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{{Short description|Allegiance to the British crown or the United Kingdom}}
{{Redirect|Loyalist}}


{{EngvarB|date=October 2013}}
:''For the township in Canada, see ]''
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}}


]
In general, a '''loyalist''' is an individual who is loyal to the ] that be. Two main historical groups of individuals have been specifically called "Loyalists" in ]. ''For Loyalists in the ], see the main article at ].'' The remainder of this article concerns Loyalists in the ].


'''Loyalism''', in the ], its ] and its ], refers to the allegiance to the British crown or the United Kingdom. In North America, the most common usage of the term refers to loyalty to the ], notably with the ] opponents of the ], and ] who moved to other colonies in ] after the revolution.
== Loyalists in Northern Ireland ==
''See also: ]''


== Historical loyalism ==
A '''loyalist''' in ] is another name for a ] who feels strongly about the political union between ] and Northern Ireland.
===18th century===
====North America====
{{Main|Loyalist (American Revolution)|Loyalists fighting in the American Revolution}}
In North America, the term ''loyalist'' characterised colonists who rejected the ] in favour of remaining loyal to the king.<ref>Wallace Brown, "The Loyalists and the American Revolution." ''History Today'' (Mar 1962), 12# 3, pp. 149–157.</ref> American loyalists included royal officials, ] clergymen, wealthy merchants with ties to London, demobilised British soldiers, and recent arrivals (especially from Scotland), as well as many ordinary colonists who were conservative by nature and/or felt that the protection of Britain was needed. Colonists with loyalist views accounted for an estimated 15 per cent to 20 per cent of the white colonial population of the day, compared with those described as "]", 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 ] as it was a ] from the ].<ref name="Allen2010">{{cite book|author=Thomas B. Allen|title=Tories: fighting for the king in America's first civil war|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vf_FG2Q7LeMC|year=2010|publisher=HarperCollins|isbn=978-0-06-124180-2}}</ref><ref name="Brown1965">{{cite book|author=Wallace Brown|title=The king's friends: the composition and motives of the American loyalist claimants|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yi9CAAAAIAAJ|year=1965|publisher=Brown University Press|isbn=9780870570926}}</ref><ref name="Calhoon1973">{{cite book|author=Robert M. Calhoon|title=The loyalists in Revolutionary America: 1760–1781|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=r8xFYgEACAAJ|year=1973|publisher=Harcourt Brace Jovanovich}}</ref>


British military strategy during the American Revolution relied on mobilising loyalist soldiers throughout the ]. Throughout the war, the ] formed over 100<ref name="urlLoyalist Institute: List of Loyalist Regiments">{{cite web |url=http://www.royalprovincial.com/military/rlist/rlist.htm |title=Loyalist Institute: List of Loyalist Regiments |access-date=18 November 2011}}</ref> loyalist line regiments whose strength totaled 19,000 of which 9,700 served most at one time. Including militia and marine forces more than 50,000 served. The Patriots used tactics such as property confiscation to suppress loyalism and drive active loyalists away.<ref name="Flick1901">{{cite book|author=Alexander Clarence Flick|title=Loyalism in New York during the American revolution...|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aZo-AAAAYAAJ&pg=PA7|year=1901|publisher=Columbia university.|page=7|isbn=9780598865229}}</ref>
In recent times, however, some sections of the media have devalued the term to refer to someone on the extreme fringe of ] who resorts to murder, or threatens to do so, in what they perceive as their defence of their community, ], or Northern Ireland's position as part of the United Kingdom. Loyalists in Northern Ireland usually live in small working-class areas in the major urban centres, such as ] and ]. The rest of this article mainly refers to this second definition.


After the war, approximately 80–90 per cent of the Loyalists stayed in the new United States, and adapted to the new conditions and changes of a republic.{{cn|date=September 2023}}
A number of loyalist ] groups exist; these include the ] (UDA), ] (UFF), ] (LVF), and the ] (UVF).


