Colonel/Captain John Leggett: One of the most prominent Loyalists was John Leggett, a rich planter in Bladen County. He organized and led one of the few loyalist brigades in the South (the North Carolina Volunteers, later known as the Royal North Carolina Regiment). After the war, Colonel Leggett and some of his men moved to Nova Scotia; the British gave them free land grants in County Harbour as compensation for their losses in the colony. The great majority of Loyalists remained in North Carolina and became citizens of the new nation.[4][3]
^ abcLewis, J.D. "Loyalist Officers". The American Revolution in North Carolina. Retrieved April 22, 2019.
^Carole Watterson Troxler, "'The Great Man of the Settlement': North Carolina's John Leggett At Country Harbour, Nova Scotia, 1783–1812," North Carolina Historical Review, July 1990, Vol. 67 Issue 3, pp. 285–314
Pancake, John S. (1985). This Destructive War: The British Campaign in the Carolinas, 1780–1782.
Rankin, Hugh F. (1959). North Carolina in the American Revolution.
Troxler, Carole Watterson (July 1990). 'The Great Man of the Settlement': North Carolina's John Legett at Country Harbour, Nova Scotia, 1783–1812., NCHR 67