Divided Loyalties
Descended from American Colonists who fled north rather than join the revolution, Canada's Tories still raise their tankards to King George
- By David DeVoss
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2004, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
Some Loyalist leaders wanted to replicate 18th-century England, in which the rich lived off large estates with tenant farmers. “But most of the new arrivals were infected with America’s democratic ideals,” says Ronald Rees, author of Land of the Loyalists. “Nobody wanted to be a tenant farmer anymore. More than a few Tories condemned ‘this cursed republican town meeting spirit.’ ”
By the mid-19th century, Britain had begun eliminating trade protections for Maritime Canada, thereby putting these colonies at a disadvantage relative to its much more developed American states. “Britain’s embrace of free trade was the killer blow,” says Rees. “By 1870, steam had replaced sail, and all the best lumber had been cut. Once all the timber was gone, the Loyalists had nothing the British wanted.”
Inside new Brunswick’s provincial legislature, enormous portraits of George III, whose erratic behavior eventually gave way to insanity, and his wife, the self-effacing Queen Charlotte, dominate a chamber that replicates Britain’s House of Commons. And the image of a British galleon, similar to those that carried Loyalists from America, adorns the provincial flag. Beneath the ship floats New Brunswick’s resolute motto: Spem Reduxit (Hope Restored).
“There is no place on earth more loyal than here,” says historian Robert Dallison, as he ambles through Fredericton’s Old Public Burial Ground, past tombs whose weathered epitaphs relate a story of unvarying defiance and privation. Leaving the cemetery, Dallison drives down to the St. John River and turns onto Waterloo Row. On the left, a number of stately properties stand on land first developed by Benedict Arnold. On the right, down a gravel road past an overgrown softball field, several stones in a pool of mud mark the anonymous graves of starved Loyalists hastily buried during the harsh winter of 1783-84, a period Maritime history books call “the hungry year.”
Maritime Canada’s living monument to its Loyalist past lies just north of Fredericton at Kings Landing, a 300-acre historical settlement that comes alive each summer when 175 costumed employees work in and about 100 relocated homes, barns, shops and mills that once belonged to Loyalists and their descendants. At Kings Landing, it’s possible to sample a hearth-baked rhubarb tart, observe the making of lye soap and learn how to cure a variety of maladies from Valerie Marr, who in her role as a colonial healer, tends what appears to be a sprawling patch of weeds. “A Loyalist woman needed all these plants if she expected her family to survive,” Marr says. “Butterfly weed cures pleurisy. Tansy reduces arthritic pain if it’s mixed with a bit of vinegar.” Marr, who is 47, has worked at Kings Landing for 26 years. “I tell my friends that I’ve spent half my life in the 19th century,” she says with a laugh.
Kings Landing gardeners grow heirloom fruits, flowers and vegetables in demonstration plots and work with CornellUniversity to preserve a variety of apples no longer sold commercially. Various traditional species of livestock, including Cotswold sheep, are bred here as well. “Kings Landing is a living portrait of a society striving to regain what it lost in the American Revolution,” says chief curator Darrell Butler. “We’re re-creating history.”
No less a luminary than England’s Prince Charles attended the 1983 bicentennial celebration of the Penobscot Loyalists’ mass migration to Canada. “I was wearing my United Empire Loyalist pin when I met Charles,” sighs retired teacher Jeannie Stinson. “I told him that everybody in my family is a Loyalist. He smiled and told me that I didn’t look 200 years old.”
America’s Tories were among the British subjects who transformed Canada, which was largely French territory until 1763, into an English-speaking country. Today some 3.5 million Canadians—more than 10 percent of the country’s population—are direct descendants of Americans on the losing side of the Revolutionary War. But the world moves on. Memories fade, values morph, new people arrive. For more than two centuries, Saint John, New Brunswick, proclaimed itself the LoyalistCity, and schools were dismissed and merchants donned colonial garb when Saint John annually memorialized the arrival of Sarah Frost and her fellow Tories. Today, however, Saint John styles itself as “The Fundy City” and celebrates the ebb and flow of the Bay of Fundy’s tides, to the dismay of some.
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Comments (3)
I would like to inform the Smithsonian.com that I have found a permanent place for my family information an contribution which was erased from Jamaican records and returned to the UK after there independence in 1962. Being the grandson of Jamaican Police Inspector Herbert Theodore Thomas 1856-1930. I felt it was my duty to expose the truth about my mixed race family background. My research took ten years, with help of UK Military Genealogist Alan Greverson and Madeleine E. Mitchell in the US to, document the facts about my grandfather's contribution to Jamaica. My own autobiography A Struggle to Walk with Dignity-The True story of a Jamaican-born Canadian"2008, was brought to the attention of York University- Clara Thomas Archives & Special Collections in Toronto On. Canada where all my family Books, Pamphlets, Writings and documents are available for public info; titled: The Archambeau- Thomas family Collection. My thanks to all who help to preserve our history around the world. Gerald.
Posted by Gerald A. Archambeau- author on April 18,2013 | 11:12 AM
For the benefit of readers and researchers at the Smithsonian,it should be noted that I am the grandson of of Jamaican Police Inspector Herbert Theodore Thomas 1856 to 1930. He was also a Lecturer, Naturalist, Explorer and the Author of three books "Untrodden Jamaica"1890, "Something about Obeah"1891 & "The story of a West Indian Policeman-47 years in the Jamaica Constabulary"1927. His three books are now connected to my autobiography "A Struggle to Walk with Dignity-The True story of a Jamaican-born Canadian"2008, which tells the whole family story of the Thomas-Archambeau connection. This Jamaican family history has been erased in Jamaica. However it is now available to the public and Smithsonian readers, if they Google-User Pages; Info on Jamaican Police Inspector Herbert T. Thomas. All my family info has been donated to York University Toronto On. Clara Thomas Archives & Special Collections 305 Scott Library archives@yorku.ca Phone:416 736 5442, for all to see. With my thanks, Gerald.
Posted by Gerald A. Archambeau -author on October 11,2012 | 10:45 PM
I am the author of "A Struggle to Walk with Dignity"-2008 who would like to pass on the history of my grandfather that I had to research before doing my own autobiography. I feel that the Smithsonian will find great interest in my information for the sake of preserving lost Jamaican history. Much of Jamaica's history was thrown out after the British left in 1962. My white Jamaican grandfather Inspector of Police Herbert Theodore Thomas 1856 to 1930, who served Jamaica & the British Empire for 47 years and made great contributions to the development of his country and has suffered from reverse discrimination, when it comes his lost history. This has happened to many other Jamaicans who are not black. I am his black grandson from his 2nd marriage to my black grandmother Leonora Thomas, who is willing to tell the whole truth about my family: Visit:www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~jamwgw/ and scroll down to; Links to Jamaican Genealogy. To get the facts from UK Genealogist & Madeleine E. Mitchell in the US. My thanks.
Posted by Gerald A. Archambeau- author on December 7,2011 | 12:21 AM