On the sizeable
American community we hardly ever think about at all, and why we should.
I mentioned in
yesterday’s post that the House was sold to Samuel Ingersoll in
1782 by the third generation of its original family, the Turners; they did
so because John Turner III had lost more or less all of the family’s sizeable
fortune during the Revolutionary War. As best historians can tell, Turner lost
it all not only because of excessive spending and poor financial acumen but
also, and most saliently, because he
and his family were Loyalists, supporters of Great Britain during the lead-up
to and events of the Revolution. By 1782, only a year before the war’s
conclusion with the
Treaty of Paris (1783), the Loyalist position had become a clear loser,
economically and socially as well as militarily, as reflected concisely in
Turner’s loss of the House in that year.
Thanks to the
power of hindsight, because the Revolution ended the way it did, it’s easy to
think of the Loyalist position as a loser’s choice from the get-go. But it wasn’t,
and not only because of just how fully the war went against the colonists for
the first few years (nor because of how crucial
French aid was to the ultimate turning of that tide). While there were of
course no opinion polls in the 1770s, it’s also quite likely the case that
Loyalists (or Tories,
as they were often known) outnumbered Revolutionaries for much of the Revolution’s
early period. Which, if we’re able to step back from our false sense of the Revolution’s
inevitability, makes all the sense in the world—pragmatic sense, given the
overwhelming power and military superiority of Britain and what would have
happened to Revolutionaries had they lost the war; and philosophical sense,
given how absolute of a change the Revolutionaries were arguing and fighting for.
In any case, the
Loyalists represented a sizeable Revolutionary community, a third side in the
conflict that complicates a binary America-England vision of the war. And
outside of Benedict
Arnold (who of course is remembered much more as a traitor than a Tory), I’m
not sure we include Loyalists in our collective memories and narratives at all.
Perhaps the new TV series Turn, which premieres on AMC later
this year, will feature Loyalist characters, although the
initial glimpses seem to pit its early Revolutionary spy protagonists
against British forces rather than their Tory neighbors. Which is really the
most central point of better remembering the Loyalist community—that the Revolution
was far more of a Civil War than we like to admit, pitting neighbor against
neighbor, Americans against Americans, all fighting for their homes and their
vision of a homeland. Such a shift in our narratives would be hugely difficult,
of course—but far more reflective of the complexities of history and, as a
result, of their relationship to our own divisions and debates.
Next House
history tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
On Twitter, Abby Perkiss (https://sites.google.com/a/kean.edu/abigail-perkiss-ph-d/Home) highlights Barnard's Reacting to the Past (http://reacting.barnard.edu/), and specifically their American Revolution game which "is great for humanizing/legitimating Loyalist cause&memory for students."
ReplyDelete