The failure of the combined forces
of France and America before the walls of Savannah,
left the cause of the latter, in the South, in much
worse condition than before. The event served
to depress the Carolinians, and in the same degree,
to elevate and encourage the enemy. The allies
withdrew to their ships, and, shortly after, from the
coast. General Lincoln, with the American army,
retreated to the heights of Ebenezer, and thence to
Sheldon. Proceeding from this place to Charleston,
he left Marion in command of the army. On the
thirty-first of January, 1780, he writes to the latter
as follows: “The state of affairs is such
as to make it necessary that we order our force to
a point as much and as soon as possible. No troops
will be kept in the field except two hundred Light
Infantry and the Horse (Washington’s).
You will therefore please to select from the three
regiments with you, two hundred of your best men,
and those who are best clothed, and organize them
into corps, with proper officers. All the remainder,
with the baggage of the whole (saving such as is absolutely
necessary for light troops), will march immediately
for this town. You will please take command of
the light infantry until Lieut. Col. Henderson
arrives, which I expect will be in a few days.
After that, I wish to see you as soon as possible
in Charleston.”
In the February following, Marion
was dispatched to Bacon’s Bridge on Ashley river,
where Moultrie had established a camp for the reception
of the militia of the neighborhood, as well as those
which had been summoned from the interior. It
was to Marion that Lincoln chiefly looked for the
proper drilling of the militia. In his hands they
lost the rude and inefficient character, the inexpert
and spiritless manner, which, under ordinary commanders,
always distinguish them. Feeling sure of their
Captain, he, in turn, rendered them confident of themselves.
Speaking of Marion’s “Patience with
the militia” a phrase of great importance
in this connection Horry, in his own memoirs,
which now lie before us, adds, “No officer in
the Union was better calculated to command them, and
to have done more than he did." Lincoln knew his
value. The admirable training of the Second South
Carolina Regiment had already done high honor to his
skill as a disciplinarian. He discovered the
secret which regularly bred military men are slow to
discern, that, without patience, in the training of
citizen soldiers for immediate service, they are incorrigible;
and patience with them, on the part of a commanding
officer, is neither inconsistent with their claims
nor with their proper efficiency.
The accumulation of troops at Bacon’s
Bridge was made with the view to the defence of Charleston,
now threatened by the enemy. Many concurring
causes led to the leaguer of that city. Its conquest
was desirable on many accounts, and circumstances
had already shown that this was not a matter of serious
difficulty. The invasion of Prevost the year before,
which had so nearly proved successful; the little resistance
which had been offered to him while traversing more
than one hundred miles of country contiguous to the
Capital; and the rich spoils which, on his retreat,
had been borne off by his army, betrayed at once the
wealth and weakness of that region. The possession
of Savannah, where British Government had been regularly
re-established, and the entire, if not totally undisturbed
control of Georgia, necessarily facilitated the invasion
of the sister province. South Carolina was now
a frontier, equally exposed to the British in Georgia,
and the Tories of Florida and North Carolina.
The means of defence in her power were now far fewer
than when Prevost made his attempt on Charleston.
The Southern army was, in fact, totally broken up.
The Carolina regiments had seen hard service, guarding
the frontier, and contending with the British in Georgia.
They were thinned by battle and sickness to a mere
handful. The Virginia and North Carolina regiments
had melted away, as the term for which they had enlisted,
had expired. The Georgia regiment, captured by
the British in detail, were perishing in their floating
prisons. The weakness of the patriots necessarily
increased the audacity, with the strength, of their
enemies. The loyalists, encouraged by the progress
of Prevost, and the notorious inefficiency of the
Whigs, were now gathering in formidable bodies, in
various quarters, operating in desultory bands, or
crowding to swell the columns of the British army.
