The Swamp Fox

Home > Other > The Swamp Fox > Page 44
The Swamp Fox Page 44

by John Oller


  Greene’s fear of renewed incursion by, 211

  reinforcements under, 109, 110

  seeking permission from Greene to buy provisions, 228

  Lincoln, Benjamin, 5, 46, 47, 48, 49–51, 52, 101

  Logan, George, 67, 70

  long rifles, 26, 136–137

  Lords Proprietor, 18

  Louis XIV (French King), 18

  Lower Bridge engagement, 136

  Lyttelton, William, 24–25

  Maham, Hezekiah, 149–150, 181, 191, 243

  attack on Monck’s Corner, 171, 172, 173

  blaming Marion for Thompson’s victory, 223

  burning of hospital and, 209–210, 210n

  General Assembly at Jacksonboro and, 213, 221

  insubordination of, 203, 205

  postwar behavior, 225n

  rivalry with Horry, 169–170, 200, 217–218, 223–225

  Stewart’s retreat and, 200

  Maham Tower, 149–150, 157, 164

  Malmedy, François de, 187, 189, 193

  Manigault’s Ferry, 120

  Mao Tse-tung, 9n, 107

  Marion, Benjamin (brother), 21

  Marion, Benjamin (grandfather), 18–19, 210

  Marion, Charlotte (niece), 30, 241

  Marion, Esther (Cordes) (mother), 20, 21, 22, 241

  Marion, Esther (sister), 21, 117

  Marion, Francis

  address praising, 246

  adopted children, 241–242

  after Eutaw Springs, 200

  attacks on Georgetown, 92–93, 115–118

  attempt to recover Fort Watson, 145–146, 147–150

  attempt to retake Savannah and, 47, 49–50

  at Belle Isle, 22–23

  birth of, 20

  childhood, 21

  combining Horry’s and Maham’s regiments, 223–224

  commendations, 198, 239

  commitment to revolutionary cause, 33–36

  Confiscation Act and, 215–216

  Cowpens victory and, 120

  defense of Charleston, 39–40, 50

  dispute between Horry and Maham and, 218

  Dog Days campaign and, 168, 170–177

  Doyle and, 141–142

  education and, 243

  effect on British supply lines, 56, 81

  elected militia captain, 35–36

  estate of, 244

  evacuation of Charleston and, 235–236

  final illness and death of, 244

  final liberation of South Carolina and, 208–209, 211, 231–234

  Fort Johnson sinecure and, 239–240

  Fraser and, 180, 181–185

  Gates and, 5–6, 78–79, 93–94

  General Assembly and, 213–219, 237–238

  in Georgetown, 77–78

  Greene and, 109, 113

  Greene’s letters to, 101–102, 103–104, 151

  Greene’s requests for horses and, 111–112, 154–155, 156

  Hampton Hill and, 23

  Hayne and, 178

  in hiding, 4

  Horry’s insubordination and, 203–206

  hostilities with Cherokees and, 28–29

  humaneness of, 17, 148, 245

  illness of, 201

  as intelligence provider, 79, 103–104, 109–110, 202

  joining Greene against Stewart’s forces, 188

  on lack of contemporary recognition after war, 238–239

  lack of logistical support, 58–59

  leadership style, 43–45, 66, 72

  life as farmer, 29–30

  Maham’s insubordination and, 203, 205

  Marion’s Brigade and, 52–53

  marriage, 240–242

  McLeroth and, 94–99

  meeting with Greene, 159

  militia recruitment and, 36, 90–91, 116, 120, 123

  move to St. John’s Parish, 22

  Murphy and, 64

  need for horses for militia, 111–113

  pardons for Tories and, 203

  on partisan militia, 102–103, 142, 155, 156

  places named for, 242n

  as plantation owner, 30, 32, 237, 238, 242

  policy against plundering, 90–91, 107, 123, 148

  portrayal in The Patriot, 28

  Postell and, 131–133, 138–139, 206

  postwar militia brigade, 243

  postwar Senate career, 242–243

  promotions of, 39, 45, 108, 239

  Provincial Congress and, 33, 34–35

  punishment for spies, 201

  raising new Continental regiments, 216–217

  Rawdon’s pursuit of, 99, 123–124, 126, 127

  reestablishment of legislature and, 212, 213

  repelling British supply forays, 229

  request to capture Georgetown, 161–162

  rescue of American prisoners of war, 54–56

  responsibility for children of siblings, 45–46

  in retreat in North Carolina, 62

  Rutledge’s tasks for, 200, 202–203

  siege of Fort Motte and, 153–160

  siege of Fort Watson and, 145–150

  siege of Ninety-Six and, 163, 164–165, 166

  Sinkler and, 206–207

  as slaveholder, 20, 29, 30–31, 237, 242, 244–245

  summit meeting with Greene and, 166–167

  Sumter’s authority over, 121, 123, 175–176

  Sumter’s Law and, 148, 170, 217

  Sumter’s requests for aid and, 123, 124–125

  as supreme field commander of South Carolina militia, 177

  sweet potato dinner story, 105–106

  Tarleton’s pursuit of, 85–89

  Thompson and, 221–223

  threat to resign, 155–156

  victory party after Yorktown, 206

  Watson and, 128–140, 142, 146, 149

  Wemyss and, 62, 63–64

  Williamsburg militia and, 5–7

  will of, 30–32, 244–245

  working with Lee, 114–118, 143, 144, 150

  See also Marion’s Brigade

  Marion, Francis (Dwight) (adopted son), 241–242, 244

  Marion, Gabriel (brother), 21, 22, 30, 93, 237, 241

  as delegate to Provincial Congress, 33

  hostilities with Cherokees and, 25

  Marion, Gabriel (father), 20, 21

  Marion, Gabriel (nephew), 31, 34, 41–42, 93

  Marion, Isaac (brother), 21, 34, 45, 162, 241

  Marion, Job (brother), 21, 22, 30, 33, 71, 241

  Marion, Mary (second wife of grandfather), 19

  Marion, Mary Esther Videau (wife). See Videau, Mary Esther.

