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CHAPTER III Campaign of 1781
The year 1781 commenced under auspices more propitious than
those of the last year. The British had exercised so much oppression and
rapacity over all those who would not join them, and so much insolence over
those who did, and were in the least suspected, that the people of South
Carolina found there was no alternative but between a state of downright
vassalage and warfare. Most of the men of principle already had, or were
prepared to take up arms against the enemy, and in general the unprincipled
only remained with them in the expectation of plunder. Their army too, being
divided into different cantonments over the country, while it extended their
oppression, exposed their weakness. The history of all ages shows that a
country may be overrun with more facility than kept in a state of subjection,
and that a partisan warfare is the best that can be carried on against an enemy
of superior force and discipline.
During the present winter Lord Cornwallis formed a design of
conquering the upper counties of North Carolina, and marched by the way of
Charlotte towards Salisbury, for that purpose. This part of the country was
thickly covered with underwood, and settled by a hardy race of industrious
yeomanry, all friends of their country. He was fired upon from behind bushes
and fences, trees and rocks, by companies in ambush, and individuals on foot
and on horseback, and was so much annoyed that he was obliged to retreat back
to Winnsborough. The news of this expedition was industriously spread abroad,
and encouraged the people of South Carolina to follow the example. In the mean
time, Gen. Gates had been superceded in the command of the southern army by
Gen. Greene.
With the character of this leader it is intended to make the
reader better acquainted than he has been heretofore. His command begun with a
good omen, which in all times has had its effect. In a few hours after his
arrival in camp at Charlotte, he received the news that Col. Washington had
taken Rugely and one hundred men, by the well known stratagem of mounting a
pine log over against his block house, which he mistook for a field piece.1 Gen. Greene had not only no more than one thousand
continentals and about as many militia, but was also bare of ammunition and
clothing, and had no money to pay them. With this force he marched down to
Pedee, in South Carolina, and took a position near Hick's creek, on the east
side of the river, not many miles from Chatham. From this place his first
despatch to Gen. Marion is dated, the 19th Jan. 1781, in which he says, "by the
last accounts, Lieut. Col. Tarleton was in motion, with about one thousand
troops, towards Gen. Morgan." On the 23d Jan. Gen. Greene congratulates Marion
on Morgan's victory over Tarleton, and writes him the particulars. On the 25th
he says, "before this I hope you have received the agreeable news of the defeat
of Lieut. Col. Tarleton. After this nothing will appear difficult."
As the defeat of Tarleton at the Cowpens has been related by
many American writers, whose works are generally read, the account of the
renowned chief himself, who was unexpectedly foiled, and which is now out of
print, will be extracted for the amusement of the historical reader. "Near the
end of the last year, (1780) information had been received by Lord Cornwallis,
that Gen. Greene had made a division of his troops, which did not exceed
fourteen hundred men, exclusive of militia, and that he had committed the light
infantry and Col. Washington's cavalry to Gen. Morgan, with directions to pass
the Catawba and Broad rivers, to collect the militia, and threaten Ninety-Six.
It is not to be supposed Gen. Greene would have adopted the hazardous plan of
dividing his forces, if he had received information of Gen. Leslie's command
being withdrawn from Virginia, and united to the force in South Carolina;
because such an accession of strength would produce a movement from
Winnsborough (where Cornwallis then lay,) and might separate the two divisions
of the American army, and endanger their safety. To attain this object, (the
separation of the two divisions of the American army,) Col. Tarleton was now
detached from the main army of Lord Cornwallis, and was to be supported by his
lordship, and Gen. Leslie as soon as he arrived; with orders to push Morgan to
the utmost. Tarleton's force was his corps of cavalry and infantry of five
hundred and fifty men; the first battalion of the 71st, of two hundred men; two
hundred men of the 7th regiment, new recruits; and fifty dragoons of the 17th
regiment -- total one thousand men. Morgan retreated before Tarleton till the
commanding officer in front of the British reported the American troops were
halted and forming. (17th Jan.) Lieut. Col. Tarleton, having obtained a
position he certainly might deem advantageous, did not hesitate to undertake
the measures his commander and his own judgment recommended. He ordered the
legion dragoons to drive in the militia, that Morgan's disposition might be
inspected. The American commander had formed a front line of about one thousand
militia; his reserve of five hundred continental infantry, one hundred and
twenty of Washington's cavalry, and three hundred back woodsmen. Tarleton
ordered his infantry to disencumber themselves of every thing except arms and
ammunition, to file to the right, till they became equal to the flank of the
American front line; the legion infantry were added to their left, and under
the fire of a three pounder they were to advance within three hundred yards of
the enemy. This situation being acquired, the 7th regiment was commanded to
form on the left of the legion infantry, and the other three pounder was given
to its right. A captain with fifty dragoons, was placed on each flank. The
first battalion of the 71st extended to the left of the 7th, one hundred and
fifty yards in the rear, and composed, with two hundred cavalry, the reserve.
The animation of the officers and soldiers promised assurances of success. The
troops moved in as good line as troops could move, at open files. The militia,
after a short contest, were dislodged. The British approached the continentals,
and the fire on both sides produced much slaughter. The cavalry on the right
were ordered to charge the enemy's left, and executed the order with great
gallantry, but were driven back by the reserve and Col. Washington's cavalry.
As the contest between the British infantry and continentals was equally
balanced, Tarleton brought the 71st into line, and ordered a movement in
reserve to threaten the enemy's right flank. Upon the advance of the 71st all
the infantry again moved on; the continentals and back woodsmen gave ground;
the British rushed forwards; an order was despatched to the cavalry to charge;
an unexpected fire at this instant from the Americans who came about, stopped
the British and threw them into confusion. Exertions to make them advance were
useless. The part of the cavalry which had not been engaged, fell likewise into
disorder, and an unaccountable panic extended along the whole line. The
Americans advanced and augmented their astonishment. A general flight ensued.
Neither promises nor threats could gain attention. All attempts to restore
order, recollection or courage proved fruitless. Two hundred dragoons forsook
their leader, fourteen officers and forty horsemen were, however, not unmindful
of their own reputation, or their commanding officer. Col. Washington's cavalry
were charged and driven back into the continental infantry by this handful of
brave men. Another party who had seized upon the baggage were dispersed, and
this detachment retired towards Broad river unmolested. The number of the
killed and wounded at the Cowpens, amounted to near three hundred on both
sides, officers and men inclusive; this loss was almost equally shared. But the
Americans took two pieces of cannon, the colours of the 7th regiment, and near
four hundred prisoners." Thus far Col. Tarleton. Gen. Moultrie received his
account of this action of the Cowpens "from an officer of great veracity and
high rank, who was conspicuous on that day;" supposed to be Col. Washington.
The substance of his account shall now be given; that the two may be compared.
Gen. Morgan drew up his men in an open pine barren, the militia of about four
hundred men, under Col. Pickens, formed the first line. The continentals of
about five hundred men, two hundred of whom were raw troops, formed the second
line, under Col. Howard, two hundred yards in the rear. Col. Washington, with
seventy-five continental cavalry, and forty-five militia under Capt. M`Call, in
the rear. Pickens ordered his men to reserve their fire till the enemy came
within fifty yards, which they did, and fired with great success; but they were
soon obliged to give way and retreat behind the second line, which received
them warmly; at length the second line began to give way. Col. Washington,
perceiving this, rode up to their rear with his cavalry, and told Howard, "if
he would rally his men and charge the enemy's line, he would charge the cavalry
who were cutting down the militia." His riding so close to the rear stopped the
British, and Howard rallied his men in the mean time, and charged with fixed
bayonets. Col. Washington charged the cavalry and routed them; the militia at
the same time recovered themselves and began to fire, and the whole threw the
enemy into the utmost confusion. Howard called out to them, "to lay down their
arms and they should have good quarters." Upwards of five hundred men threw
down their arms and surrendered. Two hundred were left dead on the field, and a
great number wounded. Besides the two field pieces mentioned by Tarleton, six
hundred men, eight hundred stand of arms, and thirty-five baggage waggons, fell
into the hands of the Americans. Col. Washington pursued the British cavalry
twenty-five miles.
By this last account the disparity in numbers was not great,
and as one half the Americans were either militia or new levies, the
superiority was on the side of Tarleton, whose men, except two hundred, were
veterans, and he had two field pieces. The ground too he acknowledges was
advantageous; so that every thing was in his favour, but an agency which
he could not control. But in the last account we can find no place where he and
his handful of brave men could encounter Col. Washington. In his bewildered
fancy perhaps it was some other object he encountered, since for the space of
five and twenty miles, not their faces, but only their backs were to be seen.
The fact is, that never was victory more complete, never was vanity more
humbled, nor cruelty more justly requited than in the defeat of this tyrannical
man. Its first effect was to raise the spirits of the people; its ultimate
consequence was the downfall of Cornwallis and peace to the country. But most
severe trials are yet to be surmounted, and patriotism the most exemplary
remains yet to be recorded.
On the day the last letter of Greene, of the 23d Jan. was
written, Gen. Marion and Col. Lee projected a joint expedition to surprise
Georgetown. Capts. Carnes and Rudulph, with ninety men, dropped down the Pedee
from Snow's island in a boat, to fall in on the back of the town by Winyaw bay,
while Marion and Lee were to come down with the main body by land. -- Carnes
with his party went ashore at Mitchell's landing, and marched over his
rice-field bank into the town at day light. The surprise would have been
complete, had they pushed up directly to the redoubt, but they delayed too long
on the Bay. They took the commandant, Col. Campbell, out of his bed, and killed
Major Irvine and some others; but Marion and Lee could not arrive in time to
cooperate. The redoubt was alarmed and placed in a state of defence, and Carnes
was obliged to retreat. The great cause of delay was the inclination to take
the commandant, by which they lost the fort and the town. Lieut. Cryer killed
Irvine, by whose orders he had received five hundred lashes some time before,
for attempting to take away his horse from Georgetown.
On the 28th Jan. Gen. Huger transmitted an
order from Greene to Marion, to strike at the posts beyond Santee. But this
Gen. Marion had anticipated. -- From Cordes' plantation, in advance, at the
distance of one hundred miles from Greene, and on the 29th Jan. he had detached
Col. Postell and Major Postell on this important service. The latter had but
thirty-eight men, and it is presumed from circumstances, the colonel had about
an equal number. The colonel burnt a great quantity of valuable stores at
Manigault's ferry, and the major a great many more in its vicinity. -- Thence
the latter posted to Keithfield, near Monk's corner, and burnt fourteen waggons
loaded with soldiers' clothing, baggage and other valuable stores, and took
prisoners about forty British regulars, without losing a man. To the Postells
"nothing indeed appeared difficult." They received the thanks of Gen. Greene.
About the beginning of this year, Gen. Marion appointed two
aids, Thomas Elliott and Lewis Ogier, the first of whom conducted the most of
his correspondence. He formed a mess of which Col. Hugh Horry and Col. James
Postell were inmates, and apparently his principal counsellors; Serjt. Davis
was his caterer, and supplied his dinners, such as they were: heretofore
he had seldom any thing but meat and sweet potatoes, and often not both of
these at a time, but now he had the luxury of rice. He did what was of more
consequence than this, he put in requisition all the saws in the country, and
all the blacksmiths, and made swords for four troops of militia cavalry. -- He
had so little ammunition this expedient was necessary. He gave the command of
this corps to Col. Peter Horry, who had been a captain with him in the second
regiment and had been an excellent infantry officer. -- His major was Benson,
and his captains John Baxter, John Postell, Daniel Conyers and James M`Cauley;
John T. Greene soon after succeeded Baxter, who was appointed colonel on the
resignation of Ervine. Hugh Horry had command of M`Donald's regiment, who was a
prisoner on parole, and his officers have been mentioned. Capt. Wm.