All things concurred to encourage the attempt of the
enemy on Charleston. Its possession, with that
of Savannah, would not only enable them to complete
their ascendency in the two provinces to which these
cities belonged, but would probably give them North
Carolina also. Virginia then, becoming the frontier,
it would be easy, with the cooperation of an army
ascending the Chesapeake, to traverse the entire South
with their legions, detaching it wholly from the federal
compact. Such was the British hope, and such
their policy. There was yet another motive for
the siege of Charleston, considered without reference
to collateral or contingent events. Esteemed
erroneously as a place of great security an
error that arose in all probability from the simple
fact of the successful defence of Fort Moultrie it
was crowded with valuable magazines. As a trading
city, particularly while the commerce of the North
remained interrupted, it had become a place of great
business. It was a stronghold for privateers
and their prizes, and always contained stores and
shipping of immense value.
The temptations to its conquest were
sufficiently numerous. Ten thousand choice troops,
with a large and heavy train of artillery, were accordingly
dispatched from New York for its investment, which
was begun in February, 1780, and conducted by the
Commander-in-Chief of the British forces, Sir Henry
Clinton, in person. He conducted his approaches
with a caution highly complimentary to the besieged.
The fortifications were only field works, and might
have been overrun in less than five days by an audacious
enemy. The regular troops within the city were
not above two thousand men. The citizen militia
increased the number to nearly four thousand.
For such an extent of lines as encircled the place,
the adequate force should not have been less than that
of the enemy. The fortifications, when the British
first landed their ‘materiel’, were in
a dilapidated and unfinished state, and, at that time,
the defenders, apart from the citizens, scarcely exceeded
eight hundred men; while the small pox, making its
appearance within the walls, for the first time for
twenty years an enemy much more dreaded
than the British, effectually discouraged
the country militia from coming to the assistance
of the citizens. Under these circumstances, the
conquest would have been easy to an active and energetic
foe. But Sir Henry does not seem to have been
impatient for his laurels. He was willing that
they should mature gradually, and he sat down to a
regular and formal investment.
It was an error of the Carolinians,
under such circumstances, to risk the fortunes of
the State, and the greater part of its regular military
strength, in a besieged town; a still greater to do
so in defiance of such difficulties as attended the
defence. The policy which determined the resolution
was a concession to the citizens, in spite of all
military opinion. The city might have been yielded
to the enemy, and the State preserved, or, which was
the same thing, the troops. The loss of four
thousand men from the ranks of active warfare, was
the great and substantial loss, the true source, in
fact, of most of the miseries and crimes by which
the very bowels of the country were subsequently torn
and distracted.
It was the great good fortune of the
State that Francis Marion was not among those who
fell into captivity in the fall of Charleston.
He had marched into the city from Dorchester, when
his active services were needed for its defence; but
while the investment was in progress, and before it
had been fully completed, an event occurred to him,
an accident which was, no doubt, very much deplored
at the time, by which his services, lost for the present,
were subsequently secured for the country. Dining
with a party of friends at a house in Tradd-street,
the host, with that mistaken hospitality which has
too frequently changed a virtue to a vice, turned
the key upon his guests, to prevent escape, till each
individual should be gorged with wine. Though
an amiable man, Marion was a strictly temperate one.
He was not disposed to submit to this too common form
of social tyranny; yet not willing to resent the breach
of propriety by converting the assembly into a bull-ring,
he adopted a middle course, which displayed equally
the gentleness and firmness of his temper. Opening
a window, he coolly threw himself into the street.
He was unfortunate in the attempt; the apartment was
on the second story, the height considerable, and
the adventure cost him a broken ankle. The injury
was a severe and shocking one, and, for the time,
totally unfitted him for service. He left the
city in a litter, while the passage to the country
still remained open for retreat, in obedience to an
order of General Lincoln for the departure of all idle
mouths, “all supernumerary officers, and all
officers unfit for duty.” Marion retired
to his residence in St. John’s parish. Here,
suffering in mind and body, he awaited with impatience
the progress of events, with which, however much he
might sympathize, he could not share. His humiliation
at this unavoidable but melancholy inaction, may be
imagined from what we know of his habits and his patriotism.
