Thomas N. Ingersoll is Associate Professor at Ohio State University, Lima. His first book was Mammon and Manon in Early New Orleans: The First Slave Society in the Deep South, 1718-1819 (1999). In To Intermix with our White Brothers: Indian Mixed Bloods in the United States from Earliest Times to the Indian Removals (2005), he explores the social and political problems created by racial mixture. His guiding interest is how people in early America defined legitimate membership in society, who had rights and who did not.
Introduction. History, revolutionary ideology, and the Loyalist problem;
Part I. New England in December, 1773: 1. The New England people in their
towns on December 16, 1773: a historic mission at risk; 2. Loyalists and
Oliver Cromwell's ghost: the problem of the radical tradition in 1773; 3.
'A moral distemper in the British Government': Loyalists, the ruling class,
and the mailed fist; Part II. From the Boston Tea Party to the War of
Independence: 4. Rebels and Loyalists from December 16th, 1773 to September
1774; 5. 'The attempts of a wicked administration to enslave America': the
peace of the towns destroyed and the Loyalist cause, September, 1774 to
April 19, 1775; 6. 'Avoid blood and tumult': Loyalist policy during the
war; Part III. The Loyalist Problem and Ideology after 1776: 7. The radical
critique of Tory oligarchy, slavery, and patriarchy; 8. The 'ugly question'
of confiscation; 9. 'A day of strict reckoning' for 'a multitude of subtil
enemies'?: New England Loyalists after 1783; Conclusions.