director at marquette university. hi, patrick, dr. eile. chang associate professor of history at sarah lawrence college hi, eileen, and suzanne buchanan executive director of the shirley eustis house right here in boston in roxbury. hi, susie. thank you all for joining us. i am so honored and delighted to have you all here. i want to get us started with a background on the loyalists and can you give us a brief background on the people who identified as loyalists what their lives look like leading up to and during the revolution and what happened to them after the war patrick. do you want to start us off on this? error and gina. thanks for having us. so i i see there s being kind of three basic categories of loyalists. there are people who really just wanted to remain neutral in the war. but because they were trading in violation of nonprotation or selling livestock to the british. they were there. retarded as well a lot of the native americans wanted to stay out of the war, b
buchanan executive director of the shirley eustis house right here in boston in roxbury. hi, susie. thank you all for joining us. i am so honored and delighted to have you all here. i want to get us started with a background on the loyalists and can you give us a brief background on the people who identified as loyalists what their lives look like leading up to and during the revolution and what happened to them after the war patrick. do you want to start us off on this? error and gina. thanks for having us. so i i see there s being kind of three basic categories of loyalists. there are people who really just wanted to remain neutral in the war. but because they were trading in violation of nonprotation or selling livestock to the british. they were there. retarded as well a lot of the native americans wanted to stay out of the war, but they got sucked into it. there were some religious groups like quakers and mennonites who were opposed to war in principle and were often see
identified as loyalists what their lives look like leading up to and during the revolution and what happened to them after the war patrick. do you want to start us off on this? error and gina. thanks for having us. so i i see there s being kind of three basic categories of loyalists. there are people who really just wanted to remain neutral in the war. but because they were trading in violation of nonprotation or selling livestock to the british. they were there. retarded as well a lot of the native americans wanted to stay out of the war, but they got sucked into it. there were some religious groups like quakers and mennonites who were opposed to war in principle and were often seen as deciding with the british. they were also loyalists who some of them who were believed in tory principles of obeying the king no matter what and that resistance to to lawful authority was a christian sin and there was some these are like hydrogen clergy, but there was a small group i think mos
It is my honor to introduce our guests dr. Jay Patrick Mullins associate professor of history and public history director at marquet chang associate professor of history at Sarah Lawrence college hi, patrick. Doctor eileen chang, associate professor of history at zahra lawrence college. Hi, i lean. And suzanne executive director of the surely uses house right here in boston in roxbury. Hi, suzie. Thank you all for joining us. I am so honored and delighted to have you all here. I want to get us started with a background on the loyalists. Can you give us a brief background on the people who identified as loyalists, whether lives looked like leading up to and during the revolution, and what happened to them after the war . Patrick, do you want to start us off on this . Sure and gina, thanks for having us. So, i see there have been kind of three basic categories of loyalists. There are people who really just wanted her main neutral in the war, but because they were trading in violation of
Background on the people who identified as loyalists what their lives look like leading up to and during the revolution and what happened to them after the war patrick. Do you want to start us off on this . Error and gina. Thanks for having us. So i i see theres being kind of three basic categories of loyalists. There are people who really just wanted to remain neutral in the war. But because they were trading in violation of nonprotation or selling livestock to the british. They were there. Retarded as well a lot of the native americans wanted to stay out of the war, but they got sucked into it. There were some religious groups like quakers and mennonites who were opposed to war in principle and were often seen as deciding with the british. They were also loyalists who some of them who were believed in tory principles of obeying the king no matter what and that resistance to to Lawful Authority was a christian sin and there was some these are Like Hydrogen clergy, but there was a smal