How did the Loyalists react to the declaration of independence

The Revolutionary War split the people of the American colonies into two groups: the loyalists and the patriots.

How did the Loyalists react to the declaration of independence

Patriot Minuteman Statue

What was a patriot?

Patriots were people who wanted the American colonies to gain their independence from Britain. They wanted their own country called the United States.

Why did people become patriots?

People in the Americas felt they weren't being treated fairly by the British. They were being taxed without any say or representation in the British government. Soon cries for "liberty" were being heard throughout the colonies. The patriots wanted freedom from British rule.

Famous Patriots

There were many famous patriots. Some of them became presidents such as Thomas Jefferson who wrote the Declaration of Independence and John Adams. Perhaps the most famous patriot at the time was George Washington who led the Continental Army and later became the first President of the United States. Other famous patriots included Paul Revere, Samuel Adams, Ethan Allen, Patrick Henry, and Ben Franklin. These people are often called the Founding Fathers of the United States.

What was a loyalist?

Not everyone who lived in the American colonies wanted to break away from the British. There were many people who wanted to stay part of Britain and remain British citizens. These people were called loyalists.

Why did some people remain loyal?

Many people felt that their lives would be better off if the colonies remained under British rule. Some of these people were simply afraid to go up against the might of the British army. Others had business interests in Great Britain and knew that British trade was important to the economy. Still others thought that British rule would be better than patriot rule.

Famous Loyalists

Since the loyalists lost the war, there aren't as many famous loyalists as there are patriots. Benedict Arnold was a general in the Continental Army who went to fight for the British. Another famous loyalist was Joseph Galloway who was the Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress but later worked for the British army. Other famous loyalists include Thomas Hutchinson (governor of Massachusetts colony), Andrew Allen, John Butler (leader of the loyalists troops Butler's Rangers), and David Mathews (mayor of New York City).

What happened to loyalists during the war?

Life for the loyalists became increasingly difficult during the war. Loyalists who lived in areas controlled by the patriots were in constant danger from radical patriots. Many of them lost their homes and businesses.

Many loyalists left the country and went back to Britain. Others decided to help the British fight the patriots. They either joined the British army or formed their own groups of fighters such as the Loyal Greens and the Royal American Regiment.

What happened to the loyalists after the war?

Many loyalists moved to Great Britain after the war ended. A lot of them lost their fortunes and land that they had built up over years in the Americas. In some cases the British government paid them for their loyalty, but it was usually not nearly as much as they had lost. The United States government wanted the loyalists to stay. They felt the new country could use their skills and education. Few stayed, however.

The Loyalists opposed the Revolution for a number of reasons. Some believed that the British government had the right to ask the colonies to pay half the cost of their own defence. When the colonies refused to do so through their elected assemblies, some Loyalists thought the British Parliament had a right to tax them, even if the colonies had no direct representation in that Parliament. Other Loyalists opposed parliamentary taxation, but did not consider violent opposition justified. Even if they had some sympathy with the revolutionaries, they often became Loyalists out of outrage at the excesses of the "rebels" and the persecutions they suffered for refusing to actively support the rebellion. Many simply supported the existing government, or held public office under it. Still others, like the black slaves living on plantations belonging to Patriots, responded to the invitation of the government to win their freedom by taking up arms against the Revolution. The First Nations, particularly the Mohawks, as allies of the Crown, felt the need of British protection.

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Today, millions of Americans are celebrating the 4th of July, America’s Independence Day.  The day commemorates the date that the Continental Congress signed the Declaration of Independence in Philadelphia in 1776.  The event was met with celebrations in the colonies, but what did the British think of this declaration?  We will look through The British Newspaper Archive to understand the reaction of the British press to America’s Declaration of Independence.