M`Cottry commanded a company of riflemen who were the dread of the enemy. As
the brigade was not strong enough for this corps of horse to act in
conjunction, single troops were commonly detached by the general. At the head
of a party of this cavalry Col. Peter Horry had soon an opportunity to make a
trial of his skill in cavalry evolutions. He met and charged a troop of British
horse on Waccamaw neck, but by his own account he appears to have been rather
worsted, for he was unhorsed himself and his life saved by Serjt. M`Donald;
however he brought off some prisoners. Major John Postell, who was mentioned
before, was stationed to guard the lower part of Pedee, had better fortune. On
the 18th Jan. Capt. James Depeyster, with twenty-nine grenadiers of the British
army, had posted himself in the dwelling house of the major's father, and
Postell commanded but twenty-eight militia men. Towards day on the morning
after, the major, by knowing well the ground and avoiding the sentinels, got
possession of the kitchen, and summoned Depeyster to surrender; this was at
first refused, and the major set fire to the kitchen. He then summoned him a
second time, with the positive declaration if he did not surrender he would
burn the house; the British being intimidated, laid down their arms and
surrendered unconditionally.
From a part of the correspondence of Gen. Marion with Capt.
Saunders, now commandant of Georgetown, it appears that he had either soon
after the 17th Jan. or before that, imprisoned Mr. John Postell, the father of
the major; Gen. Marion offers "to exchange him, and hopes humanity will induce
Capt. Saunders to treat him like a gentleman."2 Mr.
John Postell was at least seventy years of age, and much afflicted with
disease, but possessed the spirit of a Cato.
Soon after this, Col. Peter Horry had a conflict with Major
Ganey at White's bridge, near Georgetown, which had a more decisive effect than
could have been expected at the time. Early in the morning he made a charge
upon a party who were killing beeves at the camp near that place. They fled and
were pursued through the woods on the left towards Georgetown, with some
disorder on the side of Horry. In the mean time the firing was heard in the
town, and their tory friends came out to their assistance. A kind of savage
warfare now took place in the woods, between the Sampit and Black river roads,
during the whole morning. A party of Horry's was at one time seen advancing,
and the tories retreating; then again the tories were advancing, and a party of
Horry's retreating. At one time the commander was left as he thought alone, and
Capt. Lewis at the head of a party was rushing on to shoot him down, when
suddenly from behind a tree off went the gun of a boy by the name of Gwyn, and
shot Lewis, whose party thinking more guns were behind trees ran away. As Lewis
fell his gun went off and killed Horry's horse. Finally the tories were routed.
In this affair Serjt. M`Donald performed essential service; he had singled out
Ganey as his object of attack, and the latter fled from him. -- In going at
full speed down the Black river road, at the corner of Richmond fence, M`Donald
shot one of Ganey's men, and overtaking him soon after thrust a bayonet up to
the hilt in his back; the bayonet separated from the gun, and Ganey carried it
into Georgetown; he recovered, but tired of a garrison life, after a few months
he and his men deserted the British.
As the navigation of the Wateree river was at that time
imperfect, the British were obliged to have most of their stores of rum, salt,
ammunition and clothing sent over land, across Nelson's ferry, to Camden, and
as the Americans were destitute of these articles, constant conflicts took
place upon that road to obtain them from the enemy. To secure these, they had
established a line of posts, at Biggen, at Nelson's, and at Scott's lake.
Besides this protection, their supplies were always attended by escorts, which,
since the enterprizes of the two Postells, seldom consisted of less than three
or four hundred men. About the middle of February, Major M'Ilraith was marching
from Nelson's ferry at the head of one of these escorts, and Marion with about
an equal force assailed him near Halfway swamp, on the road; he first cut off
two pickets in his rear in succession, then wheeling round his main body,
attacked him in flank and in front. As M'Ilraith had no cavalry, his situation
became perilous in the extreme. By a forced march, and constant skirmishing, he
at length gained a field upon the road, now belonging to Mr. Matthew James; and
as it was open and enclosed, he posted himself on the west of the road, within
the enclosure. On the east, skirting the road, there is a large cypress pond
stretching towards Halfway swamp, and on the verge of this Marion pitched his
camp. Here M'Ilraith sent him a flag, reproaching him with shooting his
pickets, contrary, as he alleged, to all the laws of civilized warfare, and
defying him to a combat in the open field. Marion replied, that the practice of
the British in burning the houses of all who would not submit and join them,
was more indefensible than that of shooting pickets, and that as long as they
persisted in the one he would persevere in the other. That as to his defiance,
he considered it that of a man in desperate circumstances; but if he wished to
witness a combat between twenty picked men on each side, he was ready to
gratify him. The offer was accepted, and a place pitched upon to the south of
an oak tree, which still stands in the field. Accordingly, Gen. Marion
appointed Maj. John Vanderhorst, then a supernumerary officer, to take command
of this band, and Capt. Samuel Price, of All Saints, to be second in command.
The names of the men were written on slips of paper, and presented to them
individually, and the first slip was handed to Gavin Witherspoon. Not one
refused. Vanderhorst formed in Indian file, and they proceeded to the fence,
where Gen. Marion met and harangued them to the following effect: "My brave
soldiers! you are twenty men picked this day out of my whole brigade. I know
you all, and have often witnessed your bravery. In the name of your country, I
call upon you once more to show it. My confidence in you is great, and I am
sure it will not be disappointed. Fight like men, fight as you have always
done, and you are sure of the victory." This short speech was received with
applause by the combatants. Vanderhorst now asked Witherspoon, "What distance
would you choose as the surest to strike with buck shot?" "Fifty yards for the
first fire," was the reply. Then, said the commander, "when we get within fifty
yards, my boys, as I am not a good judge of distances, Mr. Witherspoon will tap
me on the shoulder. I will then give the word, and you will form on my left
opposite those fellows. As you form, each man will fire at the one directly
opposite him, and my word for it, few will be left for a second shot." The
British had now formed in a single line in front of the oak, and Vanderhorst
advanced boldly on within one hundred yards. At this juncture, an officer was
seen to pass swiftly on toward the oak, and the enemy shouldered their muskets
and retreated with a quick step towards the main body. Vanderhorst and his men
gave them three huzzas! but did not at that distance fire a shot. Thus a
British officer was met on his own boasted ground and proved recreant. The next
morning Major M`Ilraith abandoned his heavy baggage, left his fires burning,
and retired silently from the ground, along the river road towards Singelton's
mill, distant ten miles. Near day Marion discovered his movement, and detached
Col. Hugh Horry with one hundred men to get ahead of him, before he should
reach the mill. The colonel made all possible speed, but finding he could not
overtake him, detached Major James at the head of a party mounted on the
swiftest horses, to cross the mill pond above, and take possession of
Singelton's houses, which stood on a high hill, commanding a narrow defile on
the road, between the hill and Wateree swamp. Major James reached the houses as
the British advanced to the foot of the hill; but found Singelton's family down
with the small pox. This was more dreaded than the enemy. He gave them one
fire, by which a captain was killed, and retired. As M`Ilraith was now in a
strong hold, Marion pursued him no further.
The character of Major M`Ilraith has been constantly
represented by the inhabitants of this state, among whom he passed as the most
humane of all the officers of the British army. To those in their power even
forbearance was at that time a virtue, but his virtues were active. It has been
currently reported that he carried his dislike to house burning so far, that he
neglected to carry into effect the orders of his commander in chief on that
point to such an extent, as to gain his ill will and that of many other British
officers. -- How much it is to be regretted that the rigid rules of warfare
should have arrayed such a man in opposition to Marion, when both professed the
same humane principles.
We come now to the most interesting part of the warfare of Gen.
Marion, which, bringing into action all the energies of his officers and men,
at the same time developed all the skill and patience of their commander.
At the juncture of the retreat of Gen. Greene before
Cornwallis, Sumter and Marion were left alone in South Carolina; Sumter on the
Catawba, in York district, and Marion on the Pedee, at Snow's island, about two
hundred miles apart, and Lord Rawdon directly between them, with a much
superior force. Thus situated his lordship laid a well digested plan to crush
Marion. Col. Watson with a British regiment, and Harrison's regiment of tories,
amounting in the whole to more than five hundred men, was ordered to march down
the Santee, towards Snow's island; and he commenced his expedition from Fort
Watson about the first of March.
Shortly after Col. Doyle with another British regiment, was
directed to proceed by the way of M`Callum's ferry on Lynch's creek, and down
Jeffer's creek, to the Pedee road to the same point, where they were to form a
junction. Doyle had to open a road from M`Callum's to Pedee, and his approach,
though slow, was unexpected; but Marion's scouts placed from Camden down, with
relays of horses, soon informed him of Watson's movement. By one of his rapid
marches he met him at Wiboo, about midway between Nelson's and Murray's ferry,
and at this swamp commenced his arduous contest with Watson. Col. Peter Horry
was placed in advance at the swamp, while the general with the cavalry, and
remainder of the brigade, amounting to about four hundred men, lay in reserve.
Horry made considerable impression upon the tories in advance; but Watson with
two field pieces, and at the head of his column of regulars, dislodged him from
the swamp, and the tory cavalry under Harrison pursued. As they advanced, Gavin
James, a private of gigantic size and spirit, mounted on a strong grey horse,
and armed with a musket and bayonet, threw himself in their way. He first
deliberately fired upon the column and one man fell. The causeway was narrow
and this occasioned a pause, in which a volley was fired at him without effect.
One dragoon advanced and was struck off his horse by the bayonet. A second came
to his aid and shared a like fate; in falling he laid hold of the musket near
the muzzle to jerk it away, and James dragged him forty or fifty paces. This
bold action produced a considerable effect, and was soon followed by many
others, not so well recollected, and too numerous to be inserted. -- Harrison
had not pursued far, when Marion ordered the cavalry to charge; Capts. M`Cauley
and Conyers, met him, and soon dispersed his force; whilst Conyers killed one
of his officers, said to be Major Harrison, with his own hands. Thus were the
tories intimidated at the outset.
On the 9th of March, Col. Watson encamped at Cantey's
plantation, and wrote a letter to Gen. Marion, in which he justifies (what the
other had complained of by a previous communication,3) the burning of houses and the hanging of those
citizens who had taken paroles, and afterwards joined the Americans, upon the
principles of the laws of war and nations. -- It seems the colonel had
reference to the code of barbarous nations. Marion made him no reply, but gave
orders to his nightly patroles, to shoot his sentinels and cut off his pickets.
Such a retaliation was to be expected; and thus raged the civil warfare.
Watson marched down the river, and at Mount Hope had to build
up the bridges, and to sustain a second conflict with Col. Hugh Horry, at the
head of Marion's advance. By dint of his field pieces, and the strength of his
column, he at length made good his way. Near Murray's ferry he passed the
Kingstree road to his left, and when he came to the Black river road, which
crosses at the lower bridge, he made a feint of still continuing down the
Santee; but soon after wheeling took that road on which the lower bridge was,
distant twelve miles. His manoeuvre did not long deceive Marion. He detached
Major James at the head of seventy men, thirty of whom were riflemen under
M`Cottry, to destroy the remnant of the bridge, which had been partially
broken, and to take post there, while the general kept an eye on Watson.
The pass of the lower bridge was now to decide the fate of
Williamsburgh, and seventy of her sons, under her most approved leaders, were
gone forth to defend it. Maj. James proceeded with great expedition, and
crossing the river by a shorter route than the road, arrived at the bridge in
time to throw down two of the middle arches, and to fire the string pieces at
the eastern end. At this place the west bank of the river is considerably
elevated, the east low and somewhat swampy, and on the west the road passes to
the bridge through a ravine; the river is forty or fifty yards wide, and though
deep, was fordable below the bridge. As soon as the breach in it was effected,
Maj. James drew up M'Cottry's riflemen on each side of the ford and end of the
bridge, so as to have a fair view of the ravine, and disposed the rest of his
little band on the flanks. Not long after, Marion arriving, took post in the
rear, and sent Capt. Thomas Potts, with his Pedee company, to reinforce Maj.
