Some people thought this so that the colonies would be provided for by Britain
Practically all 13 colonies fought for their independence but some people in some colonies were fence-sitters (couldn't decide) or loyalists (was still loyal to the British and was on British side).
left India
How do you think British colonists evolved from being loyal British citizens to revolutionaries? Why?
NovaNet Answer: They feared a destructive war.
Corn
Trying to spy and plot against the colonists. Loyalists were people who remained loyal to England; some moved up to Canada, but others stayed in the colonies to help the British.
Not every British person in the colony was a loyalist. Many were, but some thought that the British government had no right to tax the colonies when the colonies didn't even have a representative in parliament,and therefore rebelled against England. They became known as patriots, and the ones who stayed loyal to the crown were called loyalists.
When the colonies were founded and people migrated from England, those people were still considered Englishmen, or subjects of the British crown. At the same time, they were fererred to as colonials. When the revolution started in the 1770s, some supported the revolution and were called rebels by those loyal to the crown. Those who were from the colonies and loyal to the crown were loyalists.
Practically all 13 colonies fought for their independence but some people in some colonies were fence-sitters (couldn't decide) or loyalists (was still loyal to the British and was on British side).
New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Lower Canada amd Upper Canada stayed under British rule. Britain also gained control of British Honduras and several Caribbean Islands (e.g. Bermuda, Bahamas, Jamaica, etc.) at some point.
left India
Yes, to a certain extend i think the British appreciated that some Americans (Colonists) stayed loyal to their roots. After the revolution however, i feel the British cared much less about the loyalists because their affairs weren't as important to England as before the Revolution
They didn't need to be, a loyalist normally was a colonist who was loyal to the British. The British were already British so they were already loyal to King George, unless there were some that weren't.
During the Revolutionary War in the 1700s, it is undeniable that both Revolutionaries and Loyalists were influenced by fear; some may even have remained loyal or rebelled due to fear of the consequences for themselves or their families, etc. Generally speaking, however, Loyalists remained loyal to England due to believing that rebellion was unlawful and/or that the Colonies were incapable of governing themselves well.
Some colonists had extreme national pride and believed that they were still British by nationality even though they were not born in Great Britain. These British loyalists believed in the British rule and were deeply Loyal to the King of England.
If you mean the 'loyalists', which were pro-British colonists during the American Revolution, then they were never kicked out. Some were considered unpatriotic, which was only true in some cases, but most loyalists stayed in the colonies and were declared Americans after the war.
Some of them thought they would take a chance with it and others stayed loyal to there king