The siege of Charleston, in consequence
of the firm bearing of the besieged, and the cautious
policy of the British Government, was protracted long
after the works had been pronounced untenable.
It was yielded unwillingly to the conqueror, only
after all resistance had proved in vain. It fell
by famine, rather than by the arms of the enemy.
The defence was highly honorable to the besieged.
It lasted six weeks, in which they had displayed equal
courage and endurance. The consequences of this
misfortune leave it somewhat doubtful, whether the
determination to defend the city to the last extremity,
was not the result of a correct policy; considering
less its own loss, and that of the army, than the
effect of the former upon the rustic population.
Certainly, the capture of the army was a vital misfortune
to the southern States; yet the loss of the city itself
was of prodigious effect upon the scattered settlements
of the country. The character and resolve of
the capital cities, in those days, were very much the
sources of the moral strength of the interior.
Sparsely settled, with unfrequent opportunities of
communion with one another, the minds of the forest
population turned naturally for their tone and direction
to the capital city. The active attrition of
rival and conflicting minds, gives, in all countries,
to the population of a dense community, an intellectual
superiority over those who live remote, and feel none
of the constant moral strifes to which the citizen
is subject. In South Carolina, Charleston had
been the seat of the original ‘movement’,
had incurred the first dangers, achieved the first
victories, and, in all public proceedings where action
was desirable, had always led off in the van.
To preserve intact, and from overthrow, the seat of
ancient authority and opinion, was surely a policy
neither selfish nor unwise. Perhaps, after all,
the grand error was, in not making the preparations
for defence adequate to the object. The resources
of the State were small, and these had been diminished
wofully in succoring her neighbors, and in small border
strifes, which the borderers might have been taught
to manage for themselves. The military force of
the State, under any circumstances, could not have
contended on equal terms with the ten thousand well-appointed
regulars of Sir Henry Clinton. The assistance
derived from Virginia and North Carolina was little
more than nominal, calculated rather to swell the
triumph of the victor than to retard his successes.
If the movements of the British were
slow, and deficient in military enterprise, where
Sir Henry Clinton commanded in person, such could
not be said of them, after the conquest of Charleston
was effected. The commander-in-chief was succeeded
by Earl Cornwallis, and his career was certainly obnoxious
to no such reproaches. We shall have more serious
charges to bring against him. Of the gross abuse
of power, wanton tyrannies, cruel murders, and
most reckless disregard of decency and right, by which
the course of the British was subsequently distinguished,
we shall say no more than will suffice to show, in
what dangers, through what difficulties, and under
what stimulating causes, Francis Marion rose in arms,
when everything appeared to be lost.
Charleston in possession of the enemy,
they proceeded with wonderful activity to use all
means in their power, for exhausting the resources,
and breaking down the spirit of the country. Their
maxim was that of habitual tyranny “might
is right”. They seemed to recognize no other
standard. The articles of capitulation, the laws
of nations, private treaty, the dictates of humanity
and religion, were all equally set at naught.
The wealth of private families, slaves by
thousands, were hurried into the waists
of British ships, as the legitimate spoils of war.
The latter found a market in the West India islands;
the prisoners made by the fall of Charleston were,
in defiance of the articles of capitulation, crowded
into prison-ships, from whence they were only released
by death, or by yielding to those arguments of their
keepers which persuaded them to enlist in British
regiments, to serve in other countries. Many
yielded to these arguments, with the simple hope of
escape from the horrors by which they were surrounded.
When arts and arguments failed to overcome the inflexibility
of these wretched prisoners, compulsion was resorted
to, and hundreds were forced from their country, shipped
to Jamaica, and there made to serve in British regiments.
Citizens of distinction, who, by their counsel or presence,
opposed their influence over the prisoners, or proved
themselves superior to their temptations, were torn
from their homes without warning, and incarcerated
in their floating dungeons. Nothing was forborne,
in the shape of pitiless and pitiful persecution, to
break the spirits, subdue the strength, and mock and
mortify the hopes, alike, of citizen and captive.