James; and this had scarcely been effected, when Watson's field pieces opened
their fire, from the opposite bank to clear his way, for a passage at the ford.
These field pieces could not be brought to bear on the low grounds to the east
without exposing his artillerists on the hill to the fire of the riflemen. His
balls hit the pines across the river, about midway their trunks, or passed over
disregarded. This attempt not succeeding, Watson drew up his columns in the old
field over the river, and his advance was now seen approaching the ford with an
officer at its head, waving his sword. M`Cottry fired the signal gun, and the
officer clapped his hand to his breast and fell to the ground. The riflemen and
musketeers next poured in a well directed and deadly fire, and the British
advance fled in disorder; nor did the reserve move forward to its support. Four
men returned to bear off their officer, but all four shared his fate. In the
evening, Watson succeeded in removing his dead and wounded, and took up his
head quarters at John Witherspoon's, a mile above the bridge. Here he was
overheard to say, "that he never saw such shooting in his life." To men
fighting for their homes, wives, families, and their very existence, "nothing
appeared difficult;" and good shooting, if not a virtue in them, was highly
commendable. Gen. Marion took a position on a ridge below the ford of the
river, which is still called the general's island. Next day he pushed M`Cottry
and Conyers over the river, and recommenced shooting Watson's pickets and
sentinels. Watson posted himself a little farther up the river, at Blakely's
plantation, where he pitched his camp in the most open place he could find, but
still Marion kept him in a bad humour, (as his letters from that place
indicate,) and his regulars in a constant panic. Here he remained for more than
a week4 in inactivity and irresolution; perhaps he
waited for Doyle to make an impression at Snow's island; but if Marion heard of
Doyle, he kept it a profound secret. While Blakely's and Witherspoon's
provisions lasted, his present plan answered pretty well; but when they failed,
it became necessary to have more at a greater distance, and these could not be
obtained, but by daily skirmishes. In these Capt. Conyers was greatly
distinguished. He was most daring, and sat and managed his horse so remarkably
well, that as was the case with the centaur of old, they might have been taken
for one animal. Conyers was at this time fighting under the auspicious eye of a
young lady,5 to whom his faith had been plighted,
and beneath her alternate smiles and fears, he presented himself daily before
the lines of the enemy, either as a single champion, or at the head of his
troop. Often did she hear them repeat, "Take care! there is Capt. Conyers!" It
was a ray of chivalry athwart the gloom of unrelenting warfare.
To increase the panic of the British, Serjt. M`Donald, with a
rifle, shot Lieut. Torriano through the knee, at the distance of three hundred
yards. This appears to have softened even the proud spirit of Watson; for, on
the 15th of March, he wrote a letter to Marion, stating, "we have an officer
and some men wounded, whom I should be glad to send where they could be better
taken care of. I wish, therefore, to know if they will be permitted to pass to
Charleston." Gen. Marion wrote for a list of them, and next day sent the
following pass: "Gen. Marion's pass, granted to Lieut. Torriano and twelve
privates. -- One officer and six wounded men, with six attendants, of the
British troops, are permitted to pass to Nelson's ferry, thence to Charleston,
unmolested," &c. Col. Watson was now literally besieged; his supplies were
cut off on all sides, and so many of his men killed, that, he is said by
tradition, to have sunk them in Black river to hide their number. There is a
quarry of rock in the neighbourhood of the place, and the only one in that part
of the country, where, it is said, he sunk his men. At length Watson,
decamping, made a forced march down the Georgetown road; but paused at Ox
swamp, six miles below the lower bridge. On each side of the road there was
then a thick, boggy swamp -- trees were felled across the causeway -- three
bridges were destroyed, and Marion was watching him with the eye of an eagle.
Thus situated, and having to force a more difficult pass at Johnson's swamp,
ten miles ahead, Watson most prudently wheeled to the right, and passed on,
through open piney woods, to the Santee road, distant about fifteen miles. When
overtaken by Marion upon this road, his infantry were passing like horses at a
full trot. Here he had not so many obstacles to encounter as on the other road,
and, by wheeling covertly and marching so briskly, had gained considerable
ground. However, Col. Peter Horry now advanced ahead with the cavalry and
riflemen, and annoyed him in flank and in front, while Marion attacked in the
rear, until they reached Sampit bridge, where the last skirmish took place.
News from Doyle appears to have arrested Marion's progress, and summoned him to
new perils.
Watson reached Georgetown, with two waggon loads of wounded
men.6 It is evident from an intercepted letter of
his of the 20th of March, that he had been hemmed in so closely that he was in
want of every thing, and had taken this route to Georgetown, fifty miles out of
his way, to obtain supplies. From Fort Watson to the lower bridge, he had not
advanced more than forty miles on his premeditated route to join Doyle.
In the mean time, Col. Doyle, an active, enterprising officer,
had driven Col. Ervin, who commanded only a weak guard, from Snow's island. But
before retreating he had Marion's arms, stores and ammunition thrown into
Lynch's creek. This, at the crisis, was a most serious loss.
From Sampit, Gen. Marion marched back towards Snow's island; on
the way he received intelligence that Doyle lay at Witherspoon's ferry, and he
proceeded forthwith to attack him. Doyle had taken a position on the north side
of the ferry, and when M`Cottry, in advance, with his mounted riflemen, arrived
at the creek, the British were scuttling a ferry boat on the opposite side. He
took a position behind trees, and gave them a well directed and deadly fire;
they ran to their arms and returned a prodigious volley, which did no more harm
than that of knocking off the limbs of trees among the riflemen. Doyle had
received news, which occasioned him to retreat for Camden. The ferry boat being
now scuttled and sunk on the opposite side, and Lynch's creek being swollen,
and at this place wide and deep, Gen. Marion proceeded up the creek, and swam
over it at the first place he reached, five miles above Witherspoon's. This was
the shortest route to come at Doyle. He pursued all that day, and the next
morning till nine or ten o'clock, when he came to a house where Doyle had
destroyed all his heavy baggage, and had proceeded on with great celerity
towards Camden. This seemed mysterious at the time; but here Marion halted.

It appears from what follows, shortly, as well as from Horry's
account, that this pursuit was undertaken by Gen. Marion with the desperate
resolution of either selling his own life and that of his followers, as dearly
as possible, or of cutting his way through the enemy to make good a retreat
into North Carolina. Happily for his country, Doyle evaded him, and thus
prevented the dangerous attempt. The general now received the melancholy
account of the extent of his loss in ammunition and other stores on Snow's
island, which under present circumstances appeared irretrievable. However he
was but little disposed to brood over misfortunes, and if he had, his enemies
were not inclined to allow him leisure. In the mean time Col. Watson, having
refreshed and reinforced his party, and received a fresh supply of military
stores and provisions at Georgetown, proceeded again towards the Pedee. On his
march he had nothing to impede him but a few bridges broken down. He took the
nearest route across Black river at Wragg's ferry, and crossing the Pedee at
Euhany, and the little Pedee at Potato bed ferry, he halted at Catfish creek, a
mile from where Marion court house now stands. -- Here Ganey's party flocked in
to him in such numbers that he was soon nine hundred strong. Gen. Marion
returning from the pursuit of Doyle, and hearing of the approach of Watson,
crossed the Pedee and encamped at the Warhees, five miles from him. At this
place he consulted with his field officers then in camp, and informed them that
although his force was now recruited to five hundred men, that yet he had no
more ammunition than about two rounds to each man, and asked them "if he should
retreat into the upper parts of North Carolina, or if necessary to the
mountains, whether they would follow him." With a firm and unanimous voice the
resolution to follow him was adopted. These field officers, whose names should
be engraved on tablets of brass, were Cols. Peter Horry, Hugh Horry, James
Postell and John Ervin, and Majors John James, John Baxter and Alexander
Swinton.
Not long after this resolution was taken, Gen. Marion met Capt.
Gavin Witherspoon, who said to him, "General had we not better fight Col.
Watson before any more tories join him." "My friend," replied he, "I know that
would be best, but we have not ammunition." "Why, general," said Witherspoon,
"here is my powder horn full," holding it up. "Ah! my friend," said Marion,
"you are an extraordinary soldier, but as for others, there are not two rounds
to a man." Witherspoon passed off in silent sorrow; but as soon as he reached
his camp, met Baker Johnson, an old tried whig, who begged him for God's sake
to give him something to eat, and he set before him some cold rice in a pot.
While Johnson was eating, Witherspoon sat pondering over what he had heard for
some time; but at last inquired, "What news, Johnson?" "Fine news," said he, "I
saw a great number of continental troops, horse and foot, crossing at Long
bluff." "Come and tell the general," said Witherspoon. "No," replied the other,
"I am starving with hunger, and if the general wants the news he must come to
me." Witherspoon immediately posted off to the general, who lost no time in
going to Johnson; around whom some hundreds were soon collected. The bearer of
the good tidings was to be depended on. The news was sudden and unexpected, and
to men now in a state of desperation nothing could be more transporting. Scarce
was there an eye but what was suffused with tears of joy. All sufferings
appeared now to be at an end, and that balm of the soul hope began to revive.
But while Johnson was still communicating his intelligence, it was confirmed by
the sound of a drum in the rear; and soon after by the arrival of Major Conyers
and Capt. Irby, with Lieut. Col. Lee's legionary infantry. By Conyers, Marion
received orders from Gen. Greene to join Lee, and cooperate with him in
striking at the posts below Camden, and in furnishing provisions for the main
army;7 and Lee had moved on towards the Santee for
that purpose. Commencing his march immediately, Gen. Marion crossed the Pedee
in his rear, and left Witherspoon with a small party to watch Watson. The line
of march was directed through Williamsburgh; and Marion joined Lee near Fort
Watson, on Scott's lake.
About the same time, Capt. John Brockington, of the tories, had
been up to his plantation at Cashway, and hearing the same news with Baker
Johnson, pushed over the river, and gave Watson the like information. He lost
no time, but immediately rolled his two field pieces into Catfish creek,
destroyed all his heavy baggage, re-crossed the little Pedee, and not venturing
by Euhany, he passed the Waccamaw at Greene's ferry, and retreating through the
neck, between that river and the sea, crossed Winyaw bay, three miles wide, and
thus arrived in Georgetown. To those unacquainted with this route, a bare
inspection of the map of the country will at once give information, how much
Marion was dreaded by Watson.
Upon forming a junction with Col. Lee, it was decidedly the
opinion of Gen. Marion, that they should pursue Watson, and either take him or
prevent his junction with Lord Rawdon. But Lee was of opinion it would lead
them too far from Gen. Greene. Gen. Marion must have given up his point with
much reluctance, for he was afterwards heard repeatedly to regret that his
orders did not permit him to pursue Col. Watson. But, perhaps the true reason
was that Marion and Lee were both bare of ammunition, and could get it only by
taking Fort Watson. It was left without the presence of its commander, and as
in that day there was no road from Kingstree up Black river to Camden, and the
swamps were impassable except to hunters, by taking a position at Scott's lake,
they would be on the only road there was from Georgetown, on a direct line, to
intercept Watson, as he marched up to Camden. -- But while Gen. Marion passed
through Williamsburgh, his men having now performed a tour of duty of more than
a month against Watson, which with all its watchings and privations was
unusually severe, and being suddenly relieved from that pressure, many of them
took the liberty of going home to recruit themselves; and he was left to his
great mortification with only eighty men. However, they soon dropped in, one or
two at a time.8
On the 15th of April, Gen. Marion invested
Fort Watson, at Scott's lake, without any other means of annoyance than
musketry. The fort stood on an Indian mound, about forty feet high, and was
stockaded, and had three rows of abbatis round it.9
The besiegers took post between the fort and the lake, to cut off the water;
but the besieged sunk a well in the fort. As there were no trees or other
covering near the fort, Marion's riflemen were too much exposed at first to
fire with effect; but Col. Maham contrived to raise a tower of logs in one
night, so high that it overtopped the fort, and the marksmen began to fire into
it. Gen. Marion had no entrenching tools to make a regular approach, but on the
day after the investment, a party of militia under Ensign Baker Johnson, and of
continentals under Mr. Lee, a volunteer in the legion, with a sudden movement,
and much intrepidity, made a lodgment near the stockade, and began to pull away
the abbatis and fling them down the mound. Lieut. M`Kay, who commanded, then
hoisted a white flag, and the garrison, consisting of one hundred and fourteen
men and officers, capitulated. Major Eaton had been detached by Gen. Greene,
with one field piece, to join Marion, but arrived too late to participate in
this siege. The loss of the Americans was only two militia men killed, and
three continentals and three militia wounded. -- As this fort lay on the great
line of communication between Camden and Charleston, its fall was a great loss
to the enemy; and by taking it Gen. Marion obtained supplies of ammunition,
which he soon turned to great advantage.