  Marion, Robert (nephew), 30

  Marion, Theodore (nephew), 241

  Marion, William (nephew), 31, 32

  Marion’s Bridges Campaign, 128–140

  map of, 130

  Marion’s Brigade, 8–9, 10, 53

  attack at Black Mingo Creek, 68–71, 72–74

  attack at Blue Savannah, 60–61

  and Bridges Campaign, 128–131, 134–140

  attack at Great Savannah (Sumter’s plantation), 54–56

  attack on McLeroth at Halfway Swamp, 96–99

  attack on Tynes’s Tory militia at Tearcoat Swamp, 79–81

  comings and goings of volunteers, 79, 156

  decrease in numbers of men, 142

  and Eutaw Springs battle, 189, 193–194, 197–198

  foray to Georgetown, 77–78

  at Great White Marsh, 62, 65–66

  and Parker’s Ferry engagement, 182–185

  personnel changes, 169

  return to South Carolina, 67

  Snow’s Island camp, 104–107

  Stewart’s retreat and, 200

  Thompson’s attacks on, 221–223

  and Wadboo Plantation engagement, 232–233

  Marjoribanks, John, 192, 194–197, 201

  Martin, Alexander, 226

  Maryland Continentals, 54, 149–150, 151, 191, 195

  massacre at Waxha
ws, 83–84

  Mathews, John, 214, 223–224, 226, 227, 232, 235, 239

  McCallum’s Ferry, 79

  McCauley, James, 129, 173

  McCottry, William, 8, 213

  McCottry’s Rifles, 8, 141

  Marion’s Bridges Campaign and, 135–138

  McDonald, Allen, 78, 137, 159

  McDonald, Archibald, 221

  McKay, James, 147, 149, 150

  McLeroth, Robert, 93, 94–95, 127

  attack on while escorting recruits to Cornwallis, 96–99

  McPherson, Donald, 153–154, 156–157, 158

  McQueen, Alexander, 51

  Mepkin Plantation, 213, 222

  Merritt, Thomas, 138–139, 141, 170–171

  Middleton, Henry, 13

  Midway Plantation, 186

  militia

  fickleness of colonial, 25

  Greene’s opinion of, 102–103

  North Carolina, 94, 187, 193–194

  performance at Eutaw Springs, 193–198

  refusal to come to Charleston’s defense, 51

  Whig, 16, 71–72

  See also South Carolina militia; Tory militia

  Miscally, Hugh, 158

  Mitchell, Edward, 34

  Mitchell, Thomas, 34

  Moderators (vigilante groups), 15, 32

  Monck’s Corner, 22, 51

  British at, 83, 84n, 120, 159, 163, 165, 167, 168, 200

  British evacuation of, 176

  Marion in, 219

  Marion’s attack on, 168–169, 171–175

  Monmouth Courthouse (New Jersey), battle of, 11, 101

  Montgomery, Archibald, 26

  Morgan, Daniel, 109–110, 122

  Cornwallis’s pursuit of, 119–120

  victory at Cowpens, 118–119

  Motte, Isaac, 36, 43, 45

  Motte, Rebecca, 153, 157, 158

  Moultrie, William, 7, 46, 51, 107, 156, 171n, 243

  in Cherokee War, 27, 28

  as commander of 2nd Regiment, 36–37