With those who kept the field the
proceedings were more summary, if not more severe.
The fall of Charleston seems necessarily to have involved
the safety of the country from the Savannah to the
Pedee. In a few weeks after the capture of the
city, the British were in peaceable possession of
the space between these limits, from the seaboard to
the mountains. They had few opponents an
isolated body of continentals, a small squad
of militia, for the first time drilling for future
service, or a little troop of horse and
these were quickly overcome. On these occasions
the British were generally led by Lieutenant-Colonel
Tarleton. This officer acquired for himself an
odious distinction in his progress through the South
in the campaigns which followed. He was rather
an active than a skilful commander. Rapid in
his movements, he gave little heed to the judicious
disposition of his troops, and aiming more at impressing
the fears of his enemy, than overcoming him by science,
his chief successes were the result of the panic which
his surprises and his butcheries inspired. He
seems never to have been successful against an equal
and resolute foe. But, as courage and activity
are, perhaps, after all, and before all, the most
necessary requisites for a soldier, Tarleton’s
services were inappreciable to the invading army.
In one month after its arrival, his legion was mounted
and began its career of slaughter. While yet
the city was sustaining the siege, he penetrated the
country, in pursuit of those bands of militia horse,
which, by direction of the American commander, still
kept the open field. On the 18th of March, he
surprised a company of militia at Salkehatchie Bridge,
killed and wounded several and dispersed the rest.
Five days after, another party at Pon-Pon shared the
same fortune. He was not so successful at Rantowles
on the 23d of the same month, where in a rencounter
with Col. Washington, his dragoons were roughly
handled, and retreated with loss. He avenged
himself, however, on Washington, in less than a month
after, by surprising him at Monk’s Corner.
Col. White soon after took command of the southern
cavalry, and obtained some trifling successes, but
suffered himself to be surprised at Lenud’s ferry
on the Santee. These events all took place prior
to the surrender of the city. The activity of
Tarleton, with the general remissness, and want of
ordinary military precautions on the part of the militia
which opposed itself to him, made his progress easy,
and thus enabled him to cut off every party that was
embodied in the field. He was now to succeed in
a much more important and much more bloody enterprise.
A Continental force from Virginia of four hundred
men, under Col. Beaufort, had been dispatched
to the relief of Charleston. Beaufort had reached
Camden before he was apprised of the surrender of
that city. This event properly determined him
to retreat. Earl Cornwallis, meanwhile, had taken
the field with a force of twenty-five hundred men,
and was then in rapid progress for the Santee.
Hearing of the advance of Beaufort, he dispatched Tarleton
in quest of him, with a select body of infantry and
cavalry, in all, seven hundred men. Beaufort
was overtaken near the Waxhaw settlements, and summoned
to surrender. This person does not seem to have
been designed by nature for military operations.
He halted at the summons, hesitated awhile, sent his
wagons ahead, consulted with his officers, and did
little or nothing farther, either for flight or conflict.
While thus halting and hesitating he was attacked
by the impetuous Tarleton, offered a feeble resistance,
unmarked by conduct or spirit, suffered the enemy to
gain his rear, and finally grounded his arms.
He either did this too soon or too late. His
flag was disregarded in the flush of battle, the bearer
of it cut down by the hand of Tarleton, and the British
infantry, with fixed bayonets, rushed upon the inactive
Americans. Some of Beaufort’s men, seeing
that their application for quarter was disregarded,
resolved to die like men, and resumed their arms.
Their renewed fire provoked the massacre of the unresisting.
A terrible butchery followed. The British gave
no quarter. From that day, “Tarleton’s
Quarters”, implying the merciless cutting down
of the suppliant, grew into a proverbial phrase, which,
in the hour of victory, seemed to embitter the hostility
with which the American strove to avenge his slaughtered
comrades.