During the siege, Col. Watson evaded Marion and Lee. Having
arrived in Georgetown, and not yet recovered from his panic, he crossed the
north and south Santee, at the lower ferries, and having surmounted this
difficulty, he marched up the west side of the river and arrived in Camden by
the way of the ferry near the town, with forces much impaired by the incessant
attacks of Marion, and long marches, combined with much desertion; but his loss
is not confessed by the enemy, nor could it be discovered by the Americans. --
Had he been able to have cooperated with Doyle in sufficient time, with their
overwhelming force, assisted by Harrison and Ganey, with an equal, if not
greater number of tories; there can be little doubt, but Gen. Marion with his
scanty means of defence, must either have fallen in the conflict or been driven
out of the country. When he first marched from Scott's lake, Col. Watson had
only seventy miles to traverse, and only Black river to pass, before he reached
Snow's island; yet such was the consummate skill and indefatigable exertions of
Gen. Marion, that from the 9th of March until the 10th of April, he had not
reached his place of destination, and then made a hasty retreat through roads
unfrequented, and over wide swamps and rivers, unpursued. To effect this he
took a circuitous route, nearly one hundred miles out of his way, which
detained him until about the 9th of May, more than two months from his first
setting out on this expedition.
Col. Watson was considered by the British one of their best
partisans; yet we have seen how he was foiled. Had his regiment attempted, as
was no doubt intended, to ford the river at the lower bridge, they would have
found the passage narrow, and the river at that time deep; or had he undertaken
to repair the bridge, in either case he must have lost a great portion of his
men. He was, however, a better officer than historian or civilian, otherwise he
would not have justified the practice of burning houses, in the face of the
universal censure cast upon Lewis XIV. for adopting the same measure in the
Palatinate. But when Watson, Balfour, and other British officers, professing to
know the laws of war and nations, burnt houses and hanged those citizens who
had taken deceptive paroles upon their authority, certainly it may be affirmed
that Marion, who was self-taught, and had no book of the law of nations, or
perhaps any other book in his camp, was justifiable as a matter of retaliation,
to shoot down their pickets and cut off their sentinels wherever he could find
them; and always to fight such invaders in their own barbarian manner. Nothing
ever showed, in such a strong light, the plain good sense of Marion. Col.
Watson had orders to burn houses, but did not however appear to wish to carry
them rigourously into effect. It is believed he burnt but two; one was the
house of Lieut. Dickson, who was with Marion; the other belonged to Nathaniel
Dwight, of Waccamaw neck. Upon a retrospection, Col. Watson's character appears
in a favourable point of view; and, as far as was consistent with orders, his
humanity is undoubted.
On the 18th of April, Col. William Harden, acting under the
orders of Marion, took the British fort at Pocotaligo, with one militia
colonel, one major, three captains, three lieutenants, sixty privates and
twenty-two dragoons, prisoners. He writes, "I wish you would send some
commissions, with your orders. It seems they wait for Col. Hayne, and he says
he cannot act without a commission, and I am sure, if he turns out, at least
two hundred will join him. If so, I am very certain that this part of the
country may be held." Every one has either read or heard of the subsequent
melancholy fate of Col. Hayne; but more of that in the sequel.
Major John Postell had been pitched upon as the first victim.
After distinguishing himself, as related, he obtained leave from his general to
go with a flag to Georgetown, to obtain the release of his father, (who was
still a prisoner) and of some others. Capt. Saunders, now the commandant,
detained him, and threw him also into gaol, on the plea of his having broken
his parole;10 and, in a long correspondence with
Gen. Marion, he and Col. Balfour, the commandant of Charleston, vindicated the
measure, as consistent with the laws of war and nations. It appears Balfour was
the civilian of the British while here in power. He was just such a minion as
would have suited the purposes of Tiberius Caesar. He had several hundreds of
Americans pining in want and misery in loathsome prison-ships, and in dungeons
under the Exchange, damp and noisome, which he called his provost.
He writes thus to Saunders, concerning Major Postell, "send him
by water," (by land was not safe) "by a fast sailer -- under a guard -- be
so good as to let him have no chance of escaping." Be so good here,
meant to clap him in irons. This royal tiger, secure in his jungle, was now
crouching to spring upon what he deemed defenceless prey; but, while reasoning
about the law of nations, Saunders had the folly to send out Capt. Merrett with
a flag. Marion immediately detained him, and swore a bitter oath, that if they
touched a hair of Postell's head he would hang Merrett. Major Postell lost all
further opportunity of distinguishing himself, and underwent a long and
rigourous imprisonment; but this had become a common case, and the British knew
Marion too well to carry matters further. On the 25th of April,11 Gen. Greene lay at Hobkirk hill, at that time a
mile out of Camden, but now partly in the town. His army consisted of only
about seven hundred continentals, and as many militia; his left rested on
Pinetree creek, and his right extended across the road leading to Lancaster,
uncovered by any obstructions. Having just received a comfortable supply of
provisions, which they much wanted, his men were employed in cooking and
washing. At this juncture, Rawdon sallied out of Camden, at the head of nine
hundred men, his whole disposable force. Between him and Greene, along Pinetree
creek, were thick woods and shrubbery, and he preferred this route for
concealment. His advance was not suspected, until he was fired upon by the
American pickets; but these received him bravely, and during the contest with
them, Greene formed his army. The Virginia brigade, under Gen. Huger, took the
right; the Maryland brigade, under Col. Williams, the left. The continentals
were thus disposed in one line, and the artillery, under Col. Harrison, were in
the centre. The reserve were the cavalry, under Col. Washington, and two
hundred and fifty North Carolina militia, under Col. Reade. Rawdon advanced
with the King's American regiment on the right, the New York volunteers in the
centre, and the 63d on the left; his right supported by Robertson's corps, and
his left by the volunteers of Ireland. Greene discovering his narrow front,
ordered Col. Campbell, of the Virginia, and Col. Ford, of the Maryland line, to
turn his flanks; the centre regiments to advance with fixed bayonets, and
Washington to gain his rear. Rawdon perceiving his danger, brought up the
volunteers of Ireland into line. The battle opened with vigour, and Huger
evidently gained ground. Washington in the rear, was carrying all before him,
and Col. Hawes in the centre, was descending the hill with fixed bayonets. At
this flattering moment, the veteran regiment of Gunby, the 1st Maryland, fired
contrary to orders; while Capt. Armstrong, with two sections, was moving ahead
upon the enemy. Gunby, being anxious to lead his regiment into battle
thoroughly compacted, ordered Armstrong back, instead of making him the point
of view in forming. Retrograde being the consequence of this order, the British
shouted and pressed forward, and the regiment of Gunby, considered the bulwark
of the army, never recovered from its panic. Williams, Gunby, and Howard, all
strove in vain to bring it to order. The Virginia brigade and second Maryland
regiment maintained the contest bravely; but the 2d Maryland, feeling the
effect of the retreat of the 1st, became somewhat deranged, and its commander,
Lieut. Col. Ford, being wounded in repressing it, this corps also fell back.
Rawdon's right having now gained the summit, and flanking Hawes, Gen. Greene
ordered a retreat, which was covered by Hawes. Col. Washington having gained
his point of attack, and taken two hundred prisoners, was confident of victory;
but seeing the retreat, he paroled the officers on the field, and relinquished
all the prisoners but fifty. These he brought off, and made good his retreat,
with the loss of only three men. Greene's field pieces were now likely to fall
into the hands of the enemy, and seeing Capt. John Smith,12 with his company of picked light infantry,
marching off the field in good order, he rode up and called to him, "Smith, my
brave fellow, save the field pieces." He immediately fell in the rear, and
executed his orders, with the loss of his whole company. All were killed but
one man and Smith, and they were made prisoners. Gen. Greene rallied his army
at the pass of Sanders' creek, six miles from Camden, and soon after occupied
the position Gates had intended to take, at Gum swamp. The British lost between
sixty and seventy, and Greene two hundred men. This affair shows upon how small
an incident the fate of war generally depends.
Upon Watson's arrival in Camden, Lord Rawdon being now
reinforced, marched out to attack Gen. Greene, at Sawney's creek, on the west
side of the Wateree. Greene did not like his position for a general engagement,
and took a new one at Cornal's creek, leaving the horse, light infantry and
pickets, at his old encampment. The enemy approached and drew up on the
opposite side of the creek, but did not attempt to cross; and retired into
Camden before night. Early in the morning of the next day (10th of May, 1781,)
Lord Rawdon burnt the mill at Camden, the gaol, his stores, and many private
houses, and evacuating it, retreated towards Nelson's ferry. Thus was Camden
evacuated in less than a year after the British obtained possession of it; but
during that short period it had become the scene of innumerable spoliations,
and other atrocities. While they held it, the loss of property, and being
reduced to poverty, were the least considerable incidents, which happened to
the inhabitants. To form an accurate idea, as well of the wretched situation of
the people of that town and its vicinity, during this period, as to elucidate a
part of history not yet explained, let the reader take the following narrative,
partly in and partly out of its due order. Gen. Greene, having traversed that
part of North Carolina from Guilford to Pedee, and passed through nearly one
half the breadth of South Carolina, by the way of Cheraw hill, and Lynch's
creek, arrived at Town creek, four miles below Camden, about the middle of
April. Except at the Pedee, the country through which he had marched was
destitute of provisions, and no where, unless he had impressed salt provisions,
could he find any thing better than beef driven out of the woods; which in
April is well known to be lean and nauseating. For the last fifty miles, his
route had been across the sand hills, between Pedee and the Wateree; here his
guide deserted him, and when he arrived at Town creek, he and his men were at a
loss which way to proceed, and were literally starving. The fine low grounds of
the Wateree now lay before him, where he expected an abundance of provisions,
but he was most grievously disappointed. The British had swept away every thing
of the kind that could be found, and what little subsistence was left to the
planters was hid in small parcels, and in different places in the swamps.
Scarcely any thing fit to eat, was visible, where prior to this period, and
subsequently, every kind of provisions had been so abundant. But Gen. Greene,
in his distress, happily13 met with a young man,
whom, while he had been at Hick's creek in January last, he had appointed
assistant commissary general; and who had served him with zeal and ability in
that department. This young man, (the present Gen. Cantey, of Camden,) had but
just returned from Dan river, where he had supplied Gen. Greene, with fifteen
waggon loads of flour, and nearly one thousand head of hogs, which he had
driven from the Pedee, by private ways, with so much skill and address, as to
avoid Lord Cornwallis, and the numerous tories by whom he was surrounded; and
Cantey was still zealous to serve his country. After gaining some intelligence
of the enemy, Gen. Greene requested his commissary to endeavour to get them
some provisions, for they were famishing. Cantey's father lived not far off,
and recollecting he had some bacon and corn meal hid in a swamp, he immediately
went and brought enough for the general's mess, and in a short time after,
drove in beeves, such as they were, sufficient for a supper for the men; but so
destitute was the neighbourhood, that Cantey recommended it to Gen. Greene to
move above Camden, where provisions might be collected from the upper country,
and it was more probable he would receive aid from the militia. But for this
explanation, the good judgment of Gen. Greene, in taking post above Camden,
might well be questioned; since his wisest, and hitherto favoured plan, had
been to strike at the posts below. It is thought, if he could have taken a
position at Town creek, or Swift creek below, all surprise might have been
prevented. At this time, Gen. Greene sent Cantey to Gen. Sumter, distant more
than one hundred miles, to request him to join him; but Sumter, who was
meditating an attack on fort Granby, declined any further cooperation except in
that way. When this answer was communicated to Gen. Greene, by Cantey, he was
exceedingly angry, and said he had a great mind to leave them to defend
the country as well as they could, without his assistance. Could he have
concentrated his force, and had not regarded Ninety-Six, he might have
driven the British into Charleston, before the sickly season commenced. But the
system of leaving fortresses behind an invading army, so strongly recommended
by Machiavelli, and so much followed by Bonaparte, had not yet been adopted in
tactics. But we are anticipating our narrative.
