Introduction |
Questions to Consider |
Source |
Related Links
A Profile of Loyalist Claims
(1780)
Wallace Brown
Introduction
There is a sometimes forgotten reality of Revolutionary America: the fact that the colonial population was deeply divided on the issue of a complete break with England. By focusing on the impact of the Revolution on the Crown's loyal subjects this document serves, first, as a reminder that revolutions are not and never have been polite disagreements among friends and, second, indicates who were likely to be Loyalists.
Questions to Consider
- What occupational groups were more likely to support the cause of the Crown? What was the relationship among social class, economic standing, and Toryism?
- By referring to the table constructed from the data in "Charleston, South Carolina, Sons of Liberty (1766)" compare and contrast the socioeconomic profiles of the Revolutionaries and Loyalists.
- Are there missing data or some other condition that would weaken a generalization based on this table? To what extent is generalization possible on the question of Loyalist identity? What precautions are necessary in analyzing the available social and economic data like that displayed in the table?
Source
| Occupation | No. of Claimants | % of Claimants |
| Farmers | 1,368 | 49.1 |
| Commerce | | |
| (a) Artisans | 274 | 9.8 |
| (b) Merchants and Shopkeepers | 517 | 18.6 |
| (c) Miscellaneous innkeepers, seamen, etc. | 92 | 3.3 |
| Combined Commerce | 883 | 31.7 |
| Professions | | |
| (a) Lawyers | 55 | |
| (b) Teachers and professors | 21 | |
| (c) Doctors | 81 | |
| (d) Anglican clerics | 63 | |
| (e) Other clerics | 7 | |
| (f) Miscellaneous | 26 | |
| Combined professions | 253 | 9.1 |
| Officeholders | 282 | 10.1 |
Source:
Wallace Brown,
The Good Americans: The Loyalists in the American Revolution (New York: William Morrow and Company, 1969), pp. 206-207.
Related Links