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Written by: Madeline McMahon M.A. '24 | July 02, 2026

Forgotten Stories of the American Revolution

Patrick O鈥橞rien, assistant professor of history, geography and legal studies, shares a glimpse into what really happened 250 years ago.

At the Massachusetts Historical Society, Patrick O'Brien viewed letters, diary accounts and maps that belonged to the loyalist Robie family. Photos by O'Brien

Today, July 2, is the day Founding Father John Adams thought future generations of Americans would celebrate forever.

That was the actual date that American independence was declared in 1776, while July 4 was the day the declaration was adopted by Congress. But because the document was dated on the fourth, that鈥檚 the date history remembers and the date that is still honored 250 years later.

Patrick O鈥橞rien, assistant professor of history, geography and legal studies, said this is one of many facts about the American Revolution that became gradually misremembered over two-plus centuries of record keeping. He鈥檚 an expert on such slights 鈥 his research focuses on loyalists, the Americans who sided with the British forces during the Revolutionary War, and whose reputations were inaccurately vilified over time.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e this group that have these stories that get told later. They get really demonized; they become the bad guys,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen you get below the surface, you find out that these people are very much the same as the people who opposed them.鈥

During the revolution, it鈥檚 estimated that about 20% of colonists were loyal to Britain. But of those 500,000 or so people, O鈥橞rien said only a handful of them openly condemned the American rebels and took up arms against them. He argues that the vast majority were hastily labeled as enemy sympathizers by friends and neighbors suspicious of their activities. Many of them might not have been loyalists at all, or if so, their allegiances were more of a gray area than pure redcoat.

The economy of the American colonies heavily depended on Great Britain for commercial importing and exporting, O鈥橞rien explained. Plus, only two decades before the revolution, the colonists fought alongside the British in the French and Indian War. Especially for the soldiers who had so recently donned British uniforms, it wasn鈥檛 easy for a lot of people to support a revolution against their former allies.

Take the Robie family, for example, the subject of a book O鈥橞rien (pictured left) is writing. The year before the Revolutionary War, the patriarch, Thomas Robie, was elected treasurer of Marblehead, Massachusetts, where the family lived and was highly respected. Less than two weeks after the first battle at Lexington and Concord, the Robies were run out of town, suspected of being loyalists because of Thomas鈥 business relations with the British.

鈥淚n the histories of the loyalists, Thomas Robie is depicted as someone who鈥檚 greedy, obsessed with rank, and all these negative characteristics,鈥 said O鈥橞rien. 鈥淚鈥檝e read their letters and their diary accounts, and it鈥檚 nothing like that.鈥

The Robies fled to Halifax, Nova Scotia, and theirs became a popular cautionary tale of what can happen to people who defy the status quo. Nineteenth century histories tell a story of patriotic Americans angrily congregating on the docks as the exiled family set sail for Canada, with Thomas鈥 wife, Mary, supposedly yelling that she hoped the streets would soon be filled with rebel blood.

鈥淚 have almost basically proven that she did not say that,鈥 said O鈥橞rien. 听

The family papers, which O鈥橞rien found at the Massachusetts Historical Society, give a more civilized account. Thomas and Mary Robie鈥檚 daughter, also named Mary, kept a diary in her young adulthood, where she described feeling like an outsider and wrote about funerals she attended for other refugees whom she never met but felt emotionally connected to.

While the Robie family is exceptional for having lasting records of their daily life throughout the revolution and afterward, O鈥橞rien said that they are representative of most of the people who were labeled as loyalists.

鈥淲hat鈥檚 great about people celebrating 250 is thinking about the stories that make up the nation and appreciating the variety of experiences,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat better thing to do on 250 than to get the story straight?"