Although so weak after the affair at Hobkirk, Gen. Greene, had
sent a reinforcement to Marion under Major Eaton with a six-pounder, and on the
8th of May, Marion and Lee commenced firing upon Fort Motte. As soon as Gen.
Greene heard of the retreat of Lord Rawdon from Camden, he decamped from
Cornal's creek, and moving down on the west bank of the Wateree, took a
position near M`Cord's ferry, so as to cover the besiegers. Fort Motte stood on
a high hill called Buckhead, a little on the right of the Charleston road,
where it leaves the Congaree below M`Cord's. Within its walls was included the
house of Mrs. Motte, who had retired to that of her overseer. -- When told it
was necessary to burn the house, in order to take the fort expeditiously, she
at once requested it should be done, and, as the means of effecting it,
furnished an Indian bow and arrows. On the night of the 10th, the fires of Lord
Rawdon's camp were seen on the Santee hills, in his retreat from Camden, and
encouraged the garrison for a while; but on the 12th the house was set on fire,
and the commander Lieut. M`Pherson, and one hundred and sixty-five men,
surrendered. This deed of Mrs. Motte has been deservedly celebrated. Her
intention to sacrifice her valuable property was patriotic; but the house was
not burnt, as is stated by historians, nor was it fired by an arrow from an
African bow, as sung by the poet. -- Nathan Savage, a private in Marion's
brigade, made up a ball of rosin and brimstone, to which he set fire, slung it
on the roof of the house. The British surrendered before much mischief was done
to it, and Marion had the fire put out. At the commencement of this siege,
Serjt. M`Donald, now advanced to a lieutenancy, was killed. He was a native of
Cross creek, in North Carolina, and his father and other relations had espoused
the opposite side of the cause. Lieut. Cryer, who had often emulated M`Donald,
shared a similar fate. On the 25th Nov. last, we have seen Gen. Sumter severely
wounded at Black Stocks; but on the 20th Feb. just three months after, he sat
down before Fort Granby, to besiege it, and wrote to Marion, who was his junior
officer, to move in such a direction as to attract the attention of Lord
Rawdon; but at that time the fort was relieved.
On the same day that Fort Motte surrendered, Gen. Sumter took
the British fort at Orangeburgh, with a garrison consisting of seventy tories
and twelve British; and in three days after, on the 15th May, he took Fort
Granby; long the object of his wishes. This fort was surrendered to him by
Major Maxwell, of the British, with nineteen officers, three hundred and
twenty-nine men, mostly royalists, and five pieces of ordnance.14
Gen. Marion soon after taking Fort Motte, re-crossed the
Santee, and encamped at Cantey's plantation, a little more than midway from
Nelson's to Murray's ferry, and here he reposed his men for some time and
collected reinforcements. In consequence of the evacuation of Camden, and
recent successes, the militia turned out well and in high spirits. About the 3d
of June, he marched for Georgetown, and appearing before it on the 6th, began
his approach by breaking ground; but on the night after the garrison evacuated
the town, and took shipping. Remaining here for some time, the general threw
off his old habiliments, furnished his wardrobe anew, and fitted himself out
with a suit of regimentals. He also procured a couple of mules to transport his
baggage. His privations, during the period passed over, were so great that he
even wanted a blanket, for on a certain night his bed of pine straw catching
fire under him, while he was soundly reposing after one of his forced marches,
half of the only one he had was burnt,15 and his
leather cap was wrinkled upon one side, from the contact of the same element.
Hereafter he indulged himself with the luxury of coffee for breakfast, but
often without bread to it, and he seldom tasted wine or spirits; but was fond
of vinegar and water, the drink of a Roman soldier. However, Georgetown was no
Capua to him. He soon returned again to Cantey's plantation, and kept out
scouts constantly towards Biggen church, where the enemy had a garrison of
considerable force.
About this period, Gen. Marion sent Col. Peter Horry with a
force to negociate a treaty with Major Ganey and his party. As he could not
well turn his arms against him, and the whig settlements on Pedee were left
exposed to his depredations, it was good policy to awe him, and to endeavour to
keep him quiet. After a little time Horry negociated a treaty, humiliating
enough to Ganey; by which, among other matters, he and his officers agreed to
lay down their arms and remain neutral, to deliver up all those who refused to
comply with the treaty and all deserters from the Americans, and also to
restore all negroes and other plundered property. This treaty was ratified on
the 17th of June, but was not strictly complied with until Marion afterwards
found leisure to enforce it; as shall be narrated in its place.
Soon after the siege of Fort Motte, Gen. Greene proceeding on
with his main army, laid siege to Ninety-Six; in which Lieut. Col. Cruger
commanded a garrison of five hundred men, and defended himself with energy and
ability. On the right of the besiegers was a strong stockade fort, and on the
left a work called the Star redoubt. On the night of the 26th of May, the
celebrated Kosciusko, who acted at that time as an engineer for Greene, raised
two block batteries within three hundred and fifty yards of the besieged. Soon
after a third and a fourth were erected, and lastly a rifle battery within
thirty yards of the ditch of the fort. The abbatis was turned, and two trenches
and a mine were extended within six feet of the ditch. The fort must soon have
been taken; but Lord Rawdon was approaching fast to the relief of the garrison,
with two thousand men, which he had lately received from Ireland; (18th June)
and Gen. Greene was obliged to raise the siege and retreat over the Saluda. His
loss before the fort was about one hundred and fifty men. Lord Rawdon followed
the Americans, as far as the Ennoree; but finding the pursuit fruitless, he
drew off a part of the garrison from Ninety-Six, and fixed a detachment of his
army at the Congaree. Gen. Greene, finding the British force divided, faced
about and offered Lord Rawdon battle; but he, in his turn, retreated to
Orangeburgh.
About the beginning of July, in this year, Lord Rawdon still
lay in Orangeburgh, strongly posted, and Gen. Greene was near, watching his
motions. While thus situated, Col. Cruger evacuated his post at Ninety-Six, and
marching down through the fork of Edisto, joined Rawdon. As there was no other
place at which the Edisto could then be passed but at Orangeburgh, it was out
of Greene's power to prevent the junction; and Rawdon's army being thus
reinforced, Gen. Greene thought it prudent to retire to Bloom hill,
Richardson's plantation, at the High Hills of Santee. Before retiring, however,
he detached Gen. Sumter as commander, and ordered Marion to join him, to strike
at the posts below. On his way down, Sumter made several successful attacks on
British outposts, which were conducted more immediately by Col. Lee and Col.
Wade Hampton. Generals Sumter and Marion formed a junction near Biggen, and
marched to attack the fort there, garrisoned by five hundred infantry and one
hundred cavalry, and commanded by Col. Coates, a spirited officer. His cavalry
at first repulsed Sumter's advance, but were driven in by the state troops
under Col. Hampton. In the evening after, Col. Coates set fire to the church,
which contained all his heavy baggage and stores, and retreating by the
Strawberry road over Watboo bridge, destroyed it, and thus gained a
considerable advance upon Sumter, who had to march round by a ford in pursuit.
Coates, in like manner, threw the plank off Huger's bridge, and proceeded
rapidly for Quimby. Here he had loosened the planks of the bridge, and was
waiting for his rear guard; but, in the mean time, Lee had come up with and
taken it. Dr. Irvine, by advancing too far among the combatants, was wounded in
this affair,16 together with several of Lee's men.
While Coates was waiting, Capt. Armstrong, at the head of five of his own men,
and Capt. James M`Caulay's troop of militia horse crossed the bridge and
charged in among the enemy, who at first threw down their arms, but seeing the
force so small, soon resumed them, and began to fire; but Armstrong made good
his way through them down the road. In the mean while, the passage of the
cavalry over the bridge had opened such a chasm17
in the plank, that Lee could not cross to follow up the advantage thus gained,
and the critical moment was lost. The enemy had time to recover from their
panic, and to post themselves in Col. Shubrick's house and out houses, which
were near. After some delay, Sumter arrived and ordered an attack, which was
led on by Marion, whose men, and a regiment of Sumter's, under Col. Thomas
Taylor, marched up in open ground, with a view of gaining a fence near the
houses; and were exposed to a most galling fire, from riflemen aiming at them
from behind cover. More than fifty were killed and wounded, generally of
Marion's men, who were most exposed. Capt. Perry and Lieut. June, of his
brigade, were killed; and Lieut. Col. John Baxter, who was very conspicuous,
from his gigantic size and full uniform, received five wounds; Major Swinton
was also severely wounded. A retreat was ordered. The attack was made against
Marion's opinion, who blamed Sumter afterwards for wasting the lives of his
men. But, with such a force, Sumter had not the disposition to be idle, and
wanted only a field piece to have ensured success. Col. Coates had now the
command of boats, and a wide river before him, and could easily have effected
his retreat in that way to Charleston; but Sumter did not attack him again;
because, it was said, a reinforcement was coming to his assistance. After this,
Gen. Marion retired to the Santee, and took post at Cordes', and afterwards at
Peyre's plantation, near the mouth of the present Santee canal, where he
reposed his men and horses, until about the 25th of August.
The British lay near M`Cord's ferry, with a strong party at
Monk's corner and Dorchester, and Gen. Greene was still encamped at
Richardson's plantation on the High Hills of Santee, directly opposite the
enemy, where they might easily see each other; but with a wide swamp between
them. About this time Gen. Greene ordered Marion to go to the assistance of
Col. Harden, who was then much pressed by the enemy, to the south of the
Edisto. Immediately he detached a party of mounted militia under Capt. George
Cooper, to the neighbourhood of Dorchester and Monk's corner, to create a
diversion there, whilst he with about two hundred picked men, by a circuitous
route and forced march of at least one hundred miles, crossed the Edisto,
joined Harden and approached the British. When sufficiently near he drew up his
men in a swamp upon the road near Parker's ferry, and sent out some of his
swiftest horse to lead the British into the ambuscade. While lying there a
small party of tories crossed at the ferry, and in passing on one of them
called out that he saw a white feather, and fired his gun. This occasioned an
exchange of a few shots on both sides; but (as is supposed) it was thought by
Major Fraser, who commanded the British, to be only Harden's party that was in
the swamp; he pursued the horsemen sent out as a decoy, and led his corps in
full charge within forty or fifty yards parallel to the ambuscade. A deadly
fire from the swamp, was the first notice he had that a greater force than
Harden's was there. He attempted to wheel and charge into the swamp, but only
exposed his men the more, as they were thus delayed before the fire, and were
wedged up on a causeway so closely that every shot had its utmost effect.