=====Loyalist migrants=====
Though loyalists claim to speak on behalf of their communities and the unionist community in general, the evidence of electoral contests would tend to suggest that their support is minimal and exclusively urban, working-class based. Only one moderate pro-] loyalist party (the ]) won any seats in the ] in ]. Ideologically, loyalism is typified by a militant opposition to ] and ]. It stresses ] identity and community with its own folk heroes and events, e.g. the heroic exploits of the ] during ] and through its association with the ].
{{main|Expulsion of the Loyalists}}
] refugees on their way to ] during the ].]]
Of the 62,000 who left by 1784, almost 50,000 sought refuge elsewhere in the ]n colonies of ] (partitioned into ] in 1791), ], ], and ];<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/military-heritage/loyalists/loyalists-ward-chipman/Pages/loyalist-maritimes-ward-chipman.aspx|title=Loyalists in the Maritimes — Ward Chipman Muster Master's Office, 1777–1785|date=16 May 2019|work=Library and Archives Canada|publisher=Government of Canada|access-date=3 May 2020}}</ref>{{notetag|St. John's Island was renamed Prince Edward Island in 1798.}} whereas the remaining loyalist migrants went to ], the ] and Britain, often with financial help 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 administration and given land and low taxes in exchange for swearing allegiance to the King,<ref>{{cite book|title=Liberty's Exiles, American Loyalists in the Revolutionary World|author=Maya Jasanoff|publisher=Alfred A. Knopf|year=2011|pages=206–208}}</ref> for a total of 70,000+ new settlers. There were in fact four waves of emigration: in the years 1774 through 1776 when for example 1300 ] 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 results 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, many 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 maybe from New Brunswick returned to the States as did an unknown number from Nova Scotia.<ref>Christopher Moore, The Loyalists, Revolution, Exile, Settlement, 1984, pp. 244–252 {{ISBN|0-7710--6093-9}}</ref> This migration also included ] loyalists such as ] leader ], the "]s" – former slaves who had joined the British cause in exchange for their freedom, and ] loyalists (]).<ref name="Barkley1975">{{cite book|author=Murray Barkley|title=Murray Barkley the Loyalist tradition in New Brunswick:: the growth and evolution of an historical myth, 1825–1914|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qs6TNAAACAAJ|year=1975|publisher=s.n.}}</ref><ref>''Acadiensis'' 4 (1975): 3–45;</ref>


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" (]) 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".<ref>Moore, op. cit. p, 253</ref>
Loyalism has a diverse following ranging from ] sympathisers to supporters of an independent ] to the ].


==== Ireland ====
Officially most loyalist organisations are in ceasefire mode as a result of the Belfast Agreement, though numerous breaches of the ceasefire have been recorded. Many loyalist groups are heavily involved in the drugs trade.
The term ''loyalist'' was first used in Irish politics in the 1790s to refer to Protestant Irishmen (often of English or Scottish ancestry) who opposed ] and Irish independence from the British Empire.<ref name="Cross1920">{{cite book|author=Arthur Lyon Cross|title=A shorter history of England and greater Britain|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5yAOAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA593|year=1920|publisher=The Macmillan company|pages=593–595, 597}}</ref> Prominent Irish loyalists included ], ] and ]. In the subsequent ], the term ''ultra loyalist'' was used to describe those who were opposed to the ], who were in support of an independent ]. In 1795, ]s founded the ] and organised the ] Militia, which helped to put down the rebellion. Some loyalists, such as ], considered the rebellion a Catholic plot to drive Protestant colonists out of Ireland.<ref name="Cross1920" />


===19th century===
Relatives of the victims of loyalist violence, whether ] or unionist, often contrast the vehemence with which the ] and the ] attack the ] for killing and bombing, with their more muted responses to loyalist actions.
==== Australia ====
The ] and ] Loyalist Associations, with approximately 50 members each, were formed in 1804 to counter radical societies in those counties, and subsequently helped to put down the ] later that year.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.lancers.org.au/site/The_Military_at_Parramatta.asp |title=The Military at Parramatta |access-date=28 September 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150926083321/http://www.lancers.org.au/site/The_Military_at_Parramatta.asp |archive-date=26 September 2015 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name="ColemanKnight1953">{{cite book|author1=Keith Coleman|author2=J. T. Knight|title=Short history of the military forces in N.S.W. from 1788 to 1953|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lXFlzgAACAAJ|year=1953}}</ref>


== Loyalists in Scotland == ==== England and Wales ====
{{Toryism |expanded=characteristics}}
A '''loyalist''' in ] is someone on the fringes of Scottish ] and who is often stridently supportive of loyalism and unionism, although mainly concentrating on the Irish union, rather than Scottish politics.
During the early 19th century, nearly every English and Welsh county formed a Loyalist Association of Workers in an effort to counter a perceived threat from ].<ref name="Gee2003">{{cite book|author=Austin Gee|title=The British volunteer movement, 1794–1814|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1TMtozjZ7fYC|year=2003|publisher=Clarendon Press|isbn=978-0-19-926125-3|pages=17–18}}</ref> The first such association was founded in ] on 20 November 1792.{{cn|date=September 2023}}


