of 300 murdered loyalists from Charleston, SC
3Estate confiscations in South Carolina
4Land confiscated in North Carolina
5More land confiscated in North Carolina
6Lee writes from Suffolk, on April 23, that he is busy clearing the country of them and an overseer of the poor, in the county of Norfolk, speaks of the removal of a great many of the inhabitants with their families and goods. The confiscation of their estates made their departure profitable to the government and it was therefore not likely to be stopped. The sufferings of the Tories darken the pages of our revolutionary history. Men dreaded the power of their numbers, their wealth and their influence, and fear was quick to devise harsh measures. However successful its work along other lines, the Virginia committee, in ordering the removal of the Tories from Princess Anne and Norfolk Counties, must stand condemned both for want of judgment and of humanity.
From the Virginia Committee of Safety
7James Allen, a conservative Pennsylvanian, writing in the period, said: "No country has ever been more harassed than Jersey. Those who are called Tories, though they have been passive, having been plundered and imprisoned without mercy."
He was speaking about the New Jersey Council of Safety
8The entire book is interesting and many people have no idea what the Committees of Safety were. In some colonies they were the defacto government, in others they had a small advisory role. They often contained the most radical Revolutionaries who wanted war with the British. In Pennsylvania, for example, the Committee of Safety often butted heads with the more moderate (and peaceful) Quaker population which became a large source of contention. In Connecticut the CoS was very tolerant of the Loyalists, whereas in Virginia they were repressed with a vengeance.
Thomas Brown was a loyalist landowner whom the Sons of Liberty burned, scalped, tarred and feathered - afterward he became a loyalist fighter.
9Here is the work of David Fanning, a Patriot who became a loyalist after being "exasperated by the outrage perpetrated by these desperadoes"
10Pennsylvania notably taxed and seized the land of Quakers, Mennonites, German Baptists, Moravians, and Schwenkfelders. Interestingly these groups rather enjoyed their lot under British rule where the Mennonites wrote in 1773 that "through God's mercy we enjoy unlimited freedom in both civil and religious matters." Yet, when the fight for
liberty began Pennsylvania patriots enacted the extra taxes because these Christians refused to fight. They also refused the extra taxes, and their land was confiscated. Something the British
never did.
11Now, none of this is to say that the British fought the war with kid gloves. Nor that there weren't legitimate griefs. Yet, I don't think all the measures were "rational." People have it in their mind that the American Revolution was Americans versus British. It wasn't. It was a Civil War and a very nasty and brutal one at that. The Americans and French versus British did play a major part in the war, but we very conveniently gloss over the civil war aspect so as to glorify the whole
liberty, justice, etc spiel.