Finding all his efforts ineffectual, Fraser at length retreated along the road
to the ferry, and thus passed the whole ambuscade. A large body of infantry
with a field piece, were now seen advancing, and Marion retreated without
counting the dead, but men and horses were seen lying promiscuously in heaps on
the road. Although a large body of infantry was advancing, yet Marion in his
situation had not much to fear from them, and indeed had often encountered
such; therefore the true cause of his retreating could not have been because
they were advancing; but the probability is, because he wanted ammunition. How
often he was thus impeded in his enterprizes was known only to himself. A party
under Capt. Melton, went out the next day to the battle ground, and counted
twenty-seven dead horses; the men had been buried. As Marion's men fired with
either a ball and buck shot, or heavy buck shot alone, and as none would aim at
horses, the loss of the British must have been great. -- But though their loss
could not be ascertained, the effect of this well conducted affair soon became
evident, for at the battle of Eutaw, nine days after, the enemy had but few
cavalry in the field. It is not a little surprising that there is no record or
date of this action to be found, but in the thanks of congress to Gen. Marion,
which fix it on the 31st of August.
In the mean time, Capt. Cooper passed on to the Cypress, and
there routed a party of tories, and then proceeding down the road, he drove off
the cattle from before the enemy's fort at Dorchester. He next moved on down
the Charleston road; a body of tories lay in a brick church, which stood then
twelve miles from town; he charged and drove them before him. Next, passing
into Goose creek road, he proceeded to the ten mile house, returned and passed
over Goose creek bridge, took a circuitous route around the British at Monk's
corner and arrived in camp at Peyre's plantation near the canal, where Gen.
Marion now lay, with many prisoners, and without the loss of a man. In his
letter of the 10th of August, 1781, noted above, Gen. Greene writes to Marion,
"you will see by Col. Harden's letter, the enemy have hung Col. Hayne; do not
take any measure in the matter towards retaliation, for I do not intend to
retaliate on the tory officers, but the British. It is my intention to demand
the reasons of the colonel's being put to death, and if they are
unsatisfactory, as I am sure they will be, and if they refuse to make
satisfaction, as I suppose they will, to publish my intentions of giving no
quarters to British officers of any rank that fall into our hands. This will be
delayed for some few days, to give our friends in St. Augustine18 time to get off." The measure thus proposed was
quite too extensive in its nature to have been carried into effect. The true
reason why there was no retaliation was the last, respecting the friends in St.
Augustine, and it is suspected that it originated with the governor and
council. The British army was now no longer commanded by Lord Rawdon; he had
retired to Europe, and was succeeded by Brigadier Gen. Stewart. Lord Rawdon had
defended Camden as long as he could with vigour and ability; but lately stained
his reputation by the execution of Col. Hayne. In extenuation of this act, it
is said by his friends, he only obeyed the orders of his superior; but if he
really disapproved that act of cruelty, he could easily have avoided taking a
part in it, for as he was shortly to sail for Europe, he might have left the
execution of it to Col. Balfour; as being congenial to his natural disposition.
This proceeding was sudden and unexpected, and produced a great sensation in
the American army. When Gen. Greene demanded the reason of it, Lord Rawdon had
either departed or returned no answer; but Balfour stated, that "it took place
by the joint order of Lord Rawdon and myself, in consequence of the most
express directions of Lord Cornwallis to us, in regard to all those who should
be found in arms, after being, at their own request, received as British
subjects." Now, although Lord Cornwallis, when flushed with victory, issued
cruel orders; yet it is not to be presumed he acted the tyrant so far as to
communicate private orders to Rawdon and Balfour; but the only case in which
his public orders directed a capital punishment, is the following: "I have
ordered in the most positive manner, that every militia man, who has borne arms
with us, and afterwards joined the enemy, shall be immediately hanged." But it
was never pretended that Col. Hayne had borne arms with the British; when he
submitted, he expressly stipulated with Gen. Patterson, that he was not to do
so; and when, notwithstanding such stipulation, he was called upon for that
service, he positively refused, although threatened with confinement. Besides,
both Moultrie and Ramsey assert he did not serve with the British; and as far
as negative proof can go, this should be conclusive. But the fact that he bore
arms with the British is not charged against him; his accusation was, "being at
his own request received as a British subject." Then Col. Hayne neither came
within the letter, nor the penalty of the order issued by Lord Cornwallis; and
his blood rests upon the heads of Rawdon and Balfour. A fair state of the case
is, that Col. Hayne had been considered by the British a character of great
influence, and after the fall of Charleston, having applied to Gen. Patterson,
then commandant, for a parole, he was refused one, and was threatened with
confinement if he would not subscribe a declaration of allegiance. Under the
influence of this threat, by the advice of friends, and the stipulation above
stated, he was induced to sign the declaration; and he was now tried for a
breach of his allegiance. Lord Cornwallis punished for breaches of parole, but
this was a new charge, made by Rawdon and Balfour themselves. But Hayne's
signature to that instrument, had been obtained by duresse, and the part of the
country in which he lived had been for several months in the possession of the
Americans, and the British were unable to protect him in his allegiance. These,
and no doubt other grounds, might have been alleged in his defence, but he was
at first promised, and afterwards refused to be heard by counsel. The law of
nations, as we have seen, was often on the lips of Balfour, and here was a case
which came clearly within that code. Then the forms of justice should have been
carefully observed; the accused should have been heard in his defence; the
spirit of the law should have been the guide of the judges, with a leaning in
favour of lenity and mercy; the passions ought not to have been suffered to
interfere, where the minds of the court should have been regulated by justice
and wisdom; and finally, the judges should have proceeded deliberately,
avoiding every thing like haste in their decision. Such is the law of
nations.19 But neither the forms of justice, nor
the spirit of the law were observed; the accused was tried by a court martial,
in which, after the production of the declaration of allegiance, the only
inquiry made was, "whether he had been taken in arms?" And that being proved,
the defendant received a summary sentence of death. A most feeling intercession
was made in his behalf, but in vain; all that could be obtained was a few days
delay of the execution, which otherwise would have been hurried on in the most
indecent manner. Col. Hayne died, not indeed the death, but with the spirit of
a soldier, and a martyr in the cause of civil liberty; he met his fate calmly
on the gibbet. The character of Balfour was already so black there was scarcely
room for an additional blot; but the execution of Col. Hayne must ever continue
a stain upon the reputation of Lord Rawdon. He had not even the excuse that it
was the law of the conqueror; for Lord Cornwallis and himself were conquerors
no more.
The two hostile armies still lay encamped and watching each
other in the positions before mentioned, at Bloomhill and M`Cord's ferry; but
about the beginning of September, Gen. Greene, for the want of boats, marched
up the Wateree and crossed it not far below Camden,20 and marching down through the fork between the two
rivers, passed the Congaree at Howell's ferry and encamped at Motte's
plantation, on a direct route to meet the enemy, who had been encamped but a
short distance below him.
Here he received intelligence that the British army commanded
by Brigadier Gen. Stewart21 had retreated and
halted at the Eutaw Spring, about forty miles below, that they had been
reinforced there, and were about to establish a permanent post. To prevent
this, he determined to risk a battle, though his force was thought to be
inferior. Accordingly he sent back his baggage to Howell's ferry, and proceeded
by easy marches to Burdell's plantation seven miles from Eutaw, where he was
joined by Gen. Marion. Gen. Stewart had posted himself to great advantage at
Eutaw; his head quarters were in a strong brick house, which stood at that time
a little to the west of the spring or rather fountain. In his rear, to the
south, there was an open field; in his front a thick wood covered with pines
and scrubby oaks. Below the fountain on his right there was a deep valley,
through which the Eutaw creek, five or six feet deep, takes its course towards
the north-east. Between the fountain and the brick house the Congaree road
passes to the north.
It was down this road Gen. Greene marched to attack the British
army, on the memorable 8th of September, 1781. The effective force of each army
was nearly equal, except the cavalry, in which Greene would have had the
advantage, if the nature of the ground had permitted the use of it, for none of
the ground was then open, and particularly on his left it was covered by
scrubby oaks. While moving down the road in the morning with much
circumspection, Col. Lee in advance met a party which covered another that was
foraging. Several of these were killed, and their captain and forty men taken.
Pressing forward, Lee soon met another party, with whom another action
commenced, and he requested the support of artillery to counteract that of the
enemy, which had now opened. Two field pieces were quickly brought up by Capt.
Gaines, and began to fire.
During this firing both armies formed. The South Carolina
militia under Marion, and the North Carolina under Col. Malmedy occupied the
first line; the South Carolinians on the right. The continentals formed the
second line. The Virginians under Col. Campbell, occupied the right. Gen.
Sumner with the North Carolina new levied troops, the centre; and the
Marylanders, under Cols. Williams and Howard, the left, on the Charleston road.
Lee had charge of the right, and Henderson of the left flank, with their
cavalry. Two field pieces were disposed in the front and two in the rear line.
Washington's horse and Kirkwood's infantry formed the reserve.
The enemy was drawn up in one line, the Buffs on the right,
Cruger's corps in the centre, and the 63d and 64th on the left. Major
Marjoribanks with one battalion of light infantry was posted on the Eutaw
creek, flanking the Buffs, and the cavalry under Major Coffin were drawn up in
the open field in the rear; these were not numerous. The artillery were posted
on the Charleston road and the one leading to Roach's plantation. -- The action
commenced about a mile from the fountain. Marion and Pickens continued to
advance and fire, but the North Carolina militia broke at the third round. --
Sumner with the new raised troops, then occupied their place, and behaved
gallantly. Marion's marksmen firing with great precision, and galling the enemy
greatly, had now advanced more than half a mile, when the British charged upon
them with fixed bayonets, and Marion ordered a retreat. The Virginia and
Maryland troops now advanced with trailed arms, and scarcely had Marion cleared
the right of the Virginians, when the crash of bayonets was heard. But by
degrees it receded, and becoming less and less audible, a loud shout of huzza
for America! told the issue of the contest. -- Gen. Marion now rallied his men.
Col. Henderson of the South Carolina state troops was wounded early in the
action, and the command devolved on Col. Wade Hampton, who made a spirited
charge; but being warmly received, Col. Washington brought up the reserve to
his aid, and at first charged so briskly that the enemy gave way; but advancing
into the thickest part of the woods, Marjoribanks came to the assistance of the
Buffs; Washington's horse was killed under him, and he was wounded and taken.
After this, and the loss of many officers and men, the corps was drawn off by
Capt. Parsons. Marjoribanks though victorious on the right, now fell back to
assist Stewart; and Major Sheridan with the New York volunteers, threw himself
into the brick house. Stewart was busily engaged in rallying his men under
cover of the fire from Sheridan; and Greene now ordered Lee to charge upon
Coffin. Lee at the beginning of the action had advanced with the legionary
infantry upon the left of the enemy, and ordered his cavalry under Eggleston to
follow in the rear; but sending for Eggleston, at present, he found that by
some mistaken order he had gone to assist Washington. Thus a most favourable
opportunity of completing the rout already commenced, was irretrievably lost.
Greene had now brought up his artillery against the brick house, and sent for
Marion who came to his assistance; but the weight of his metal was too light to
effect a breach. Here, after losing many men and making unavailing efforts, he
was obliged to desist, bringing off one field piece, which he had taken from
the enemy, and losing two of his own. Thus Sheridan and Marjoribanks saved the
British army.
Gen. Greene, in this manner disappointed in the most sanguine
expectation of a complete victory, collected all his wounded, except those
under the fire of the enemy, and placing a strong picket on the field of
battle, retired sullenly from the ground in search of water. The battle had
taken place on a dry thirsty soil, and in a hot day, and the want of water was
severely felt. Four or five miles up the Congaree road, there is a remarkably
boggy pond, still the dread of travellers; the cavalry had passed through it,
twice or thrice in the course of the day; and it was now become a filthy
puddle; but into this did the men as soon as they arrived, throw themselves
headlong, over the shoulders of each other, and drink with an avidity which
seemed insatiable. This was the first water in Greene's rear, which is
mentioned by historians, as being resorted to by his army.22 The battle had lasted more than three hours.
Please visit...
Next morning, Marion and Lee were ordered by a circuitous route
to gain the enemy's rear, in order, as it was expected they would retreat, to
retard their march and prevent their being reinforced. On the evening of the
9th of September, Stewart piled up the arms of his dead and wounded, and set
them on fire, destroyed his stores, left seventy of his own wounded, and some
of Greene's, at the Eutaw; and retreated precipitately towards Monk's corner.