== Modern loyalism ==
Although a tiny fraction of the Scottish population, and less so in comparison to their ] counterparts, their profile has become more prominent with strident demonstrations of their beliefs since the establishment of a ] - often seen at loyalist marches and through their support for ] in ], a city with a long history of ] violence.
=== Northern Ireland ===
{{main|Ulster loyalism}}
Generally, the term ''loyalist'' in ] is typified by a militant opposition to ], and also often to Roman Catholicism. It stresses ] identity and community with its own folk heroes and events, such as the actions of the ] during ] and the activities of the Orange Order. An Ulster loyalist is most commonly a ] who strongly favours the political union between ] and Northern Ireland,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.academia.edu/1896376|last=White|first=Andrew|date=2007|title=Is contemporary Ulster unionism in crisis? Changes in unionist identity during the Northern Ireland Peace Process. Irish Journal of Sociology |volume=16|issue=1|pages=118–135}}</ref> although some may also support an ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Northern Ireland Loyalist Paramilitaries (U.K., extremists)|url=http://www.cfr.org/terrorist-organizations/northern-ireland-loyalist-paramilitaries-uk-extremists/p9274|work=Council on Foreign Relations|access-date=23 May 2012|author=Staff|year=2011|archive-date=20 June 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130620111722/http://www.cfr.org/terrorist-organizations/northern-ireland-loyalist-paramilitaries-uk-extremists/p9274|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IudoAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA56|title=Unionists, Loyalists, and Conflict Transformation in Northern Ireland|isbn=9780199875382|last1=Smithey|first1=Lee A.|date=22 August 2011|publisher=Oxford University Press }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tcd.ie/Political_Science/staff/michael_gallagher/HowManyNations95.pdf|title=People - Political Science - Trinity College Dublin|website=www.tcd.ie}}</ref> In recent times, the term has been used to refer to several loyalist paramilitary groups, such as the ] (UDA), ] (UVF), ] (RHC) and the ] (LVF).


Although Irish loyalist paramilitaries have claimed to speak on behalf of their communities and unionists in general, their electoral support is minimal and exclusively based in the urban working class. The ], a pro-] loyalist party, won seats in the ] in 1998, 2003 and 2007, but lost them in 2011.
On the extreme it will be supportive of violence, or threats of violence, in what they perceive as a "defence" of loyalists, unionists, their version of ] and Northern Ireland's and Scotland's positions as part of the United Kingdom.


=== Republic of Ireland ===
Although far less active and organised in Scotland than their Northern Ireland counterparts, they have been involved in a small number of activities over the years of the troubles in Northern Ireland. Most notably have been two pub bombings, spontaneous murders of people they perceive as enemies of their version of Protestantism and the smuggling of guns and explosives to Northern Ireland.
Loyalism in the post-partition ] has declined since independence.<ref name="ClearyConnolly2005">{{cite book|author1=Joseph N. Cleary|author2=Claire Connolly|title=The Cambridge companion to modern Irish culture|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Kt8l_7gAS-gC&pg=PA71|year=2005|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-82009-7|pages=71–72}}</ref> Large numbers of southern Irish loyalists and non-loyalists volunteered for service in the British Armed Forces in World War I and World War II, many of them losing their lives or settling in the United Kingdom after the wars.<ref name="Grayson2009">{{cite book|author=Richard S. Grayson|title=Belfast Boys: how Unionists and Nationalists fought and died together in the First World War|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QBsUGGlXciwC|year=2009|publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group|isbn=978-1-84725-008-7}}</ref> Partition saw mass movements of southern loyalists to Northern Ireland or to Great Britain,<ref name="Hennessey1998">{{cite book|author=Thomas Hennessey|title=Dividing Ireland: World War One and Partition|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bha01y6OD6UC&pg=PA178|year=1998|publisher=Psychology Press|isbn=978-0-415-19880-6|pages=178–181}}</ref> although small loyalist or neo-unionist groups are still active.{{cn|date=September 2023}}


=== Scotland ===
Loyalists within Scotland live within very small working enclaves in the major urban centres or industrial villages, in ], ], especailly ], ], ] and ]. In areas such as the ], Borders and the North East (including ]), there are relatively few.
The Scottish loyalist movement originated during the ] when a significant number of Ulster Protestants migrated to Scotland from Ireland.<ref>{{cite web|title=Support in Great Britain|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/loy/gb.html#1|work=A Guide to Ulster Loyalism and Unionism Online|publisher=CAIN Web Service|access-date=23 May 2012|author=Niall O'Dochartaigh|year=2004–2005}}</ref> In Scotland, a loyalist is someone on the fringes of ] who is often strongly supportive of loyalism and unionism, although mainly concentrating on the Irish union issue rather than on ].{{citation needed|date=November 2012}} Scottish loyalism is typified by militant opposition to Scottish republicanism, ].


