History and Its “Losers”
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Jacobites
3. Loyalists
4. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | James II has been called, by Thomas Macaulay and others, “one of the worst English kings.” There have been attempts to rehabilitate him: Maurice Ashley “Is there a Case for James II?” History Today 1963 pp. 347–352 and W.E. Brown, “A plea for James II,” Contemporary Review 138 (1925) pp. 501–508 For a generally favourable view of James II or, at least, one that tries to draw a balance between denigration and praise, see K.N. Stankov,” korol ’iakov 11 v zarubezhioi istriografii; osnovnye nauchye napravleniiia i podhody” Vestnik PSTGU (2016) seriia. Istoriia, Istoriia russkoi pravoslavnoi tserkvi. |
2 | Among recent additions to the literature on the exiled Jacobites attempts to regain the throne are the numerous works of Daniel Szechi. |
3 | Eamonn O’Ciardha, Ireland and the Jacobite Cause, 1685–1766: A Fatal Attachment (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2002) has argued that the Stuarts could have reigned in Ireland where their Catholicism was not an obstacle (to the contrary). James II and his descendents could not imagine reigning n only one of their three kingdoms. Nor, for that matter, could the Hanoverians give up Ireland. |
4 | These examples are given, as might be expected, by Ashley. “Is there a Case for James II?” p. 350. He also makes the bold assertion, following Lord Acton, that James II not William III, represented the cause of toleration in its most liberal form. Cain and Hopkins, British Imperialism: Innovation and Expansion 1688–1914 pp. 62–63. |
5 | The first two Hanoverian monarchs, George I (1714–1727) and George II (1727–1760) hardly knew any English. In itself, this was not an eliminatory feature in that pre-nationalistic age. James II was approached for the crown of Poland (which did not interest him). One of the principle charges against the early Hanoverians was that they were loutish. |
6 | No friend of the Jacobites, Linda Colley, In Defiance of Oligarchy: The Tory Party 1714–60. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,1982) argues that Jacobitism was only one option among others for the Tory party. She is indirectly replying to Eveline Crui kshank’s argument, i.a. in The House if Commons 1715.1754 edited by Romney Sedgwick (London: Oxford University Press, 1970, 2 volumes) that attachment to Jacobitism was widespread in the Tory Party, indeed it was the ideology of the Tory Party. |
7 | In a review of Eveline Cruickshanks and Jeremy Black, eds., The Jacobite Challenge (Edinburgh: Donald, 1988) Linda Colley, American Historical Review 95:3 (1990) pp. 818–819 attempts to provide reasons for the Jacobites’ failure. She touts the wide tolerance that the Hanoverians displayed toward their critics and claims that the Jacobites irritated rather than subverted the government. More to the point she argues that no one was prepared to act decisively on behalf of the exiled Stuarts. She also argues that Jacobite Britons were very similar to their Hanoverian counterparts in terms of their attitudes to commerce and other variables. She concludes that Jacobites failed not because they were traditionalists in a proto-modern age but because they were too much a part of their age to disrupt it. Nowhere does she mention the religious fanaticism that animated the population as late as the anti-Catholic Gordon riots of 1780 and that explains much of the suspicion of Stuart intentions. |
8 | Paul H. Smith “American Loyalists: Notes on Their Organization and Numerical Strength,” William and Mary Quarterly 25:2 (1968) pp. 259–277, cites this figure “generally attributed” (p. 260) to John Adams, second President and founding father of the United States. Smith follows the (tortuous) history behind these figures but eventually adopts them as his own basing himself on William H. Nelson, The American Tory (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1961). The figure of one third of the American population being opposed to the American Revolution has been adopted by more recent authors. |
9 | Nelson The American Tory has done a disservice to the Loyalist cause, and to American history in general, by using “Tory” and “Loyalist” interchangeably, even though he rejects the “class war” interpretation of the American Revolution (p. 86) and considers the Revolution “a civil war”. p. 1). |
10 | Jill Lepore’s, The Whites of Their Eyes: The Tea Party’s Revolution and the Battle over American History (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2010) well-aimed salvo at a contemporary fundamentalist interpretation of American history does not contain an index entry for “Loyalist” (or Tory). |
11 | T. H. Breen, “How Did he Colonies Unite?” New York Review of Books, 11 March 2021 [review of Mary Beth Norton 1774: The Long Year of Revolution (New York: Vintage, 2020)] suggests (basing himself on Norton?) that Washington and Franklin (and john Adams, the second president of the United States as well) were offended at being passed over for British government preferment as “colonials.” |
