Battle of Kings Mountain

Battle of Kings Mountain
Part of the American Revolutionary War

Engraving depicting the death of Patrick Ferguson, from a painting by Alonzo Chappel
DateOctober 7, 1780
LocationKings Mountain, South Carolina
Result Decisive Patriot victory[1]
Belligerents
United States Patriot militia Kingdom of Great Britain Loyalist militia
Commanders and leaders
James Johnston
William Campbell
John Sevier
Frederick Hambright
Joseph McDowell
Benjamin Cleveland
James Williams 
Isaac Shelby
Joseph Winston
William Chronicle 
Patrick Ferguson 
Abraham DePeyster
Strength
900 (+500 nearby) 1,100 (+200 nearby)
Casualties and losses
29 killed
58 wounded[2]
290 killed
163 wounded
668 captured[2]

The Battle of Kings Mountain was a decisive victory in South Carolina for the Patriot militia over the Loyalist militia, in the Southern Campaign, of the American Revolutionary War. The battle took place on October 7, 1780, 9 miles (14 km) south of the present-day town of Kings Mountain, North Carolina in rural Cherokee County, South Carolina, where the Patriot militia defeated the Loyalist militia commanded by British Major Patrick Ferguson of the 71st Foot.

Ferguson had arrived in North Carolina in early September 1780 to recruit troops for the Loyalist militia and protect the flank of Lord Cornwallis' main force. Ferguson issued a challenge to the rebel militias to lay down their arms or suffer the consequences. In response, the Patriot militias led by Benjamin Cleveland, James Johnston, William Campbell, John Sevier, Joseph McDowell and Isaac Shelby rallied for an attack on Ferguson.

Receiving intelligence on the oncoming attack, Ferguson decided to retreat to the safety of Lord Cornwallis' army. However, the Patriots caught up with the Loyalists at Kings Mountain near the border with South Carolina. Achieving a complete surprise, the Patriot militiamen attacked and surrounded the Loyalists, inflicting heavy casualties. After an hour of battle, Ferguson was fatally shot while trying to break the rebel line, after which his men surrendered. Some Patriots gave no quarter until the rebel officers re-established control over their men; they were said to be seeking revenge for alleged killings by Banastre Tarleton's men of militiamen at the Battle of Waxhaws, under the slogan "Remember Tarleton's Quarter." Although victorious, the Patriots had to retreat quickly from the area for fear of Cornwallis' advance. Later they executed nine Loyalist prisoners after a short trial.

The battle was a pivotal moment in the Southern campaign. The surprising victory of the American patriot militia over the Loyalists came after a string of rebel defeats at the hands of Lord Cornwallis, and greatly raised the Patriots' morale. With Ferguson dead and his Loyalist militia destroyed, Cornwallis was forced to abandon his plan to invade North Carolina and retreated into South Carolina.

Prelude to battle

Major Patrick Ferguson was appointed Inspector of Militia on May 22, 1780. His task was to march to the old Tryon County area, raise and organize Loyalist units from the Tory population of the Carolina Backcountry, and protect the left flank of Lord Cornwallis' main body at Charlotte, North Carolina.[3][4]

Battle of Musgrove's Mill

On the morning of August 18, 1780 two hundred mounted Patriot partisans under joint command of Colonels Isaac Shelby, James Williams, and Elijah Clarke prepared to raid a Loyalist camp at Musgrove’s Mill, which controlled the local grain supply and guarded a ford of the Enoree River. The Battle of Musgrove Mill, August 19, 1780 occurred near a ford of the Enoree River, near the present-day border between Spartanburg, Laurens and Union Counties in South Carolina.[5] The Patriots anticipated surprising a garrison of about an equal number of Loyalists, but a local farmer informed them that the Tories had recently been reinforced by about a hundred Loyalist militia and two hundred provincial regulars on their way to join British Major Patrick Ferguson.[6] The whole battle took perhaps an hour and within that period, sixty-three Tories were killed, an unknown number wounded, and seventy were taken prisoner.[7] The Patriots lost only about four dead and twelve wounded.[8]

Some Whig leaders briefly considered attacking the Tory stronghold at Ninety Six, South Carolina; but they hurriedly dispersed after learning that a large Patriot army had been defeated at Camden three days previous.