  defense of Charleston, 39, 40, 41

  evacuation of Charleston and, 235

  General Assembly at Jacksonboro and, 213

  Marion and, 4, 36

  as prisoner of war, 52, 148–149

  Moultrie flag, 36–37, 41n

  Mount Hope plantation, 128

  Mount Hope Swamp Bridge engagement, 134, 136

  Mount Tacitus plantation, 188

  Mouzon, Henry, 7, 68, 70, 207

  Murphy, Maurice, 64, 65

  Murphy, Moses, 64

  Murray’s Ferry, 54, 117, 201

  muskets, 26, 137, 137n

  Nase, Henry, 131

  Native Americans

  in armed service under Marion, 3, 29

  in British pre-Revolutionary forces, 25, 26–27

  in South Carolina, 19

  white fears of uprisings by, 16, 35

  See also Cherokees

  Nelson’s Ferry, 54n, 78, 186, 188

  British at, 55, 104, 120, 127, 128, 152, 159

  Marion harassing British at and around, 54, 56, 58, 81, 85, 99, 120, 165

  McLeroth and, 94, 96

  neutrality, parole and, 13–14

  19th Regiment of Foot, 171–173, 192

  Ninety-Six post, 145

  battles at, 37, 160, 163–165

  British at, 109–110

  as priority for Greene, 161

  North, Frederick, 226

  North Carolina, treaty breaches and, 225–228

  North Carolina militia

  at Eutaw Springs, 193–194

  Greene and, 187

  Harrington and, 94

  oaths of allegiance, 7, 13, 14, 63, 71, 178, 179, 202, 203

  Oconostota, 24, 27

  Orangeburg

  British command of, 145, 166, 168

  fall of, 159–160

  Greene’s plan to attack, 167

  Sumter at, 208–209

  Oscar (Buddy) (slave), 4, 20, 30, 31, 106, 237, 244, 245

  Ox Swamp, 87

  pardons, for Tories, 202–203, 227

  Parker, Peter, 38, 40, 41

  Parker’s Ferry engagement, 182–185, 187–188, 198, 232

  parole, 7n, 13–14, 52

  The Patriot (film), 28, 85

  Peggy (slave), 29, 31, 237, 244, 245

  Peyre, Charles, 71

  Peyre, John, 68, 71

  Peyre’s Plantation, 161, 181, 185, 209

  Phoebe (slave), 31, 237, 245

  Pickens, Andrew, 38, 122, 126, 164, 197

  attempt to recover forts on Georgia border, 145, 160

  Battle of Cowpens and, 118–119

  Eutaw Springs battle and, 189, 193

  exemption for appropriating private property, 240

  fall of Augusta and, 163

  final liberation of South Carolina and, 208

  General Assembly at Jacksonboro and, 213

  Greene’s attack on Stewart and, 187

  leadership of, 72

  parole and, 52, 119n

  Sumter’s Law and, 148

  Pinckney, Charles (president of South Carolina Senate), 13

  Pinckney, Charles Cotesworth, 35, 36, 217, 239, 243–244

  plundering, Marion’s view of, 90–91, 107, 123, 148. See also Sumter’s Law

  Pond Bluff (Marion’s plantation), 30, 32, 107–108, 128, 188, 236, 237, 238, 241, 244

