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A. S. Salley's Introduction to the 1948 edition
But for an accident General Francis Marion probably would not
have been the hero of the Revolution that he became.
In June, 1775, the Provincial Congress of South Carolina, the
extra-legal body of the revolting people of the province, organized three
regiments of regular troops in preparation against any attempt at coercion by
the British government. The first and second regiments were constituted as
infantry, or foot; the third regiment as rangers, or horse.
The Congress elected twenty captains to man the first and
second regiments, and they took seniority according to their standing in the
vote. Francis Marion was elected one of the twenty captains and stood third in
the balloting and was assigned to the Second Regiment, ranking second to Capt.
Barnard Elliott.
In November, 1775, an artillery regiment was organized and
Capt. Elliott was promoted to major thereof. In February, 1776, a regiment of
rifles was organized and Major McIntosh of the Second was promoted to be
lieutenant-colonel thereof, which advanced Captain Marion to the majority of
the Second Regiment.
On September 16, 1776, the six regular regiments of South
Carolina were taken on the Continental Establishment and Colonel William
Moultrie, of the Second Regiment, was promoted to brigadier general;
Lieutenant-Colonel Motte was promoted to colonel and Major Marion became the
lieutenant-colonel. Colonel Motte resigned September 23, 1778, and Marion
became commander of the regiment.
As British regiments were commanded by lieutenant-colonels,
British authorities refused to exchange a captured Continental colonel for one
of their lieutenant-colonels in the hands of the Americans. This complication
caused the Continental Congress to cease promoting lieutenant-colonels to
colonels, and so Marion remained as lieutenant-colonel of the Second Regiment,
South Carolina Line, Continental Establishment, until mustered out of the
service in February, 1783.
While a British fleet and army were besieging Charles Town
March 28 - May 12, 1780, Lieutenant Colonel Marion sprained an ankle, which
rendered him unfit for active duty. Soon after General Lincoln published an
order furloughing him to his plantation until able to resume active duty, but
Charles Town was captured before Marion was able to return.
When General Gates was sent down to Hillsboro, North Carolina,
to take command of the Southern Army he published an order directing all
Continental officers and men not on parole to report to him at Hillsboro.
Marion was the senior officer of South Carolina to report. His regiment having
been captured with the garrison of Charles Town Marion was without a command.
He was directed by Gates to go down to the Santee River and assemble a militia
force and destroy the ferry boats on the river to prevent the British from
retreating to Charles Town or receiving aid therefrom. Marion found a willing
force of militia at hand on the Santee with which he speedily drove off the
guard at Murray's Ferry and captured the guard at Nelson's Ferry and also
captured a convoy from Cornwallis's army taking American prisoners to Charles
Town. From then on he was very active. In November, 1780, Governor Rutledge
appointed him brigadier general of the Lower Brigade of the State militia and
his activity knew no bounds from then to the end of the war.
This history of Marion's career thereafter, accurately and
authentically tells the story, for Judge James, its author, was one of Marion's
active officers.
Perhaps Marion's highly meritorious services would never have
received the widespread attention that has been accorded them had it not been
for a fictitious publication issued in 1809 by Matthew Carey, a well known
publisher, of Philadelphia, entitled: The / Life / of / Gen. Francis Marion,
/ a Celebrated / Partizan Officer, / in / The Revolutionary War, / against the
/ British and Tories, in South-Carolina and Georgia. From documents
furnished by his brother in arms, Brigadier-General P. Horry: and his nephew,
the Hon. Robert Marion, Esq. of Congress.
General Peter Horry, who had been one of Marion's most active
colonels, had written a history of Marion's brigade, but had not readily found
a publisher when he encountered Rev. Mason L. Weems, an itinerant book agent
and preacher. Weems persuaded Horry to let him have the manuscript, assuring
him that he would secure a publisher. Horry agreed, but admonished Weems "not
to alter the sense or meaning of my work, least when it came out I might not
know it; and, perverted, it might convey a very different meaning from the
truth." Those were Horry's own words to Weems, as recalled by Horry to Weems in
a letter dated at Georgetown, S.C., February 4, 1811.