Pursuit of Shelby

Shelby’s forces covered sixty miles with Ferguson in hot pursuit before making their escape.[9] In the wake of General Horatio Gates’ blundering defeat at Camden, the victory at Musgrove Mill heartened the Patriots and served as further evidence that the South Carolina backcountry could not be held by the Tories.

Shelby and his Overmountain Men crossed back over the Appalachian Mountains and retreated back into the territory of the Watauga Association at Sycamore Shoals in present day Elizabethton, Tennessee, and by the next month on September 25, 1780, Colonels Shelby, John Sevier, and Charles McDowell and their 600 Overmountain Men had combined forces with Col. William Campbell and his 400 Virginia men at the Sycamore Shoals muster in advance of the October 7, 1780 Battle of Kings Mountain north of present day Blacksburg, South Carolina in North Carolina.

On September 2, Ferguson and the militia he had already recruited marched west in pursuit of Shelby toward the Appalachian Mountain hill country on what is now the Tennessee/North Carolina border.[10] By September 10, Ferguson had established a base camp at Gilbert Town, North Carolina and, according to Shelby[11] issued a challenge to the Patriot leaders to lay down their arms or he would "lay waste to their country with fire and sword."[12]

North Carolina Patriot militia leaders Isaac Shelby and John Sevier, from the Washington District (now present day northeast Tennessee), met and agreed to lead their militiamen against him.[13]

Muster at Sycamore Shoals

Patriot leaders also sent word to a Virginia militia leader, William Campbell, asking him to join them at Sycamore S[13] Campbell called on Benjamin Cleveland to bring his Wilkes County, North Carolina militia to the rendezvous.[14] The detachments of Shelby, Sevier and Campbell were met by 160 North Carolina militiamen led by Charles McDowell and his brother Joseph.[14] Campbell's cousin, Arthur Campbell, brought 200 more Virginians.[15] About 1,100 volunteers from southwest Virginia and today's northeast Tennessee, known as the "Overmountain Men" because they had settled into the wilderness west of the Appalachian Mountains ridgeline, mustered at the rendezvous on September 25, 1780, at Sycamore Shoals near the modern city of Elizabethton, Tennessee. Their movement had been made possible by easing tensions with the Cherokee, thanks to diplomacy by Benjamin Cleveland's brother-in-law, Indian agent Joseph Martin.[16][17][18] The Overmountain Men crossed Roan Mountain the next day, and proceeded in a southerly direction for about thirteen days in anticipation of fighting the British Loyalist forces. By September 30, they had reached Quaker Meadows, the Burke County, North Carolina home of the McDowell brothers, where they united with Benjamin Cleveland and 350 men.[19] Now 1400 strong, the Patriots marched to South Mountain, North Carolina,[20] The five colonels leading the Patriot force (Shelby, Sevier, William Campbell, Joseph McDowell and Cleveland) chose William Campbell as the nominal commander, but they agreed that all five would act in council to command their combined army.[21]

Gathering of Overmountain Men at Sycamore Shoals, a black and white reproduction of Lloyd Branson's 1915 depiction of the Patriot militias joining up

Meanwhile, two deserters from the Patriot militia reached Patrick Ferguson and informed him of the large body of militia advancing towards him. Waiting three days for reasons that are still unclear, Ferguson ordered a retreat to Lord Cornwallis and the British main forces in Charlotte, sending a message to Cornwallis requesting reinforcements. The request did not reach Cornwallis until one day after the battle. On October 1, Ferguson reached North Carolina's Broad River, where he issued another pugnacious public letter, calling the local militia to join him lest they be "pissed upon by a set of mongrels" (the Overmountain Men).[22]

On October 4, the Patriot militia reached Ferguson's former camp at Gilbert Town,[23] where thirty Georgia militiamen joined them, anxious for action.[24] On October 6, they reached Cowpens, South Carolina, (site of the future Battle of Cowpens), where they received word that Ferguson was east of them, heading towards Charlotte and Cornwallis. They hurried to catch him.[25] Rebel spies reported Ferguson was making camp on Kings Mountain with some 1200 men.[26] Ferguson, rather than pushing on until he reached Charlotte and safety (just a day's march away), camped at Kings Mountain and sent Cornwallis another letter asking for reinforcements.[27] Kings Mountain is one of many rocky forested hills in the upper Piedmont, near the border between North and South Carolina. It is shaped like a footprint with the highest point at the heel, a narrow instep, and a broad rounded toe. The Loyalists camped on a ridge west of Kings Pinnacle, the highest point on Kings Mountain.

