[Later this
year, my next book, Of
Thee I Sing: The Contested History of American Patriotism, will be
published in Rowman
& Littlefield’s American Ways series. So this year’s July 4th
series, I wanted to highlight a few of the contested histories of American
patriotism that project includes. Leading up to a special weekend post on the
book itself!]
On why it makes
sense to define a Loyalist as a patriot, and the limits of that perspective.
Perhaps the most
controversial claim of my book comes in the first chapter, “The Revolution:
Declaring and Constituting a Nation.” As I do in every chapter, I move there through
examples from that time period of my four focal types of
patriotism—celebratory, mythic, active, and critical—and when I get to the
final/critical patriotism section, I start with a few examples of (I have to
assume) a surprising community: Loyalists
to England (or Tories,
in the language of the time). I’ve long argued that it makes sense to see the
Revolution first and foremost as an
American civil war, and wanted to flesh out that idea further by thinking
about how we might see Loyalists as expressing a critical patriotic perspective
toward Revolutionary America. I focus on three particular figures: the Maryland
landowner James Chalmers, whose 1776 pamphlet Plain Truth offered a Loyalist rebuttal to
Paine’s Common Sense; the Mohawk
Iroquois warrior and chief Joseph Brant
(Thayendanegea), who led Native American and Loyalist Anglo soldiers
against colonial forces; and William
Franklin, the Royal Governor of New Jersey and Ben
Franklin’s illegitimate (but fully acknowledged) son.
William’s story
is profoundly specific and individual, not only because of that fraught
relationship to one of the Revolution’s most famous figures and leaders, but
also and even more intimately because of how affected his relationship with his
own son, (William) Temple
Franklin. Temple was already apparently closer to his grandfather than his father
as of May 5th, 1775, when Ben and Temple arrived in
Philadelphia after having spent a good deal of time together in London; the
Revolution, and specifically Temple’s role as a diplomat
working on the colonies’ behalf, further strained William’s relationships to
both his father and his son. But I would say that those personal details also
reveal an overarching truth: no Loyalist would risk and damage all that William’s
choices did (and that seems to have been the story time and again for
Loyalists) if they did not believe that they were acting on behalf of their
communities. William was imprisoned
for two years due to his Loyalist beliefs, and when he was released he
continued those efforts, organizing spies
in New York City in opposition to the Revolutionary forces there. The latter
actions seem to fall more within the category of treason (aiding a wartime
enemy, etc.), but I think it’s impossible to separate them from William’s
longstanding commitment to what he saw as the best future for New Jersey and
the colonies.
“Colonies” is a
key word in that final sentence, though—however we see William’s actions and
life, there’s no way to describe him as a patriot to the United States of
America. That’s not because the U.S.A. did not exist yet—in fact the Declaration
of Independence opens with the frame, “A Declaration by the representatives
of the United States of America, in general Congress assembled,” meaning that
as of July 1776 at least the U.S. did exist—but rather because the America in
which William believed and for which he fought and sacrificed so much would
never have become the full political and national entity comprised by that
phrase. Certainly for most of my book, it is the U.S. that is the subject of
the patriotisms—critical and otherwise—that I’m analyzing, so I grant that in
some important ways the patriotism of Loyalists has to be seen as separate from
that overall topic. But as of the Revolutionary era, none of those concepts or
communities were quite established yet (much less set in stone), and so I
continue to think there’s great value in considering a variety of forms of American
patriotism from that period—including the critical patriotism of Loyalists like
William Franklin.
Next patriotic
post tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other moments or stories of patriotism you’d highlight?
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