- 2000, p. 1557.
Ranlet 2000, p. 431.
Anderson 2000, p. 541.
Jennings 1988, p. 447n26.
Ranlet 2000, p. 428. Fenn 2000, p. 1554.
Ranlet 2000, p. 430. Mayor...
- 86-89, 91-92, and 95.
Ranlet 2000, p. 8.
Ranlet 2000, p. 10.
Ranlet 2000, p. 11. Mann 2009, pp. 8, 10. Mann 2009, p. 13.
Ranlet 2000, p. 3.
Ostler 2019...
- 310
Ranlet, 1986, p. 13
Ranlet, 1986, pp. 16-17 Becker, 1901, p. 62
Ranlet,1986, p. 13 Engelman, 1953, pp. 560-561, 573 Engelman, 1953, p. 566
Ranlet, 1986...
-
thousands of
Loyalists left the
United States following the war;
Philip Ranlet estimates 20,000,
while Maya
Jasanoff estimates as many as 70,000. Some...
-
April 22, 2013.
Ranlet 1991, pp. 740–741.
Ranlet 1991, pp. 727–728.
Ranlet 1991, pp. 738–739.
Ranlet 1991, p. 740.
Ranlet 1991, p. 741.
Ranlet 1991, p. 742...
- 1928. The
Ranlet Manufacturing Company began building horse-drawn wagons,
carriages and
stagecoaches in 1844. The
company was
identified as
Ranlet Car Company...
- Liberty's Exiles:
American Loyalists in the
Revolutionary World. (Knopf, 2011)
Ranlet (2014) [below]
argues her
estimate of the
number of
Loyalists is too high...
-
Chronologies of the
American Mosaic.
Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 44.
Ranlet,
Phillip (2000). The British, the Indians, and smallpox: what
actually happened...
- to
British North America,
including about 50,000 whites,
however Philip Ranlet estimates that only 20,000
adult white Loyalists went to Canada,
while Wallace...
- 1760.
Archived from the
original on 9
March 2021.
Retrieved 13 May 2020.
Ranlet,
Philip (2000). "The British, the Indians, and Smallpox: What
Actually Happened...