Needing to hurry, the Patriot militia put 900 men on horseback and rode for Kings Mountain.[26] They left immediately, marching through the night of the 6th and morning of the 7th, even though the rain never stopped. By sunrise of the 7th, they forded the Broad River, fifteen miles from Kings Mountain.[28] By early afternoon they arrived and immediately surrounded the ridge and attacked.[29]

Battle

Don Troiani's depiction - "Colonel Cleveland's War Prize Oct. 7, 1780"

The battle opened about 3 p.m.,[30] when the 900 Patriots (including John Crockett, father of Davy Crockett), approached the steep base of the western ridge. They formed eight detachments of 100 to 200 men each. Ferguson was unaware that the Patriots had caught up to him and his 1,100 men. He was the only regular British soldier in his command,[31] composed entirely of Loyalist Carolina militia (except for the 100 or so red-uniformed Loyalist soldiers from New York). He had not thought it necessary to fortify his camp.[32]

The Patriots caught the Loyalists by surprise. Loyalist officer Alexander Chesney later wrote he didn't know the Patriots were anywhere near them until the shooting started.[32] As the screaming Patriots charged up the hill, Captain DePeyster turned to Ferguson and said, "These things are ominous — these are the damned yelling boys!"[30] Two parties, led by Colonels John Sevier and William Campbell, assaulted the mountains "heel"—the smallest in area, but its highest point. The other detachments, led by Colonels Shelby, Williams, Lacey, Cleveland, Hambright, Winston and McDowell, attacked the main Loyalist position, surrounding the "ball" base beside the "heel" crest of the mountain.[33]

No one in the Patriot army held command once the fighting started. Each detachment fought independently under the previously agreed to plan to surround and destroy the Loyalists.[34] The Patriots crept up the hill and fired from behind rocks and trees. Ferguson rallied his troops and launched a desperate bayonet-charge against Campbell and Sevier. Lacking bayonets, the Patriots ran down the hill and into the woods. Campbell soon rallied his troops, returned to the hill, and resumed firing. Ferguson ordered two more bayonet charges during the battle. This became the pattern of the battle; the Patriots would charge up the hill, then the Tories would charge down the hill with fixed bayonets, driving the Patriots off the slopes and into the woods. Once the charge was spent and the Tories returned to their positions, the Patriots would reform in the woods, return to the base of the hill, and charge up the hill again.[34] During one of the charges, Colonel Williams was killed, and Colonel McDowell was wounded. Firing was difficult for the Loyalists, since the Patriots constantly moved using cover and concealment to their advantage. Furthermore, the downhill angle of the hill contributed to the Loyalists overshooting their marks.[35]

After an hour of combat,[36] Loyalist casualties were heavy. Ferguson rode back and forth across the hill, blowing a silver whistle he used to signal charges. Shelby, Sevier and Campbell reached the top of the hill behind the Loyalist position and attacked Ferguson's rear. The Loyalists were driven back into their camp, where they began to surrender. Ferguson drew his sword and hacked down any small white flags that he saw popping up, but he appeared to know that the end was near. In an attempt to rally his faltering men, Ferguson shouted out "Hurrah, brave boys, the day is ours!" [sic][37] He gathered a few officers together and tried to cut through the Patriot ring, but Sevier's men fired a volley and Ferguson was shot and dragged by his horse behind the Patriot line.[38] There he was confronted by an opposing officer, who demanded a surrender from the major. Ferguson shot and killed the man with his pistol, but was shot dead by multiple Patriots on the spot. When the Patriots recovered his corpse, they counted seven bullet wounds.[39]

Seeing their leader fall, the Loyalists began to surrender. Some Patriots did not want to take prisoners, as they were eager to avenge the Battle of Waxhaws or 'Tarleton's Quarter,' in which Banastre Tarleton's forces killed a sizable number of Abraham Buford's Continental soldiers after the latter tried to surrender. (At Waxhaws, Tarleton's horse was shot, pinning him to the ground and leading his men to believe their commanding officer had been killed under a white flag of surrender.)[40] Also, other Patriots were seemingly unaware that the Loyalists were trying to surrender.[37]