The defeat of Beaufort, with the only
regular force remaining in the State, following so
close upon the fall of Charleston, paralyzed the hopes
of the patriots. The country seemed everywhere
subdued. An unnatural and painful apathy dispirited
opposition. The presence of a British force,
sufficient to overawe the neighborhood, at conspicuous
points, and the awakened activity of the Tories in
all quarters, no longer restrained by the presence
in arms of their more patriotic countrymen, seemed
to settle the question of supremacy. There was
not only no head against the enemy, but the State,
on a sudden, appeared to have been deprived of all
her distinguished men. Moultrie and others who
might have led, were prisoners of war. Governor
Rutledge, a noble spirit and famous orator the
Patrick Henry of Carolina, had withdrawn
to the North State, to stimulate the energies of the
people in that quarter and gain recruits. His
example was followed by Sumter, Horry and others, by
all, in fact, who, escaping captivity, were in condition
to fly. The progress of Cornwallis and Tarleton
left mere distinction, unsupported by men, with few
places of security. Marion, meanwhile, incapable
of present flight, was compelled to take refuge in
the swamp and forest. He was too conspicuous
a person, had made too great a figure in previous
campaigns, and his military talents were too well known
and too highly esteemed, not to render him an object
of some anxiety as well to friends as foes. Still
suffering from the hurts received in Charleston, with
bloody and malignant enemies all around him, his safety
depended on his secrecy and obscurity alone.
Fortunately he had “won golden opinions from
all sorts of people.” He had friends among
all classes, who did not permit themselves to sleep
while he was in danger. Their activity supplied
the loss of his own. They watched while he slept.
They assisted his feebleness. In the moment of
alarm, he was sped from house to house, from tree
to thicket, from the thicket to the swamp. His
“hair-breadth ’scapes” under these
frequent exigencies, were, no doubt, among the most
interesting adventures of his life, furnishing rare
material, could they be procured, for the poet and
romancer. Unhappily, while the chronicles show
the frequent emergency which attended his painful condition,
they furnish nothing more. We are without details.
The melancholy baldness and coldness with which they
narrate events upon which one would like to linger
is absolutely humbling to the imagination; which, kindled
by the simple historical outline, looks in vain for
the satisfaction of those doubts and inquiries, those
hopes and fears, which the provoking narrative inspires
only to defraud. How would some old inquisitive
Froissart have dragged by frequent inquiry from contemporaneous
lips, the particular fact, the whole adventure, step
by step, item by item, the close pursuit,
the narrow escape, and all the long train
of little, but efficient circumstances, by which the
story would have been made unique, with all its rich
and numerous details! These, the reader must
supply from his own resources of imagination.
He must conjecture for himself the casual warning
brought to the silent thicket, by the devoted friend,
the constant woman, or the humble slave; the midnight
bay of the watch dog or the whistle of the scout; or
the sudden shot, from friend or foe, by which the
fugitive is counselled to hurry to his den. A
thousand events arise to the imagination as likely
to have occurred to our partisan, in his hours of
feebleness and danger, from the rapid cavalry of Tarleton,
or the close and keen pursuit of the revengeful Tories.
To what slight circumstances has he been indebted
for his frequent escape! What humble agents have
been commissioned by Providence to save a life, that
was destined to be so precious to his country’s
liberties!
How long he remained in this situation is not exactly known,
probably several months. As soon as he was able to mount his horse, he collected
a few friends, and set out for North Carolina. A Continental force was on its
way from Virginia under Baron De Kalb. His purpose was to join it. It was while
on this route, and with this object, that he encountered his old friend and long
tried associate in arms, Col. P. Horry.
Horry describes his ankle, at this
meeting, as still “very crazy” so
much so that it required his help and that of Marion’s
servant to lift him from his horse. But his spirits
were good. He was still cheerful, and possessed
that rare elasticity of character which never loses
its tone under privations and disappointments.
