<Li> Rebecca Franks (1760--1823), prominent member of Loyalist society in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania during the American Revolution </Li> <Li> Shaddrick Furman, a Virginia free black, was a guide and information source for British troops . Upon his capture by Patriots, he was beaten and blinded . He received a pension of £ 18 per year for life from the Loyalist Claims Commission . </Li> <Ul> <Li> Joseph Galloway (1731--1803), Member of the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly </Li> <Li> Grace Growden Galloway (1727 - 1783), Female loyalist who documented her fight for property rights </Li> <Li> Micajah Ganey (1756--1830), Loyalist leader of the Pee Dee defeated by Francis Marion </Li> <Li> Alexander Garden (1720 - 1791) Scottish - born naturalist who lived in Charles Town, SC until fleeing to London in 1783 </Li> <Li> Dr. Silvester Gardiner (1708--1786) Massachusetts physician, visionary land developer who in 1774 added his name to a letter addressed to Massachusetts Royal Governor Thomas Hutchinson, affirming his allegiance to the Loyalist cause </Li> <Li> David George (ca . 1743--1810) African - American Baptist preacher and a Black Loyalist from the American South who escaped to British lines in Savannah, Georgia; later he accepted transport to Nova Scotia and land there . He eventually resettled in Freetown, Sierra Leone . </Li> <Li> Abraham Gesner (1756 - 1851), serving with the King's Orange Rangers during the American Revolution, purchased a commission of major in the British Army . </Li> <Li> Simon Girty (1741--1818), British liaison with the Indians </Li> <Li> Harrison Gray (1711--1794) was a wealthy merchant and Treasurer and Receiver - General for the Province of Massachusetts Bay </Li> <Li> Joseph Gray (1729--1803) Boston, MA Loyalist and progenitor of noted Canadian family </Li> </Ul> <Li> Joseph Galloway (1731--1803), Member of the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly </Li>

Where were the most loyalists during the revolutionary war