12 | The Other Loyalists: Ordinary People, Royalists, and the Revolution in the Middle Colonies, 1763–1787, edited by Joseph S. Tiedemann, Eugene R. Fingerhut and Robert W. Venables (Albany: Suny Press, 2009); Jim Piecuch, Three Peoples, One King: Loyalists, Indians, and Slaves in the Revolutionary South, 1775–1782 (Columbia. SC: University of South Carolina Press, 2008). Maya Jasanoff, “The Other Side of Revolution: Loyalists in the British Empire” William and Mary Quarterly. Third Series 65: 2 (2008) pp. 205–232 regrets the “marginal status of the topic of Loyalism which is “underscored by the predominance of antiquarian and genealogically oriented studies” but she also lists a number of serious works dealing with Loyalists especially praising the contribution of Robert McLuer Calhoon (p. 206 note 2). She also notes that “It remains surprisingly controversial in the United States to count loyalists among the victims of republican chauvinism” (p. 207). |
13 | Among the intolerable Acts attributed to George III in the Declaration of Indepedence was that of “abolishing the free System of English Laws in a neighbouring Province, establishing therein an Arbitrary government, and enlarging its Boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument. so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these Colonies.” |
14 | Quakers seem to have irritated American “Patriots” the most. They believed government to be divinely inspired and thus obeyed any government that did not force them to act against their conscience. Before the revolutionary war they expressed sympathy for American objections to unfair taxes but, when violence erupted they broke with the “Patriots” leading Samuel Adams to declare “if they will not pull down George III, let them not support tyrants,” A Glenn Crothers “Northern Virginia’s Quakers and the War for Independence: Negotiating a Path of Virtue in a Revolutionary World,” in The Other Loyalists, p. 109. |
15 | In a critical article on Bernard Bailyn, “exceptionalist” historian par excellence, Alan Taylor defines American exceptionalism as a “celebration of deviation from old world tradition” and he states (ruefully?) that “the exceptionalist mentality is deeply rooted in our [i.e., American] national identity.” (p. 34) Alan Taylor, “The Exceptionalist [review of Bernard Bailyn, To Begin the World Anew: The Genius and Ambiguities of the American Founders]” The New Republic. 9 June 2003, pp. 33–40. |
16 | See Frank M. Coleman, “The Hobbesian basis of American Constitutionalism,” Polity 7:1 (1974) pp. 57–89 and for a more pithy (and Hamiltonian) statement, Tom Cutterham, “Thomas Hobbes and Post-Revolutionary American Citizenship.” Commentary, 13 May 2013. |
17 | P. Smith (p. 259) cites R.R. Palmer’s lament in Palmer’s classical two volume work, The Age of the Democratic Revolution (Princeton: Princeton University Press) first published in 1959. Smith summarizes Palmer’s complaint that loyalists have been eliminated from the national consciousness—and from the work of “consensus” historians (vol. 1, p. 190). Even Nelson, The American Tory, who consistently confuses Tories and Loyalists, laments that “[t]he Loyalists in the American Revolution suffered a most abject kind of political failure, losing … even their proper place in history.”(p. V). |
18 | Erica Armstrong Dunbar, “A Praise House of Many Mansions” [review of Henry Louis Gates Jr. The Black Church This is Our Story. This is Our Song] New York Review of Books, 29 April 2021, p. 37. The slaves who escaped to Florida, then under Spanish control, allowed themselves to be baptized into the Roman Catholic faith, as much of a red flag for most American colonists as no baptism at all. |
19 | Official London shuddered at the thought of black soldiers in its ranks, although the population at large was mostly sympathetic to the cause of emancipation. Westminster did its best to keep social relations in the colonies unchanged, perhaps because of concern at the post-revolutionary situation, Piecuch, Three Peoples, One King, p. 8, p. 39. |
20 | Georgia had abolished slavery between 1735 and 1751. It was the only one of the thirteen colonies to have done so and the experiment did not last long. |
21 | Linda Colley, review of Jasanoff, Liberty’s Exiles, The Guardian, 19 February 2011. Mason, referenced above, makes an exception for Canada that, as Hugh MacLennon and others have pointed out, was indelibly marked by defeated peoples (Jacobite Scots, the French and Loyalists) ‘A Society in Revolt’ in Voices of Canada, edited by Judith Webster (Burlington, Vt USA: Association of Canadian Studies, 1976) pp. 33ff. |
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Liebich, A. History and Its “Losers”. Histories 2021, 1, 282-288. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories1040023
Liebich A. History and Its “Losers”. Histories. 2021; 1(4):282-288. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories1040023
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiebich, Andre. 2021. "History and Its “Losers”" Histories 1, no. 4: 282-288. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories1040023
APA StyleLiebich, A. (2021). History and Its “Losers”. Histories, 1(4), 282-288. https://doi.org/10.3390/histories1040023