  Port’s Ferry, 61, 67, 79, 105

  Postell, James, 8, 120, 121, 213, 243

  Postell, John, 8, 107, 109, 116, 117

  burning British supplies, 120–121

  General Assembly at Jacksonboro and, 213

  as prisoner of war, 131, 132, 138–139, 170, 206

  Postell, John, Sr., 131

  pounder (definition), 40n

  Presbyterians, 15–16, 63

  Prévost, Augustine, 46, 48, 49

  prisoner exchanges, 7n, 116, 131–133, 180, 206, 207

  Provincial Congress (South Carolina), 33, 34–36

  Provincials, 54n

  Pulaski, Casimir, 47, 49

  Quarter House, 210

  Queen’s Rangers, 138, 170, 171

  Quinby Bridge, 172–173

  Ravenel, Daniel, 197, 201

  Rawdon, Francis, 82, 95, 119

  battle with Greene at Hobkirk’s Hill, 151

  on cavalry, 112

  in charge of South Carolina, 145

  departure from colonies, 166–167

  evaluation of Camden and, 152

  fall of Fort Motte and, 156–157, 159

  Hayne and, 179

  McLeroth and, 99

  pursuit of Marion, 99, 123–124, 126, 127

  siege of Ninety-Six and, 163, 164–165, 166

  temporary command of, 76

  Tynes and, 96

  Watson and, 144

  Rawdon Town, 166

  recruitment

  Continentals, difficulties in raising, 43, 45

  Marion and, 36, 90–91, 116, 120, 123

  Sumter’s success in, 90

  Reed, Joseph, 110–111

  Regulators (vigilante groups), 15, 32

  religious divisions in South Carolina, 15–16

  Richardson, Dorothy, 85, 86–87, 88, 206–207

  Richardson, Richard, 37, 85, 88n

  Richardson, Richard, Jr., 86, 189, 191

  Richardson’s Plantation, 85–86, 88, 96, 191

  Richbourg, Henry, 127, 129

  Richbourg’s Mill Dam, 86

  Roberts, John, 54

  Royal Gazette (Charleston newspaper), 141

  Rumford, Count (Benjamin Thompson), 223

  “running the gauntlet,” 184

  Rutledge, Edward, 217

  Rutledge, John, 35, 107, 111

  Buford and, 83

  defense of Charleston, 39

  in exile, 13, 51

  General Assembly at Jacksonboro and, 214

  Horry and Maham and, 170

  letter to Horry, 204

  Marion’s promotion to brigadier general,
108

  pardons for Tories and, 202–203

  Prévost’s incursion into Charleston and, 46

  proposal to arm slaves and, 217

  reestablishment of civil government, 212

  reliance on Marion, 200, 202

  siege of Savannah and, 49

  Sinkler’s imprisonment and, 207

  Sumter and, 90, 122

  Sumter’s Law and, 148, 176

  on victory at Parker’s Ferry, 185

  St. James Parish, 22, 68

  St. John’s (Berkeley) Parish, 20, 22, 33, 213, 242n

  St. Stephen’s Parish, 22, 29–30, 33, 68

  Salem Black River Presbyterian Church, 74, 79

  salt, as valuable commodity, 92, 106, 107, 116, 120, 139, 158, 176, 203, 224

  Sampit River Bridge engagement, 139

  Santee River, British supply lines and, 56, 81

  Saunders, John, 131–133, 139, 170, 171

  Savage, Nathan, 157

  Savannah (Georgia)

  American attempt to retake, 47–50

  battle of, 230

  British evacuation of, 228

  fall of, 12, 46

  Scotch-Irish, 15–16, 33

  Scott, John, 140

  Scottish Highlanders

  immigrant people, 15–16

  British military unit, 92

  2nd South Carolina Regiment, 36–37, 38, 39, 41, 43–45, 49–50

  Seven Years’ War, 24

  7th Regiment of Foot (Royal Fusiliers), 96, 119

  Sevier, John, 208, 209

  Shelby, Isaac, 208, 209

  Sheppard’s Ferry, 68

  Shubrick, Richard, 41

  Shubrick, Thomas, 172–173

  Shubrick’s plantation, 172–174

  sieges

  of Charleston, 3–4

  of Fort Granby, 123–124

  of Fort Motte, 153–160

  of Fort Watson, 145–150, 152

  of Georgetown, 162

  of Ninety-Six, 163–166

  of Savannah, 49

  Simms, William Gilmore, 87n, 105, 233

  Singleton, John, 186

  Singleton’s Mills, 85, 98–99

  Sinkler, Peter, 206–207

  63rd Regiment of Foot, 54, 56, 59, 75, 92, 191, 194

  64th Regiment of Foot, 94, 96, 127, 152, 191, 194

  slaves

  Benjamin Marion’s, 19

  British use of, 16, 50, 201, 217

  Confiscation Act and, 215

  Marion as slaveholder, 20, 30, 31, 162, 237, 242, 244–245

  as payment for joining Continental regiments, 217

  population in South Carolina, 19

  proposals by patriots to arm, 47, 217

  punishment for spies and, 202

  white fears of slave insurrections, 16, 35, 50

  smallpox, 25, 98, 147, 237–238

  Smith, John Caraway, 222

  Snipes, William Clay, 81, 123, 148, 170–171, 171n

  Snow Campaign, 37–38, 85

  Snow’s Island base camp, 104–107, 123, 139, 140–141

  South Carolina

  American Revolution in, 10, 11–17

  civil war in, 14–16, 64–65

 

‹ Prev