Weems, who, we are compelled to admit, very frequently
exercised the privilege of the ancient historian,
of putting fine speeches into the mouth of his hero,
tells us that he jeered at the doleful expressions
of his companion, Horry, who, discussing the condition
of the country, lamented that their “happy days
were all gone.” “Our happy days all
gone, indeed!” answered Marion “on
the contrary, they are yet to come. The victory
is still sure. The enemy, it is true, have all
the trumps, and if they had but the spirit to play
a generous game, they would certainly ruin us.
But they have no idea of that game. They will
treat the people cruelly, and that one thing will
ruin them and save the country.” Weems,
speaking for Horry, describes in ludicrous terms,
their journey through North Carolina, through
a region swarming with Tories, but, fortunately for
our travellers, who were venomous without being active.
Our fugitives were without money and without credit,
and “but for carrying a knife, or a horse fleam,
or a gun-flint, had no more use for a pocket than a
Highlander has for a knee-buckle. As to hard money
we had not seen a dollar for years.” In
this resourceless condition a condition,
which, it may be well to say in this place, continued
throughout the war, they made their way with difficulty
until they joined the Continental army. Gates
had superseded De Kalb in its command, and was pressing
forward, with the ambition, seemingly, of writing
a dispatch like Caesar’s, announcing, in the
same breath, the sight and conquest of his enemy.
Marion and his little troop of twenty men, made but
a sorry figure in the presence of the Continental
General. Gates was a man of moderate abilities,
a vain man, of a swelling and ostentatious habit, whose
judgment was very apt to be affected by parade, and
the external show of things. Some of his leading
opinions were calculated to show that he was unfit
for a commander in the South. For example, he
thought little of cavalry, which, in a plain country,
sparsely settled, was among the first essentials of
success, as well in securing intelligence, as in procuring
supplies. It was not calculated therefore to raise
the troop of our partisan in his esteem, to discover
that they were all good riders and well mounted.
Marion, himself, was a man equally modest in approach
and unimposing in person. His followers may have
provoked the sneer of the General, as it certainly
moved the scorn and laughter of his well-equipped
Continentals. We have a description of them from the pen of an excellent
officer, the Adjutant General of Gates army. He says, Col. Marion, a gentleman
of South Carolina, had been with the army a few days, attended by a very few
followers, distinguished by small leather caps, and the wretchedness of their
attire; their number did not exceed twenty men and boys, some white, some black,
and all mounted, but most of them miserably equipped; their appearance was in
fact so burlesque, that it was with much difficulty the diversion of the regular
soldiery was restrained by the officers; and the General himself was glad of an
opportunity of detaching Col. Marion, at his own instance, towards the interior
of South Carolina, with orders to watch the motions of the enemy and furnish
intelligence."
From such small and insignificant
beginnings flow greatness and great performances.
We, who are in possession of all the subsequent events who
see this proud, vain Commander, hurrying on with the
rapidity of madness to his own ruin can
but smile in the perusal of such a narrative, not
at the rags of Marion’s men, but at the undiscerning
character of those who could see, in the mean equipment,
the imperfect clothing, the mixture of man and boy,
and white and black, anything but a noble patriotism,
which, in such condition, was still content to carry
on a war against a powerful enemy. The very rags
and poverty of this little band, which was afterwards
to become so famous, were so many proofs of their
integrity and virtue, and should have inspired respect
rather than ridicule. They were so many guarantees
of good service which they were able and prepared to
render. It was in defiance of the temptations
and the power of the foe, that these men had taken
the field against him, and had Gates been a wise commander,
he would have seen even through their rags and destitution,
the small but steady light of patriotism; which, enkindled
throughout the State by the example of Marion, Sumter,
and a few others, was to blaze out finally into that
perfect brightness before which the invader was to
shrink confounded.