Loyalist Captain Abraham DePeyster, in command after Ferguson was killed, sent out an emissary with a white flag, asking for quarter. For several minutes, the Patriots rejected DePeyster's white flag and continued firing, many of them shouting, "Give 'em Tarleton's Quarter!" and "Give them Buford's play!" A significant number of the surrendering Loyalists were killed.[41] When DePeyster sent out a second white flag, a few of the rebel officers, including Campbell and Sevier, ran forward and took control by ordering their men to cease fire.[42] They took about 800 Loyalist prisoners.[43]

Aftermath

Map spot for Blacksburg, South Carolina

The Battle of Kings Mountain lasted 65 minutes.[44] The Loyalists suffered 290 killed, 163 wounded, and 668 taken prisoner. The Patriot militia suffered 29 killed and 58 wounded. The Patriots had to move out quickly for fear that Cornwallis would advance to meet them.[45] Loyalist prisoners well enough to walk were herded to camps several miles from the battlefield. The dead were buried in shallow graves and wounded were left on the field to die. Ferguson's corpse was later reported to have been desecrated and wrapped in oxhide before burial.[46] Both victors and captives came near to starvation on the march due to a lack of supplies in the hastily organized Patriot army.[45]

On October 14, the retreating Patriot force held drumhead courtmartials of various Loyalists on various charges (treason, desertion from Patriot militias, incitement of Indian rebellion). Passing through the Sunshine community in what is now Rutherford County, N.C., the retreat halted on the property of the Biggerstaff family. Aaron Biggerstaff, a Loyalist, had fought in the battle and been mortally wounded. His brother Benjamin was a Patriot and was being held as a prisoner-of-war on a British ship docked at Charleston, S.C. Their cousin John Moore was the Loyalist commander at the earlier Battle of Ramsour's Mill (modern Lincolnton, N.C.), in which many of the same troops had participated on both sides.

While stopped on the Biggerstaff land, the rebels convicted 36 Loyalist prisoners. Some were testified against by Patriots who had previously fought alongside them and later changed sides. Nine of the prisoners were hanged before Isaac Shelby brought an end to the proceedings.[47] His decision to halt the executions came after an impassioned plea for mercy from one of the Biggerstaff women, although accounts vary as to whether it was Martha Biggerstaff, Aaron's wife, or Mary Van Zant Biggerstaff, Benjamin's wife.[48] As the Patriot army dispersed, all but 130 Loyalist prisoners escaped, while being led single file through the woods, over the next few days before the column finally reached camp at Salem, North Carolina.[49]

Kings Mountain was a pivotal moment in the history of the American Revolution. Coming after a series of disasters and humiliations in the Carolinas—the fall of Charleston and capture of the American army there, the destruction of another American army at the Battle of Camden, the Waxhaws Massacre—the surprising, decisive victory at Kings Mountain was a great boost to Patriot morale. The Tories of the Carolina back country were broken as a military force.[50] Additionally, the destruction of Ferguson's command and the looming threat of Patriot militia in the mountains caused Lord Cornwallis to cancel his plans to invade North Carolina; he instead evacuated Charlotte and retreated to South Carolina.[50] He would not return to North Carolina until early 1781, when he was chasing Nathanael Greene after the Americans had dealt British forces another defeat at the Battle of Cowpens.

In The Winning of the West, Theodore Roosevelt wrote of Kings Mountain, "This brilliant victory marked the turning point of the American Revolution." Thomas Jefferson called it, "The turn of the tide of success." President Herbert Hoover at Kings Mountain said,

"This is a place of inspiring memories. Here less than a thousand men, inspired by the urge of freedom, defeated a superior force intrenched in this strategic position. This small band of Patriots turned back a dangerous invasion well designed to separate and dismember the united Colonies. It was a little army and a little battle, but it was of mighty portent. History has done scant justice to its significance, which rightly should place it beside Lexington, Bunker Hill, Trenton and Yorktown."[51]

In 1931, the Congress of the United States created the Kings Mountain National Military Park at the site of the battle. The park headquarters is in Blacksburg, South Carolina, and hosts hundreds of thousands of people each year.[52]