So hurried was his retreat for fifteen miles, that he brought his first
division within a few miles of M`Arthur, coming to his aid, before Marion and
Lee reached Ferguson's swamp, their point of destination. To fight between two
fires, became hazardous, and the junction of the enemy was effected. Capt.
O`Neal of Lee's horse, fell upon the cavalry of their rear guard, and took most
of them prisoners; but Stewart continued his retreat to Wantoot, (Ravenel's
plantation,) about twenty miles below Eutaw, and Greene pursued to Martin's
tavern, fifteen miles. In this battle, the British lost by Greene's account six
hundred men, killed and wounded, and five hundred made prisoners. According to
Stewart's return, he lost eighty-five killed,23
three hundred fifty-one wounded, and two hundred fifty-seven missing. The loss
of the Americans was five hundred killed and wounded; among whom were sixty
officers. The disparity in these returns of the different commanders is great,
but Greene's prisoners could be counted at leisure. Lieut. Col. Campbell fell
as he was leading the Virginia line to the charge. Gen. Greene says of him,
"though he fell with distinguished marks of honour, yet his loss is much to be
regretted; he was the great soldier, and the firm patriot." Gen. Marion had
many of his men and Col. Hugh Horry wounded; but fewer killed than at Quimby;
among the latter was the brave Capt. John Simons, of Pedee.
The British shot generally about five feet too high; but the
wind blew that day favourably for Marion's marksmen, and they did great
execution. They fired from fifteen to twenty rounds each man. Both sides
claimed the victory; but the fruits of one were with the Americans.
It being now autumn, and his men sickly, Gen. Greene retired to
the High Hills of Santee, his favourite encampment; Col. Lee calls them, "The
benign hills of Santee." At this time Gen. Greene encamped on the range of
hills immediately below Stateburgh. His head quarters were at Mr. James', on
the right going downwards, a beautiful spot, but now deserted. Many of Greene's
wounded officers and men died, and lie buried on a hill near where the author
is now writing. An officer, who died of his wound, (Capt. De Wolfe,) lies
interred near De Wolfe's spring, on his plantation. He was a most gallant
soldier. No mound or grave stone points out the spot where such brave men
repose. Even the mounds, where the dead at Eutaw were buried, have been lately
violated by the cutting of a ditch through them. Alas! my country, why have
such things been suffered?
Marion retired to his favourite encampment, at Peyre's
plantation, in Santee river swamp. On the banks of the river at that time there
were extensive cornfields on all the plantations, and the most of the low
places were cultivated in rice.24 The crops of
three or four years past had been housed, and kept out of the enemy's reach by
the difficulty of approach and their retired situation. Here the general fixed
himself, much to his liking, in a cane brake, about a quarter of a mile from
the river, which however was soon cleared to thatch the huts of himself and his
men. Some lakes which skirted the high land, rendered the post difficult of
approach, and here was forage for horses, and beef, pork, rice, and green
corn25 for the men, in the greatest abundance.
Such a place suited Marion's views exactly, and here, or in the neighbourhood,
he encamped often; but did not stay long at present. It appears now there was
very little sickness at that day.
Soon after the battle of Eutaw, Gen. Alexander Leslie took
command of the British army. On the 17th of September Gen. Greene wrote to
Marion: "I have the pleasure to congratulate you on the arrival of Count De
Grasse, in Chesapeake bay, with twenty-eight sail of the line, a number of
frigates and six thousand land forces; Gen. Washington is also arrived in
Virginia to take command of the army. From these circumstances, and from some
further intelligence of Lord Cornwallis' movements, it is highly probable that
his lordship will endeavour to retreat through North Carolina to Charleston. I
must therefore entreat that you will use every exertion to collect a large
force of militia together, and as speedy as possible, that we may be able to
intercept his lordship." As Gen. Marion's scouts at this time frequently passed
round the enemy, and harrassed them much between their camp and Charleston, it
has often been a matter of surprise why he should recross the Santee; but this
letter explains it, for he crossed it to collect his men, and he encamped at
Cantey's plantation a considerable time for that purpose. On the 1st of Sept.
Gov. Rutledge had ordered out only the half of the militia; now all were again
directed to take the field as formerly.
Another good reason for Gen. Greene and Marion's lying so long
inactive at this season, is to be found in a letter in the correspondence
mentioned; and though the date is later than the present period, yet the fact
comes in properly here. Gen. Marion, as it appears from what follows after, had
written to Greene and the governor for ammunition on the 9th of October. On the
10th, Gov. Rutledge answers his letter: "I received yours yesterday, by Mr.
Boone, and wrote in the most pressing terms to Col. Williams, (Gen. Greene not
being yet returned from Charlotte, for which place he set out on Friday) for a
supply of ammunition; I wish to God it was in my power to send you ammunition
instantly, but it is not." Col. Otho Williams, who was second in command of the
army, writes to Gen. Marion, and, although his letter is not dated, the
connection of the correspondence is evident: "As Gen. Greene is not in camp, I
took the liberty of opening your letter of the 9th instant. Our stock of
ammunition is quite exhausted -- we have not an ounce of powder, or a
cartridge, in store. The arrival of some military stores which we expect every
hour, will put it in the general's power to supply you amply. His excellency
Gov. Rutledge has intimated that you meditated an expedition over the Santee;
in making your determination, if it is not settled, permit me to recommend to
your consideration, that the general depends upon you entirely for intelligence
of the enemy's motion." These extracts of letters must be read with
astonishment. -- With what uncommon fortitude must such men have been endowed,
to bear up under such continued discouragements. As Gen. Marion lay a long time
here, it will give occasion to relate some other matters, which as fortunate
events have for some time past thickened, would have perplexed the narrative to
have introduced before.
About the 10th August, Georgetown was burnt. -- One Manson,
commanding a small armed vessel, arrived within gunshot of the town, and sent a
party in a boat under cover of his guns, and set fire to some houses on a wharf
at the lower end of the Bay, and the wind favouring, the whole town, except a
few houses on the outskirts, was burnt. No doubt Manson had his orders from
Balfour.
As the continental troops were without pay and clothing, a plan
was adopted by the governor and council to impress all the indigo for public
service which could be found, and it was expected that it would now serve
instead of money as a medium of exchange. The principle had been authorised by
an old militia law, but it was a rigourous measure and a poor expedient,
although the best that could be devised at the time. Many thrifty planters had
hoarded up their indigo, ever since the commencement of the war, hoping some
day to turn it into money. Capt. Wm. Richardson, of Bloomhill, was appointed
commissary general by the governor, and assistants were appointed by him in the
several districts of the state; who went about with press warrants in their
pockets, and parties to assist them, and set a price upon each man's indigo,
for which they gave him a receipt, promising payment from the state. The
general depot was fixed at Bloomhill.
It was in contemplation at the time likewise to raise two
regiments of state troops to be attached to Marion's brigade, and for this
purpose all the horses fit for cavalry were impressed, except those of men
actually in service. These were indeed high handed measures, but appeared
necessary at the time. Winter was approaching, and Gen. Greene states in a
letter to Col. Peter Horry, of the 11th of November, "Blankets are so scarce
with us, that more than three-fourths of our men are without." A few goods fit
for service were afterwards purchased for indigo, but at an enormous advance.26
On the 27th of September Gov. Rutledge had ordered by
proclamation, that the disaffected should come in within thirty days and do
duty for six months. -- This measure brought down disgrace, and soon after
nearly ruin upon Marion's brigade. This proclamation is long but to the
following effect: --
"That whereas, the British had been compelled to evacuate all
their strong posts, and could no more give protection to their adherents, and
as many of them still remained with the British or lurked in secret places. And
whereas, the commandant of Charleston, having sent beyond sea the wives and
families of all the avowed friends of America in town and country; and the
brigadiers of militia had been ordered to retaliate by sending the wives and
families of such adherents within the British lines; and it is understood that
they are in great distress and poverty. Therefore, a free pardon is offered for
the offence of having borne arms, provided they surrender themselves up to a
brigadier of the state within thirty days, and do constant duty in the militia
service for six months; and upon performance of these conditions their wives
and children were allowed to return; except such as having joined the enemy,
were called upon by two proclamations to return in forty days, in pursuance of
an ordinance of the legislature. All such as were sent out of the state for
refusing to take the oath required of them by law and had returned. All such as
subscribed addresses to Sir H. Clinton and Lord Cornwallis, congratulating them
on their victories. All such as hold or have held military commissions. And all
those whose conduct has been so infamous that they cannot consistent with
policy and justice partake of the rights of citizens. But if they surrender to
the commander in chief for the time, and were judged inadmissible, they should
not be detained."
This abstract has been given to show the singular manner of
legislating in those times.27 Not, but that it was
necessary thus to legislate, as it was certainly better to have some kind of
civil government than none. The raising of two regiments of cavalry was
suggested by Gen. Greene, and highly approved both by the governor and Marion,
and it certainly promised well at first. Col. Hezekiah Maham, who had been
elected by the provincial congress a captain in the first rifle regiment, when
they passed an act to raise two such regiments, in March, 1776, was now
appointed commander of one corps, and Col. Peter Horry commander of the other;
he had been captain in the 2d regiment from the beginning of 1775, and was the
older officer of the two; the reader will hereafter see the effect of this
observation.
As they had no bounty money to give, recruiting went on slowly,
and they fell upon the following expedient, which was warmly opposed by Gov.
Rutledge at first, but it is supposed was favoured by Marion. All men that
could hire a substitute in the regiments now raising were exempted from militia
duty. -- This soon drew from the ranks the best of Marion's men, men who had
served from the first, and had left their families at home in huts, and still
in distress; but they could yet spare one or two negroes, which they did not
much value, to hire a substitute to do duty for them. The war was now moved
comparatively far from them, and they sighed for home. In the mean time, the
six months men came tumbling in by scores, to supply their places. Their new
white feathers, fine coats, new saddles and bridles, and famished horses,
showed they had lately been in the British garrison. These were not the men to
endure privations and fight their country's battles. Those of Marion's tried
men who remained, could never confide in them; and now, as is always usual in
armies, the most unprincipled men enlisted in the new regiments, but were not
kept in the discipline necessary for taming such characters, or making them
good soldiers. When Maham had got about seventy men and Horry not yet a troop,
both their commissions being of the same date, they quarreled about precedence
in rank; and although Gov. Rutledge reasoned, Gen. Greene persuaded, and Marion
threatened, they could never be reconciled. Maham appears to have been very
refractory on this occasion, and would listen to no accommodation. While in the
end, Horry acted much in the wrong.
There are in the correspondence of that day many letters of
Gov. Rutledge, several of which, without the suppression of names, it would be
highly injurious to the feelings of many to publish at the present time; the
rest are not interesting, except a few which show the spirit of the times; and
are mostly long and able constructions of militia laws, now obsolete. About
this time he issued a proclamation suspending the acts of assembly, and making
paper money28 a tender in law, which, although
strong, was certainly a just proceeding.
Col. Maham having now raised and equipped part of his cavalry,
passed the Santee, burnt some British stores in the house of Sir John Colleton,
at Fairlawn, and took some prisoners. On the 16th of October, Gen. Greene
writes to Marion, "Col. Maham's success is highly honourable to himself and
corps, and I hope will be followed by future strokes of good fortune." This
hope was not realized. A letter from Col. Doyle, of the British, shows strongly
what different views, men engaged on opposite sides, will take of the same
transaction. It is to Gen. Marion: "Sir, I am directed by Brigadier Gen.
Stewart, to represent to you an outrage that has been committed by a party of
your corps, under the command of Col. Maham, upon a parcel of sick, helpless
soldiers in an hospital at Colleton house, on the morning of the 17th inst. The
burning an hospital, and dragging away a number of dying people to expire in
swamps, is a species of barbarity hitherto unknown in civilized warfare. The
general expects that those unhappy sufferers will be sent immediately as
prisoners upon parole. Attacks on hospitals are, among your own continental
army, unprecedented. The hospital at Camden was by Gen. Greene's order
protected, although it had an armed guard for its internal police." Gen.