Gates was wise enough to take counsel
of Marion, if nothing more; and even this might not
have been done, but for the suggestions of Governor
Rutledge, who, at that time in the camp of the Continentals,
might very well have informed him of the value of
the man whose followers inspired only ridicule.
It was with Marion that the plan was concerted, and
not improbably at his suggestion, for moving into
the very heart of the State. This, subsequently,
was the policy of Greene, and had Gates adopted the
deliberate caution of that commander, his successes
would unquestionably have been the same. The
object of such a movement was to give an opportunity
to the native patriots to rally to compel
the British to concentrate their scattered forces,
call in their detached parties, and thus circumscribe
their influence, within the State, to the places where
they still remained in force. To effect these
objects, the Fabian maxims of warfare should have
been those of the American General. Few of his
militia had ever seen an enemy. He had but recently
joined his troops, knew nothing of them, and they
as little of him. Their march had been a fatiguing
one. Time and training were necessary pre-requisites
for their improvement and his success. Unhappily,
these were the very agents with which the vanity of
the unfortunate commander made him most willing to
dispense. The victory at Saratoga had spoiled
him for ever, and thinking too much of himself, he
committed the next great error of a military man,
of thinking too lightly of his foe. It would
be idle and perhaps impertinent, to suggest that if
Marion had been suffered to remain with him, the issue
of this march might have been more fortunate.
Gates was quite too vain-glorious to listen and Marion
quite too moderate to obtrude his opinions; and yet
Marion was a man of equal prudence and adroitness.
He could insinuate advice, so that it would appear
to self-conceit the very creature of its own conceptions.
Had Marion remained, could Gates have listened, we
are very sure there would have been no such final,
fatal disaster as suddenly stopped the misdirected
progress of the Continental army. There would
have been some redeeming circumstances to qualify the
catastrophe. All would not have been lost.
At all events, with Marion at their head, the militia
would have fought awhile, would have discharged
their pieces, once, twice, thrice, before they fled.
They would have done for the born-leader of militia,
what they refused to do for a commander who neither
knew how to esteem, nor how to conduct them.
It was while Marion was in the camp
of Gates, that a messenger from the Whigs of Williamsburg,
then newly risen in arms, summoned him to be their
leader. It was in consequence of this invitation,
and not because of the awkwardness of his position
there, that he determined to penetrate into South
Carolina, in advance of the American army. Such
an invitation was not to be neglected. Marion
well knew its importance, and at once accepted the
commission conferred upon him by Governor Rutledge.
He took leave of Gates accordingly, having received,
as is reported, certain instructions from that unhappy
commander, to employ his men in the destruction of
all the scows, boats, ferry-flats and barges on the
route, by which the enemy might make his escape.
The fancy of the American General already beheld the
army of Lord Cornwallis in full flight. His great
solicitude seems to have been how to secure his captives.
He had, strangely enough for a military man, never
taken counsel of the farm-yard proverb, which we need
not here repeat for the benefit of the reader. With
the departure of Marion, his better genius left him, the
only man, who, in command of the militia, might have
saved him from destruction. Leaving our partisan,
with his little squad, to make his way cautiously
through a country infested with Tories, we follow
for the present the progress of the Continental army.
On the night of the fifteenth of August, 1780, the
Americans moved from Rugely’s Mills. At
midnight, without dreaming of an enemy, they encountered
him. The first intelligence communicated to either
army of the presence of the other, was from the fire
of the British advance upon the Americans. The
two armies recoiled and lay upon their arms the rest
of the night. So far the affair was indecisive.
The Americans had sustained themselves in the face
of some disadvantages, chiefly the result of their
leader’s imprudence. A night march of raw
militia in the face of a foe, and in column of battle,
was itself an error which a sagacious commander would
never have made. It is not to be denied, that
the Americans were not satisfied with their situation.
Some of their officers openly declared their discontent.