See also

Footnotes

  1. Mooney, James (1995). Myths of the Cherokee. Courier Dover Publications. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-486-28907-6.
  2. 1 2 Dameron p.76
  3. Buchanan, 202
  4. Dameron, 22
  5. Musgrove Mill State Historic Site website.
  6. John Buchanan, The Road to Guilford Courthouse: The American Revolution in the Carolinas (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1997), 177. "Provincial regulars" were Americans who enlisted in British army units, as opposed to British regulars and Tory militia. Edgar, 153.
  7. Buchanan and Edgar give the losses as 63 killed, 90 wounded, 70 taken prisoner. Buchanan, 178; Edgar, 115. The figures in the text are those from a wayside at Musgrove Mill State Historic Site.
  8. Buchanan gives Patriot losses as four killed and seven wounded. Buchanan, 179.
  9. Edgar, 115, Buchanan, 179: "In forty-eight hours they had completed two forced marches, had neither slept nor rested, and had fought and won against a superior force an action renowned for its ferocity."
  10. Buchanan, 204
  11. "Kings Mountain and Its Heroes", Lyman C. Draper, 1881. ISBN 1-57072-060-6. Reprinted Overmountain Press, 1996. Johnson City, Tennessee.
  12. Buchanan, 208
  13. 1 2 Buchanan, 210–211
  14. 1 2 Buchanan, 212
  15. Buchanan, 213
  16. Fleenor, Lawrence J. (January 2001). "General Joseph Martin". DanielBooneTrail.com. Archived from the original on 20 September 2010. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  17. The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography. James T. White & Company. 1897. Retrieved 2010-08-05.
  18. Publications of the Southern History Association, Volume 4. Southern History Association. 1900. Retrieved 2010-08-05.
  19. Buchanan, 215
  20. Buchanan, 217
  21. Buchanan, 218
  22. Buchanan, 219
  23. Buchanan, 220
  24. "Kings Mountain Georgia Participants". Georgia Sons of the American Revolution. Archived from the original on February 9, 2009. Retrieved October 16, 2010.
  25. Buchanan, 221
  26. 1 2 Buchanan, 223
  27. Buchanan, 225
  28. Buchanan, 225-6
  29. Buchanan, 227
  30. 1 2 Dameron, 57
  31. Allen, p.89
  32. 1 2 Buchanan, 229
  33. "The Battle of King's Mountain 1780". British battles. Archived from the original on 29 October 2010. Retrieved October 16, 2010.
  34. 1 2 Buchanan, 230
  35. Buchanan, 231-2
  36. "The Battle of King's Mountain". Tennesseans in the Revolutionary War. TNGen Web Project. Archived from the original on 14 September 2010. Retrieved October 16, 2010.
  37. 1 2 Hibbert, 292
  38. Buchanan, 232
  39. Buchanan, 234
  40. Fredrickson p.662
  41. Wallace, 229
  42. Buchanan, 233
  43. Celebration of the Battle of King's Mountain, October, 1855. Miller & Melton, Yorkville Enquirer. 1855. p. 100. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  44. Dameron, 75
  45. 1 2 Buchanan, 237
  46. Hibbert, 293
  47. Buchanan, 238-9
  48. Buchanan, 240, 340
  49. 1 2 Buchanan, 241
  50. Herbert Hoover address at Kings Mountain, Oct. 7, 1930, The American Presidency Project
  51. "Kings Mountain National Military Park". National Park Service. Archived from the original on 14 October 2010. Retrieved October 16, 2010.

References

  • Allen, Thomas B. (2010). Tories: Fighting for the King in America's First Civil War. New York: Harper Collins, Inc. 
  • Buchanan, John (1997). The Road To Guilford Court House: The American Revolution in the Carolinas. New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-32716-6. 
  • Dameron, J. David (2003). Kings Mountain: The Defeat of the Loyalists, October 7, 1780. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-81194-4. 
  • Hibbert, Christopher (1990). Redcoats and Rebels: The war for America 1770–1781. New York: Norton/Grafton. ISBN 0-393-02895-X. 
  • Russell, C. P. (July 1940). "The American Rifle: At the Battle of Kings Mountain". The Regional Review. Richmond, Va: National Park Service, Region One. V (1): 15–21. Archived from the original on 2007-07-03. 
  • Wallace, Willard (1964). Appeal to Arms: A Military History of the American Revolution. Chicago: Quadrangle. 

Further reading

External links

Coordinates: 35°07′10″N 81°23′37″W / 35.11935°N 81.39359°W / 35.11935; -81.39359

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