America’s Revolution

At the time of the Declaration of Independence, America and Britain had been at war since the battles of Lexington and Concord in April 1775.  Plenty had been written and discussed in the British press about the American rebels along with daily reports and accounts of the American militia and movement of British troops.  In the six months leading up to the Declaration of Independence, the colonists and British were reading Thomas Paine’s Common Sense. A pamphlet which explained the colonists’ natural right to declare independence.  Extracts of the text were printed in the Caledonian Mercury.

Search the newspapers for more

 

How did the Loyalists react to the declaration of independence
Caledonian Mercury | Wednesday 17 April 1776

 

The rebellious sentiments of the American colonists were not unknown amongst the British public.  However, many did believe that the rebellion would be ended quickly and the colonists would go back to being loyal subjects of the Crown.  You can follow the events of the American Revolution through the newspapers.  They were often reported through correspondents from those living in the colonies.  The press also printed letters and reports from the Continental Congress in Philadelphia.

 

How did the Loyalists react to the declaration of independence
Shrewsbury Chronicle | Saturday 24 August 1776

 


Search tips

Three tips to remember when searching the British newspapers for events from the American Revolution.

1 – There would have been a delay in the news reported, in the case of the Declaration of Independence, it was not printed until 24 August.

2 – America was not the United States or USA at that point, most papers would have referred to the country as the American colonies.

3 – In 18th-century newspapers, the letter S resembles the letter F.  Therefore, if you are searching the newspapers and cannot find what you want, try replacing the S with an F.  For example, Obfervations instead of Observations.


 

 

Declaration of Independence

To understand the reaction in Britain to the Declaration and not the overall Revolution, we focused our search on August 1776.  As mentioned above, the Declaration of Independence was published on 24 August 1776 in the Newcastle Chronicle, seven weeks after the adoption of the Declaration by the Continental Congress took place in Philadelphia.

 

How did the Loyalists react to the declaration of independence
Newcastle Chronicle | Saturday 24 August 1776

 

The Newcastle Chronicle published the Declaration without comment, but The Scots Magazine did not hold their tongue.  The American Declaration of Independence was printed in the August 1776 edition of the magazine.  The Scots Magazine is the oldest magazine in the world.  The Declaration was printed with a running commentary.  The author had much to say about the famous preamble of the Declaration.  First, the author argues that if all men are created equal, then shouldn’t that be an argument for staying with Britain rather than declaring independence.  Since all American colonists would be equal to their fellow British subjects.  Next, the author wrote that to declare that the writers of the Declaration were ignorant to the meaning of words, particularly the statement that all men have an unalienable right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.  The author explained,

‘but to say that a man with life hath a right to be a man with life, is so purely American, that I believe the texture of no other brain upon the face of the earth will admit the idea’.

He further insulted the Declaration by professing,

these gentlement ‘assume to themselves an unalienable right of talking nonsense’.

 

How did the Loyalists react to the declaration of independence
The Scots Magazine | Thursday 01 August 1776

 

In the Kentish Gazette from Saturday 24 August 1776, the dispute between Great Britain and her American colonies was declared, of a nature the most important of any which has ever arisen, from the earliest period that history can trace; it involves questions of national right, justice, interest, honour and prudence, of greater consequence to the British dominions than any ever heretofore agitated’.  It went on to say that the revenue laws which the American rebels were resisting had been similar to laws passed in the colonies for over a century.  Since the time the colonies were settled, the Crown used Acts of Parliament to raise taxes and revenue from the colonies.  Furthermore, the paper stated that the grievances were not just with particular laws (ie Stamp Tax, Boston Port Bill, etc) but rather the fact that the colonists wanted to shake off the authority of the King and the Parliament of Great Britain.

In another edition of the Kentish Gazette, went further to say that the colonists are inventing these plots and plans of slavery by the British Crown through taxation and that these grievances are only being used to achieve a further goal of independence.  Moreover, the colonists had been led by their Priests and Demagogues on this self-destructive road to independence.