But it was too late for a retrograde movement, nor
is it likely, feeling as he did and sanguine as he
was, that Gates would have believed any such movement
necessary. The ground was equally unknown to
both commanders; but Cornwallis had one advantage:
he was in the command of veterans, who are generally
cool enough in such situations to look about them,
and make the most of their exigencies. The American
line was soon formed and in waiting for the dawn and
the enemy. The first Maryland division, including
the Delawares under De Kalb, was posted on the right;
the Virginia militia under Stevens on the left; the
North Carolinians, led by Caswell in the centre; and
the artillery, in battery, upon the road. Both
wings rested on morasses, and the second Maryland
brigade was posted as a reserve, a few hundred yards
in the rear of the first. The British formed a
single line, with each wing covered and supported
by a body in reserve. They were much less numerous
than the Americans, but they were picked men, the
choice of the regiments in Charleston and Camden.
The American militia, of which the greater part of
Gates’ army consisted, had never felt an enemy’s
fire. The Maryland and Delaware troops were good
soldiers, well trained and in confidence of their leaders.
With the break of day, and the advance of the American
left, the action began. This division of the
army consisted of Virginia militia under Stevens.
Handled with unexpected severity by the British fire,
they yielded before it and fled in panic, many of
them without even discharging their pieces. The
wretched example was followed by the North Carolina
militia, with the exception of a single corps, commanded
by Major Dixon. The cavalry under Armand, a foreign
adventurer, broke at nearly the same moment; and a
charge of the British cavalry, happily timed, put an
end to all hope of rallying the terror-stricken fugitives.
The devoted Continentals alone kept their ground
and bore the brunt of the action. They were led
by the veteran De Kalb the Commander-in-Chief
having hurried from the field in a vain attempt to
bring the militia back. The artillery was lost,
the cavalry dispersed; the regulars, numbering
but nine hundred men, were required to bear the undivided
pressure of two thousand of the best troops in the
British service. With the example before them,
the desertion of their General, and their own perfect
isolation, they would have been justified by the necessity
of the case, in instant flight. But, as if the
cowardice of their countrymen had stung them into
a determination to show, at all hazards, that they,
at least, were made of very different stuff, they
not only resisted the attack of the enemy, but carried
the bayonet into his ranks. The combatants rushed
and reeled together with locked weapons. But this
struggle could not last. The conflict was prolonged
only until the British cavalry could return from pursuing
the fugitives. Their sabres gave the finishing
stroke to the affair. De Kalb had fallen under
eleven wounds, and nothing remained, but flight, to
save this gallant body from the mortification of surrender
on the field of battle. It was no consolation
to Gates, while fleeing to North Carolina, to be overtaken
by messengers from Sumter, announcing a gallant achievement
of that brave partisan, by which forty wagons of booty
and nearly three hundred prisoners had fallen into
his hands. Such tidings only mocked his own disaster.
He could only, in reply, relate his own irretrievable
defeat, point to his fugitives, and counsel Sumter
to immediate retreat from his triumphant and now returning
enemy. Unhappily, ignorant of Gates’ disaster,
and of a bold, incautious temper, Sumter was approaching,
rather than hastening from, danger. His flight,
when he did retire, was not sufficiently rapid, nor
sufficiently prudent. He was one of those men
who too quickly feel themselves secure. He was
surprised by Tarleton, but two days after, his troops
utterly dispersed, he, too, a fugitive like Gates,
with all the fruits of his late victory taken from
his grasp. In almost every instance where the
Americans suffered defeat, the misfortune was due
to a want of proper caution an unobservance
of some of the simplest rules of military prudence.
In a brilliant sortie, a manful charge, a sudden onslaught,
no troops could have surpassed them nay,
we find as many examples of the sternest powers of
human endurance, under the severest trials of firmness,
in their military history, as in that of any other
people. But to secure what they had won to
be consistently firm always on their guard
and beyond surprise, were lessons which
they were slow to acquire which they learned
at last only under the heaviest penalties of blood.
Marion was one of the few Captains of American militia,
that never suffered himself to be taken napping.