Coming from a large section of Scottish society Scottish loyalism has become more visible through prominent demonstrations of the beliefs of its members since the establishment of a ]. Scottish loyalism is visible through participation at Orange parades with supporters from ], ] and ].
Most of the loyalist paramilitary groups are supported by loyalists in Scotland, which include the ] (UDA), ] (UFF), ] (LVF), etc. Although it nominally repudiates these organisations the ] in Scotland has members and flute bands who support and are members of these organisations.
Loyalists in Scotland mostly live in small working-class ]s in the major urban centres or industrial villages, notably ], Lanarkshire, ], ], Fife, ] and ]. There are relatively few loyalists in areas such as ], the ] and the ].


== See also ==
Though loyalists claim to speak on behalf of ] and unionists, they do not have widespread political support. In fact many of the political representatives in their areas are often from the ] and, far less so, the ]. Neither party supports their programme.
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]


==Notes==
Ideologically, Scottish loyalism is typified by a strident, and at times militant, opposition to ], ] and the ] - particularly the existence of Roman Catholic denominational schools.
{{notefoot}}


== References ==
Recently, a 24-hour loyalist radio station, Scotland's first, has begun broadcasting through an internet server in ]. ] has an exclusively loyalist playlist, with many songs celebrating the UVF and UDA and ridiculing the ].
{{reflist}}


== External links ==
A website, going by the name ] has also been pulled up by the authorities.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*


{{Nationalism in the United Kingdom}}
== Loyalists in England ==
Loyalists can also be found in some parts of England, especially ], ] and ], where there are substantial Irish emigrant populations.


]
== External links ==
]

]
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]
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]
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Latest revision as of 20:28, 23 June 2024

Allegiance to the British crown or the United Kingdom "Loyalist" redirects here. For other uses, see Loyalist (disambiguation).

Loyalism, in the United Kingdom, its overseas territories and its former colonies, refers to the allegiance to the British crown or the United Kingdom. In North America, the most common usage of the term refers to loyalty to the British Crown, notably with the loyalists opponents of the American Revolution, and United Empire Loyalists who moved to other colonies in British North America after the revolution.

Historical loyalism

18th century

North America

Main articles: Loyalist (American Revolution) and Loyalists fighting in the American Revolution

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 well as many ordinary colonists who were conservative by nature and/or felt that the protection of Britain was needed. Colonists with loyalist views 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 line regiments whose strength totaled 19,000 of which 9,700 served most at one time. Including militia and marine forces more than 50,000 served. The Patriots used tactics such 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 changes of a republic.

Loyalist migrants
Main article: Expulsion of the Loyalists
Depiction of American Loyalist refugees on their way to the Canadas during the American Revolution.

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 help 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 administration and given land and low taxes in exchange for swearing allegiance to the King, for a total 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 results 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, many 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 maybe from New Brunswick returned to the States as did an unknown number from Nova Scotia. This migration also included indigenous loyalists such as Mohawk leader Joseph Brant, the "Black Loyalists" – former slaves who had joined the British cause 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".

Ireland

The term loyalist was first 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 support of an independent Irish Republic. In 1795, Ulster loyalists founded the Orange Order and organised the Yeoman Militia, which helped to put down the rebellion. Some loyalists, such as Richard Musgrave, considered the rebellion a Catholic plot to drive Protestant colonists out of Ireland.

19th century

Australia

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 put down the Castle Hill convict rebellion later that year.

England and Wales

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

Modern loyalism

Northern Ireland

Main article: Ulster loyalism

Generally, the term loyalist in Northern Ireland is typified by a militant opposition to Irish republicanism, and also often to Roman Catholicism. It stresses Ulster Protestant identity and community with its own folk heroes and events, such as the actions of the 36th (Ulster) Division during World War I and the activities of the Orange Order. An Ulster loyalist is most commonly a unionist who strongly favours the political union between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, although some may also support an independent Northern Ireland. In recent times, the term has been used to refer to several loyalist paramilitary groups, such as the Ulster Defence Association (UDA), Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), Red Hand Commando (RHC) and the Loyalist Volunteer Force (LVF).

Although Irish loyalist paramilitaries have claimed to speak on behalf of their communities and unionists in general, their electoral support is minimal and exclusively based in the urban working class. The Progressive Unionist Party, a pro-Belfast Agreement loyalist party, won seats in the Northern Ireland Assembly in 1998, 2003 and 2007, but lost them in 2011.