‘They now pretend to discover plots and plans of slavery, in statutes by which they and their fathers have lived and even in their very charters on which they were first settled; and by their champion, Dr Price, they now kick charters, compacts, statutes, and precedents all out of doors, as useless things, affording no rule by which to try the reasonableness and justice of their new and exorbitant claims’.

 

How did the Loyalists react to the declaration of independence
Kentish Gazette | Saturday 31 August 1776

 

Dr Price

The Dr Price referred to in the previous statement was Dr Richard Price, a Welsh preacher and philosopher who advocated for American independence.  His pamphlet Observations on the nature of civil liberty, the principles of government, and the justice and policy of war with American sold thousands of copies in England and Wales.  Dr Price was criticised for his views, however, the popularity of his pamphlets demonstrates that there must have been many who believed the American rebels to be right.  Extracts from Dr Price’s pamphlet were published the Kentish Gazette, 21 February 1776.  Dr Price explained that the relationship between Britain and her colonies was similar to a relationship between parent and child, but that authority should have been gradually relaxed.  ‘But like mad parents, we have done the contrary; and, at the very time when our authority should have been most relaxed, we have carried it to the greatest extent, and exercised it with the greatest rigour.  No wonder then, that they have turned upon us; and obliged us to remember, that they are not children’.  He continued that the Crown has failed to support and protect the colonies and that the war against America was a ‘gross and flagrant violation of the constitution’.

 

How did the Loyalists react to the declaration of independence
Kentish Gazette | Wednesday 21 February 1776

 

Reaction in America

The newspapers relied on letters and correspondence from those living in America in order to report events and occurrences in the colonies.  The Scots Magazine printed a series of letters from people in New York, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey about the reading the Declaration of Independence in public.

The first letter was written 4 July 1776 and it explained the ceremony when Congress declared America independent.

‘The 4th of July, 1776, the Americans appointed as a Day of Fasting and Prayer, preparatory to their dedicating their Country to God, which was done in the following manner: The Congress being assembled, after having declared America independent, they had a Crown placed on a Bible, which by Prayers and solemn devotion they offered to God.  This religious ceremony being ended, they divided the crown into thirteen parts, each of the United Provinces taking apart’.

 

How did the Loyalists react to the declaration of independence
The Scots Magazine | Thursday 01 August 1776

 

A second letter from New York described how the crowd pulled down a statue of King George III and the metal was melted to use as bullets.

How did the Loyalists react to the declaration of independence
The Scots Magazine | Thursday 01 August 1776

 

In Princeton, New Jersey, the Declaration was met with a volley of muskets.

How did the Loyalists react to the declaration of independence
The Scots Magazine | Thursday 01 August 1776

 

By exploring The British Newspaper Archive, we have found the opinions of the British press in response to the America colonists declaring their independence.  For the most part, the British press seemed to dismiss the Declaration and the grievances of the colonists.  However, through the popularity of people such as Dr Price, it is evident that some took up the cause of the American rebels and supported their independence.

Why did the Loyalists not support the Declaration of Independence?

Loyalists wanted to pursue peaceful forms of protest because they believed that violence would give rise to mob rule or tyranny. They also believed that independence would mean the loss of economic benefits derived from membership in the British mercantile system.

What happened to the Loyalists after the Declaration of Independence?

What Happened to the Loyalists? In the end, many Loyalists simply left America. About 80,000 of them fled to Canada or Britain during or just after the war. Because Loyalists were often wealthy, educated, older, and Anglican, the American social fabric was altered by their departure.

How did Patriots react to the Declaration of Independence?

The declaration of independence was read publicly in all the states and was welcomed with many demonstrations of joy. The people were encouraged by it to bear up under the calamities of war, and viewed the evils they suffered only as the thorn that ever accompanies the rose.

Who were the Loyalists in the Declaration of Independence?

loyalist, also called Tory, colonist loyal to Great Britain during the American Revolution. Loyalists constituted about one-third of the population of the American colonies during that conflict.