Greene, who ere this, the reader must have perceived, was polite to his
friends, and humane to his enemies, for even they are obliged to confess it,
immediately instituted an inquiry into this complaint;29 but how it was accommodated cannot now be
ascertained.
On the 9th October, 1781,30 Gen. Marion
received the most agreeable news of the surrender of Lord Cornwallis, and the
next evening gave a fete to the ladies of Santee, at the house of Mr. John
Cantey. The general's heart was not very susceptible of the gentler emotions;
he had his friend, and was kind to his inferiors, but his mind was principally
absorbed by the love of country; and as the capture of Lord Cornwallis was
intimately connected with this passion there is no doubt he felt joy on the
occasion. But if he did feel joy upon a few occasions, certain it is that
watchful anxiety was the daily inmate of his breast.
On the same day he received the thanks of congress "for his
wise, decided and gallant conduct, in defending the liberties of his country,
and particularly for his prudent and intrepid attack on a body of British
troops on the 31st day of August last; and for the distinguished part he took
in the battle of the 8th Sept." Immediately on receiving the intelligence of
the capture of Lord Cornwallis, Gen. Greene prepared for moving his army into
the lower country. On the 5th November, he writes to Gen. Marion, "Gen. Sumter
has orders to take post at Orangeburgh, to prevent the tories in that quarter
from conveying supplies to town, and his advanced parties will penetrate as low
as Dorchester; therefore you may act in conjunction with him, or employ your
troops on the enemy's left, as you may find from information, they can best be
employed. Please to give me your opinion on which side they can be most
useful." Gen. Marion four days after passed the Santee, and in a short time
took post near Huger's bridge, as it was still termed, though all the bridges
in the lower country were taken down, except the one at Goose creek, which
seemed to be left by mutual consent of both armies, for the purpose of reaching
one another, by at least one way. He arrived at Huger's bridge in the night,
and in less than an hour after detached a strong party by the heads of Huger's
and Quimby creeks, to Cainhoy, in St. Thomas'. On the 23d November Gen. Sumter
was posted at Orangeburgh; on the 17th of the same month Gen. Greene marched
for the Fourholes. December 7th, he lay at Jacksonborough, and on the 13th of
the same month, he encamped at the Round O.
His movements were at this time cautious, in keeping both the
Edisto and Ashley between himself and the enemy; because he had heard they were
reinforced, and he was as yet without ammunition. He wrote now frequently to
Gen. Marion, and almost every letter has a clause similar to the one of the
15th of November: "You are at liberty to act as you think advisable. I have no
particular instructions to give you, and only wish you to avoid surprise."
At the close of this year, Gov. Rutledge and his council issued
writs of election for members of the senate and house of representatives,
which, by proclamation issued afterwards, were appointed to meet at
Jacksonborough. Gen. Greene still lay at the Round O, where he secured the rice
and other provisions from the enemy, by sending out patroles of cavalry as far
as Dorchester: but he had not yet received a supply of ammunition for his
infantry, and Marion was also without that indispensible muniment of war. As to
other necessaries he says, "Our horsemen have neither cloaks or blankets, nor
have our troops received a shilling of pay since they came into this country.
Nor is there a prospect of any. Yet they do not complain."31 At length on the 14th of December he received a
supply of ammunition and sent it all to Marion, then at Watboo, saying,
"he was in expectation of soon receiving more."
The British extended their patroles of cavalry nearly up to
Dorchester, but their main body was now confined to Charleston neck.
Thus, in the course of the campaign of 1781, the American army
under Gen. Greene, without pay, without clothing, and as we have seen
frequently without ammunition, had driven the enemy from all their strong holds
but one; had defeated them in battle, and retaken all South Carolina but a neck
of land.
Detached Narratives for 1781.
There was with Marion's brigade throughout, a young man,
Robert, commonly called Bob James, but oftener, the general's right hand
man. It was known to very few that Marion employed him often to gain
intelligence from the enemy in Georgetown and other places. The general never
suffered him to mount guard or do common duties; being an excellent woodsman,
he was his favourite guide; being an expert swimmer, he was generally by his
side when swimming rivers, or paddled him over in a canoe if they had one;
being a good fisherman, he often caught him fish; the general would laugh and
joke with him, but with no other private. He did not however employ Bob in
these small matters when he had any thing serious for him to do. Surprised at
his exact intelligence from Georgetown and other places, the author asked him
once "how he got it?" He related several interesting particulars, among others
this one: "Just in the outskirts of Georgetown there is a pond full of bushes,
and in the middle of it a large gum-tree with a thick top and branches that
reach the thicket below. This tree overlooked the garrison and both roads
leading out of town. I used to climb into it and watch for days together, and
if I saw any thing important, immediately came down, mounted my horse, hid in a
neighbouring swamp, and told it to the general myself, or sent the only other
person we trusted." The gum tree stood there lately, but Robert James sleeps
with his fathers. "Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him Horatio." It was generally
thought that although he swam so often on horseback, or crossed rivers in
unsteady canoes, the general could not swim himself. His body was sufficient
for endurance; and his mind, to sagacity and foresight, united the higher
virtues of patience and fortitude. In one thing he appeared singular; long
swords were now in fashion as best for attack or defence, but Gen. Marion
always wore the little cut and thrust, which was in use in the second regiment,
and he was seldom, perhaps never, seen to draw it. His messmates told a story,
whether true or not is of little consequence, as it shows the public opinion.
The sum of this story was, that on one occasion he attempted to draw it, but it
was so rusty he could not extricate it from the scabbard. He had a reason for
this apparent singularity; a long sword might have tempted him, a small man, to
act the common soldier, and he appeared to place no reliance on his personal
prowess. Gen. Greene depended entirely upon him for intelligence. -- Now,
intelligence is the life of an army. Sumter and Greene were then at variance,
and if Sumter gained any, he would not condescend to let Greene know it, but
take advantage of it himself. Lee, whose particular business it was to furnish
Greene with intelligence, was always too fond of seeing his men and horses in
good plight, to expose them to hardships. Marion's were for every day's use.
An anecdote worthy to be recorded happened at the brick house
at the Eutaw. Capt. Laurence Manning, since adjutant general in this state,
marched at the head of the legion infantry to batter down the door of the
house. Intent on this single object, and relying confidently on his men, he
advanced boldly up to the door; when, looking behind him for the first time,
behold his men had deserted him. He stood for a moment at the side of the door,
revolving what was to be done. -- Fortunately a British officer, Capt. Barry,
opened the door gently to peep out, and Manning seizing him fast by the collar,
jerked him out. He then used him as an ancient warrior would have done his
shield, and the enemy, fearing to shoot least they should kill Barry, Manning
escaped without a shot being fired at him from the house.
During the struggle of the present year, (1781) Capt. Wm.
Allston, of True Blue, on Little river, All Saints parish, served under Gen.
Marion. He was a firm patriot and good soldier; indeed he may well be
enumerated among the martyrs to the cause of his country; for having been
seized with a fever in camp, he had scarcely time to reach his home, where he
expired at a middle age. He left behind him, by his last wife, two sons and a
daughter; his eldest son he named after the illustrious Washington; and he has
since proved himself to be highly worthy of that distinction. In this son will
be readily recognised the distinguished artist, Washington Allston; whose
pencil has bestowed celebrity upon the place of his birth, and whom every
American should be proud to claim as his countryman.
Towards the conclusion of this year, Maj. Edward Hyrne, one of
Gen. Greene's aids, was commissioned by him to negociate a cartel of exchange
of prisoners in Charleston. He had to conduct this with Col. Balfour, who was
haughty and unreasonable as well as cruel; his demands were so exorbitant, that
Maj. Hyrne, after waiting upon him several times with much patience, at length
declared they were utterly inadmissible, and took his leave. Returning to his
lodgings, he wrote a note to each British officer on parole in town, informing
him he must prepare to follow him into the country the next day. His firmness
or good policy had the desired effect; Balfour's quarters were soon besieged by
at least forty officers, many of whom were of higher rank than himself, and
Major Hyrne succeeded to the extent of his wishes.
The party under Major John Postell, which was ordered out on
the 29th January in this year, and succeeded in taking eleven British waggons
with soldiers' clothing at Keithfield, consisted with the officers, commanding
of thirty-eight men.32 They carried off what
clothing they could, and what they could not they burnt. What was carried away
was sold for a division, and bought in, as it appears, in continental dollars,
on the 2d February, 1781.
The prices of a few are inserted; sixteen blankets were sold.
1 Bought by Major Postell for $1590 1 do. Capt.
Wm. Capers 2200 1 do. (the lowest priced) by Capt. Thomas Potts, 900 1
Loaf of sugar, Francis Greene, 2000 1 Coat by Capt. Capers, 6210 1
Knife and fork, A. Simons, 700 1 Pair of Stockings, Capt. Capers, 800
&c. &c. &c.
Most of this party were supernumerary officers, who placed
themselves under the command of Major (then Captain) Postell, who was justly
considered as one of the most enterprising officers in Marion's brigade. Of
these thirty-eight men, the only survivor is Richard Greene, who has been long
a respectable and opulent planter on Black river. The account of sales is in
the hand writing of Capt. Thomas Potts. There is a list of the names of the
thirty-eight, many of whom fought then and afterwards with great bravery. --
John Futhey, then a lieutenant, after being promoted to a captaincy was killed
in a skirmish at Avant's ferry on Black river. Thomas Potts, jun. a lieutenant,
was twice wounded. John M`Bride, father of the late friend of the author, Dr.
James M`Bride, was always at his post. What a loss to science was the early
death of the son? Capt. Wm. Capers was imprisoned by Balfour in the upper story
of his provost, and made his escape by slipping past the keeper at night
when he brought their scanty supper to the prisoners. He had then to descend a
steep flight of stairs and pass the guard at the bottom. Luckily he stumbled at
the head of the stairs and fell to the bottom, and the guard mistaking him for
the keeper, raised him up and gave him much consolation. He had only to refrain
from speaking and to utter a few groans, which being an indistinct tone of the
voice, made no discovery, and the guard suffered him to pass. A friend
furnished him with a small boat to pass Cooper river; but now the difficulty
was to get through the British guard ships which lined the river. Being a
pretty good mimic, he bethought himself of assuming the character of a drunken
sailor going on board his own ship, and acted his part so admirably
well, that he was suffered, though often threatened, to pass through the whole
fleet. Capt. Capers lost no time in joining Gen. Marion, with whom he fought
bravely in the ranks until the general advanced down into St. Thomas' parish,
where he commanded a company, and where he had left property at the mercy of
the enemy.33 Capt. Wm. Capers, and his brother G.
Sinkler Capers, were often afterwards the terror of the enemy, who had early
oppressed and imprisoned them, for G. S. Capers had also made his escape from
the provost.
Francis G. Deliesseline, the present sheriff of Charleston
district, joined Marion when a boy, and made if possible a still more
surprising and narrow escape out of the same provost; but as the
narrative would expose certain names which he wishes concealed, he has declined
giving it publicity. At so early an age, none behaved better than Deliesseline,
and no one has refreshed the author's memory more in the detail of facts of
that period.
Many of the privates of Marion's brigade were men of character
and honour; most of them lost their fortunes by the war, and many made them, or
at least handsome competencies, after it; but it is believed that more, cast
out of the ways of industry and economy, and losing their all, sunk under the
pressure brought upon them. Where they are known, what an injustice would it be
to pass over the merits of such men? -- On the monument erected by the Greeks
at Thermopylae, the names of Leonidas and his three hundred men were not
inscribed, because it was thought impossible to imagine they could ever be
forgotten.
Pardon me, ye sons of my fellow soldiers! should my memory be
found not so tenacious; and should I have passed over the merits of many of
your fathers without even a shade of remembrance.
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