Republic of Ireland

Loyalism in the post-partition Republic of Ireland has declined since independence. Large numbers of southern Irish loyalists and non-loyalists volunteered for service in the British Armed Forces in World War I and World War II, many of them losing their lives or settling in the United Kingdom after the wars. Partition saw mass movements of southern loyalists to Northern Ireland or to Great Britain, although small loyalist or neo-unionist groups are still active.

Scotland

The Scottish loyalist movement originated during the Industrial Revolution when a significant number of Ulster Protestants migrated to Scotland from Ireland. In Scotland, a loyalist is someone on the fringes of Scottish unionism who is often strongly supportive of loyalism and unionism, although mainly concentrating on the Irish union issue rather than on Scottish politics. Scottish loyalism is typified by militant opposition to Scottish republicanism, Scottish independence.

Coming from a large section of Scottish society Scottish loyalism has become more visible through prominent demonstrations of the beliefs of its members since the establishment of a Scottish Parliament. Scottish loyalism is visible through participation at Orange parades with supporters from Rangers, Heart of Midlothian F.C. and Airdrie United. Loyalists in Scotland mostly live in small working-class enclaves in the major urban centres or industrial villages, notably Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Edinburgh, Renfrewshire, Fife, West Lothian and Ayrshire. There are relatively few loyalists in areas such as Aberdeen, the Scottish Borders and the Scottish Highlands.

See also

Notes

  1. St. John's Island was renamed Prince Edward Island in 1798.

References

  1. Wallace Brown, "The Loyalists and the American Revolution." History Today (Mar 1962), 12# 3, pp. 149–157.
  2. Thomas B. Allen (2010). Tories: fighting for the king in America's first civil war. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-124180-2.
  3. Wallace Brown (1965). The king's friends: the composition and motives of the American loyalist claimants. Brown University Press. ISBN 9780870570926.
  4. Robert M. Calhoon (1973). The loyalists in Revolutionary America: 1760–1781. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
  5. "Loyalist Institute: List of Loyalist Regiments". Retrieved 18 November 2011.
  6. Alexander Clarence Flick (1901). Loyalism in New York during the American revolution... Columbia university. p. 7. ISBN 9780598865229.
  7. "Loyalists in the Maritimes — Ward Chipman Muster Master's Office, 1777–1785". Library and Archives Canada. Government of Canada. 16 May 2019. Retrieved 3 May 2020.
  8. Maya Jasanoff (2011). Liberty's Exiles, American Loyalists in the Revolutionary World. Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 206–208.
  9. Christopher Moore, The Loyalists, Revolution, Exile, Settlement, 1984, pp. 244–252 ISBN 0-7710--6093-9
  10. Murray Barkley (1975). Murray Barkley the Loyalist tradition in New Brunswick:: the growth and evolution of an historical myth, 1825–1914. s.n.
  11. Acadiensis 4 (1975): 3–45;
  12. Moore, op. cit. p, 253
  13. ^ Arthur Lyon Cross (1920). A shorter history of England and greater Britain. The Macmillan company. pp. 593–595, 597.
  14. "The Military at Parramatta". Archived from the original on 26 September 2015. Retrieved 28 September 2008.
  15. Keith Coleman; J. T. Knight (1953). Short history of the military forces in N.S.W. from 1788 to 1953.
  16. Austin Gee (2003). The British volunteer movement, 1794–1814. Clarendon Press. pp. 17–18. ISBN 978-0-19-926125-3.
  17. White, Andrew (2007). "Is contemporary Ulster unionism in crisis? Changes in unionist identity during the Northern Ireland Peace Process. Irish Journal of Sociology". pp. 118–135.
  18. Staff (2011). "Northern Ireland Loyalist Paramilitaries (U.K., extremists)". Council on Foreign Relations. Archived from the original on 20 June 2013. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  19. Smithey, Lee A. (22 August 2011). Unionists, Loyalists, and Conflict Transformation in Northern Ireland. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199875382.
  20. "People - Political Science - Trinity College Dublin" (PDF). www.tcd.ie.
  21. Joseph N. Cleary; Claire Connolly (2005). The Cambridge companion to modern Irish culture. Cambridge University Press. pp. 71–72. ISBN 978-0-521-82009-7.
  22. Richard S. Grayson (2009). Belfast Boys: how Unionists and Nationalists fought and died together in the First World War. Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-84725-008-7.
  23. Thomas Hennessey (1998). Dividing Ireland: World War One and Partition. Psychology Press. pp. 178–181. ISBN 978-0-415-19880-6.
  24. Niall O'Dochartaigh (2004–2005). "Support in Great Britain". A Guide to Ulster Loyalism and Unionism Online. CAIN Web Service. Retrieved 23 May 2012.

External links

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