. The New England magazine . •ROm-ARMMN-TH[-■OLO-STAT[. ■B0STON-B[fOR[lH[-R[VOLUTION-NOWINTKINITfCHURCHSftimOf1N-(\|[WBRUNWICK They ( Lyon & Unicorn ) were constant members of the council at Boston— (by mandamus )— ranaway when the others did—have suffered — are of course Refugees & have a claim for residence at NewBrunswick.— [ Extract from letter to Ward Chipman, Esq., March 25, 1785.] THE LOYALISTS. By James Hannay. NEARLY all the histories of the greatrevolutionary contest, which endedin the independence of the thirteencolonies, are singularly deficient in theirinformation regarding the me


. The New England magazine . •ROm-ARMMN-TH[-■OLO-STAT[. ■B0STON-B[fOR[lH[-R[VOLUTION-NOWINTKINITfCHURCHSftimOf1N-(\|[WBRUNWICK They ( Lyon & Unicorn ) were constant members of the council at Boston— (by mandamus )— ranaway when the others did—have suffered — are of course Refugees & have a claim for residence at NewBrunswick.— [ Extract from letter to Ward Chipman, Esq., March 25, 1785.] THE LOYALISTS. By James Hannay. NEARLY all the histories of the greatrevolutionary contest, which endedin the independence of the thirteencolonies, are singularly deficient in theirinformation regarding the men who tookthe side of the crown during the the share of these men in the rev-olutionary struggle, and their subsequentbanishment, are matters of deep interest,not only because of their influence onthe character of the contest, but also inconsequence of the results which haveflowed from the proceedings taken againstthem by the successful party. The ex-pulsion of the Acadians has been a sub-ject both for the poet and the hist


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidnewenglandma, bookyear1887