The United Empire Loyalists : A Chronicle of the Great Migration by W. Stewart Wallace
page 106 of 109 (97%)
page 106 of 109 (97%)
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and for a collection of papers made by Sir Frederick
Haldimand, the Swiss soldier of fortune who was governor of Quebec at the time of the migration, and who had a passion for filing documents away, our knowledge of the settlements in the Canadas would be of the most sketchy character. It would serve no good purpose to attempt here an exhaustive account of the printed sources relating to the United Empire Loyalists. All that can be done is to indicate some of the more important. The only general history of the Loyalists is Egerton Ryerson, _The Loyalists of America and Their Times_ (2 vols., 1880); it is diffuse and antiquated, and is written in a spirit of undiscriminating admiration of the Loyalists, but it contains much good material. Lorenzo Sabine, _Biographical Sketches of Loyalists of the American Revolution_ (2 vols., 1864), is an old book, but it is a storehouse of information about individual Loyalists, and it contains a suggestive introductory essay. Some admirable work on the Loyalists has been done by recent American historians. Claude H. Van Tyne, _The Loyalists in the American Revolution_ (1902), is a readable and scholarly study, based on extensive researches into documentary and newspaper sources. The Loyalist point of view will be found admirably set forth in M. C. Tyler, _The Literary History of the American Revolution_ (2 vols., 1897), and _The Party of the Loyalists in the American Revolution_ (American Historical Review, I, 24). Of special studies in a limited field the most valuable and important is A. |
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