In the same letter he reminded Weems: "I requested you would
(if necessary) so far alter the work as to make it read grammatically, and I
gave you leave to embellish the work, but entertained not the least idea of
what has happened -- though several of my friends were under such
apprehensions, which caused my being urgent on you not to alter as above
mentioned." . . . "Nor have the public received the real history of General
Marion. You have carved and mutilated it with so many erroneous statements your
embellishments, observation and remarks, must necessarily be erroneous as
proceeding from false grounds. Most certainly 'tis not my history, but your
romance." . . . "Can you suppose I can be pleased with reading particulars
(though so elevated, by you) of Marion and myself, when I know such never
existed."
The book has been through scores of editions and printings and
the falsehoods that Weems concocted -- sometimes in malice -- have been
accepted as truth and retold throughout the United States and used in
encyclopaedias and text books, government reports and political speeches. As a
result, Marion has been honored by having counties and towns named for him to
an extent equalled or surpassed by few of America's greatest men.
"Judge James's book had but a
limited circulation and it has long been a very scarce
book."
Judge James's book had but a limited circulation and it has
long been a very scarce book; hence it has not been the factor it should have
been in correcting the fabrications in Weems's book.
Judge James's book is not entirely free from error. He begins
his first chapter with the statement: "Francis Marion was born at Winyaw, near
Georgetown, South-Carolina, in the year 1732." Marion's family had no
connection with Georgetown until six or seven years after Marion's birth, when
his father moved with his family to that town from St. John's Parish, Berkeley,
where he had resided since marriage. His wife's family resided in the adjoining
St. James's Parish, Goose Creek, and, as there is no definite record of the
place of Marion's birth, it could have been at the home of either family. The
year of his birth cannot be fixed as 1732. The inscription on his tombstone
gives the date of his death as February 27, 1795, "in the sixty-third year of
his age." If he had been born at any time between January 1st and February 26,
1733, he would have been in the 63rd year of his age February 27, 1795.
William Dobein James' Introduction
A view of the first settlement of the French
Protestants on the Santee. Lawson's account of them. The ancestors of General
Marion emigrate among them.
The revocation of the edict of Nantz, by Lewis XIV., though
highly detrimental to France, proved beneficial to Holland, England and other
European countries; which received the protestant refugees, and encouraged
their arts and industry. The effects of this unjust and bigoted decree,
extended themselves likewise to North America, but more particularly to South
Carolina: About seventeen years after its first settlement, in the year 1690,
and a short time subsequently, between seventy and eighty French families,
fleeing from the bloody persecution excited against them in their mother
country, settled on the banks of the Santee. Among these were the ancestors of
General FRANCIS MARION. These families extended themselves at first only from
the lower ferry at South Santee, in St. James' parish, up to within a few miles
of Lenud's ferry, and back from the river into the parish of St. Dennis, called
the Orange quarter.
From their first settlement, they appear to have conciliated
their neighbours, the Sewee and Santee Indians; and to have submitted to their
rigorous fate with that resignation and cheerfulness which is characteristic of
their nation. -- Many must have been the hardships endured by them in settling
upon a soil covered with woods, abounding in serpents and beasts of prey,
naturally sterile, and infested by a climate the most insalubrious. For a
picture of their sufferings read the language of one of them, Judith Manigault,
bred a lady in ease and affluence: -- "Since leaving France we have experienced
every kind of affliction, disease, pestilence, famine, poverty, hard labour; I
have been for six months together without tasting bread, working the ground
like a slave." They cultivated the barren high lands, and at first naturally
attempted to raise wheat, barley and other European grains upon them, until
better taught by the Indians. Tradition informs us, that men and their wives
worked together in felling trees, building houses, making fences, and grubbing
up their grounds, until their settlements were formed; and afterwards continued
their labours at the whip-saw,1 and in burning tar
for market. Such was their industry, that in fourteen years after their first
settlement, and according to the first certain account of them, they were in
prosperous circumstances. In the year 1701, John Lawson, then Surveyor General
of the province, visited these enterprising people, and as there are but two
copies of his "Journal of a thousand miles travelled through several nations of
Indians", known at present to be in existence, no apology appears to be
necessary for presenting extracts of the most interesting parts of it to the
reader:
"On December 28th, 1700, I began my voyage for North Carolina,
from Charleston, in a large canoe. At four in the afternoon, at half flood, we
passed over the breach through the marsh, leaving Sullivan's Island on our
starboard; the first place we designed for was Santee river, on which there is
a colony of French protestants, allowed and encouraged by the lords
proprietors." -- After passing through Sewee bay and up Santee, the mouth of
which was fresh, he visited the Sewees; "formerly," he says, "a large nation,
though now very much decreased, since the English have seated their lands, and
all other nations of Indians are observed to partake of the same fate.
"With hard rowing we got that night (11th January, 1701,) to
Mons. Eugee's2 house, which stands about fifteen
miles up the river, being the first christian dwelling we met withal in that
settlement, and were very courteously received by him and his wife. Many of the
French follow a trade with the Indians, living very conveniently for that
interest. Here are about seventy families seated on this river, who live as
decently and happily as any planters in these southward parts of America. The
French being a temperate, industrious people, some of them bringing very little
effects, yet by their endeavours and mutual assistance among themselves (which
is highly commendable) have outstript our English, who brought with them larger
fortunes. We lay all that night at Mons. Eugee's,2
and the next morning set out further to go the remainder of our voyage by land.
"At noon we came up with several French plantations, meeting
with several creeks by the way: the French were very officious in assisting
with their small dories, to pass over these waters, (whom we met coming from
their church) being all of them very clean and decent in their apparel -- their
houses and plantations suitable in neatness and contrivance. They are all of
the same opinion with the church of Geneva. Towards the afternoon we came to
Mons. L'Jandro's,3 where we got our dinner. We got
that night to Mons. Galliar's,4 who lives in a very
curious contrived house, built of brick and stone, which is gotten near that
place. Near here, comes in the road from Charleston and the rest of the English
settlement, it being a very good way by land and not above thirty-six miles."5
After this, our author gives a long description of his
difficulty and danger in crossing the Santee in a small canoe, in time of a
freshet. He then goes on as follows: -- "We intended for Mons. Galliar's jun.
but were lost *************. When we got to the house we found several of the
French inhabitants, who treated us very courteously; wondering about our
undertaking such a voyage through a country inhabited by none but savages, and
them of so different nations and tongues. After we had refreshed ourselves, we
parted from a very kind, loving, affable people, who wished us a safe and
prosperous voyage."
Our traveller had now arrived at the extreme boundary of the
white population of South Carolina, and consequently of the United States, and
this was but forty miles from Charleston. In the course of one hundred and
twenty years what a change, and what a subject for reflection! But, to return
to the French refugees. The same persevering industry and courteous manners
which distinguished the ancestors, were handed down to their children, and are
still conspicuous among their descendants of the third and fourth generations.
Most of them may be classed among our useful and honourable citizens, and many
have highly distinguished themselves in the state, both in civil and military
affairs: but in the latter character, the subject of these memoirs, General
FRANCIS MARION, stands forth the most prominent and illustrious example.6
1 Gen. Horry states,
that his grandfather and grandmother commenced the handsome fortune they left,
by working together at the whip-saw.
2 Huger, who lived in
the fork between South Santee and Wambaw Creek.
3
Gendron.
4
Gaillard's.
5 Near this place
the French laid out a town, and called it Jamestown; whence the name St.
James', Santee.
6 After leaving the
house of Bartholomew Gaillard, jun. on the east side of Santee, Mr. Lawson saw
no more settlements of the whites. He visited the Santee Indians, who, from his
description of the country, must have lived about Nelson's ferry and Scott's
lake. In passing up the river, the Indian path led over a hill, where he saw,
as he says, "the most amazing prospect I had seen since I had been in Carolina.
We travelled by a swamp side, which swamp, I believe to be no less than twenty
miles over; the other side being, as far as I could well discern; there
appearing great ridges of mountains bearing from us W.N.W. One Alp, with a top
like a sugar loaf, advanced its head above the rest very considerably; the day
was very serene, which gave us the advantage of seeing a long way; these
mountains were clothed all over with trees, which seemed to us to be very large
timbers. At the sight of this fair prospect we stayed all night; our Indian
going before half an hour, provided three fat turkeys e'er we got up to him."
The prospect he describes is evidently the one seen from the Santee Hills; the
old Indian path passed over a point of one of these at Captain Baker's
plantation, from which the prospect extends more than twenty miles; and the
Alp, which was so conspicuous, must have been Cook's Mount, opposite
Stateburgh. -- Our traveller afterwards visited the Congaree, the Wateree, and
Waxhaw Indians, in South Carolina, and divers tribes in North Carolina, as far
as Roanoke; and it is melancholy to think, that all of these appear to be now
extinct. They treated him with their best; such as bear meat and oil, venison,
turkeys, maize, cow peas, chinquepins, hickory nuts and acorns. The Kings and
Queens of the different tribes always took charge of him as their
guest.
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