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The Battle of Charleston
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The Battle of Charleston |
Overview:
In 1778, the British Commander-in-Chief in America Lt. General Henry
Clinton turned his attention to the South, where partisan fighting between
Patriot militia and Tories had been heavy. Clinton had been there once
before on June 28, 1776 when Colonel William Moultrie had defeated Clinton
and Commodore Sir Peter Parker at the Battle of Fort Sullivan. The British
had tried to approach Charleston by water and had failed to reach the city
proper.
General Clinton and the British government back in London believed
that if the British controlled the South, Tories would flock to support the
British and Clinton would be able to overwhelm General
George Washington in Virginia. During the winter of 1778-1779, the
British took control of Georgia including the cities of Savannah and
Augusta. They soon began planning the capture of the important port city of
Charleston, South Carolina.
In response to the loss of Georgia in December 1778, the Continental
Congress replaced native North Carolinian Maj. General Robert Howe with
Bostonian Maj. General Benjamin Lincoln as Southern Department Commander.
Lincoln had proven to be an able motivator of militia. But that was New
England militia, he would not have nearly as much success with Carolina
militia. Lincoln's first task was to retake Georgia.
On May 11, 1779, General Lincoln was able to reoccupy Augusta,
Georgia. In September, he was joined by French Admiral d'Estaing in laying
siege to Savannah. The British held out for a month. In October, D'Estaing
abandoned the siege and sailed south to the West Indies for the winter.
Without naval support, Lincoln was forced to give up the siege and return to
Charleston, South Carolina.
In December 1779, General Clinton sailed himself sailed south bound
for Charleston from New York City. The British fleet included ninety
troopships and fourteen warships with more than 8,500 soldiers and 5,000
sailors. Because they had been delayed several months in leaving, the fleet
now sailed through stormy seas. The first storm hit on December 27 and
lasted three days. On January 1, 1780 another storm hit and lasted six days.
This pattern continued and the fleet was separated. From March 11
until the 21th the British fortified their position which was located where
the Wappoo Creek flowed into the Ashley River. They mounted artillery to
shell American ships and keep the Ashley River secure. They then moved
upstream and north, away from Charleston, slowly securing the plantations
along the way while the Americans shadowed them from across the river.
Under the cover of fog on March 29th, the British crossed the Ashley
River upstream from the heavily fortified Ashley Ferry and established
themselves on Charleston Neck. When the Americans learned that the British
were on the Neck, they abandoned their breastworks at Ashley Ferry. By April
1st, the British had moved down into position to begin their siege works.
Meanwhile, naval maneuvering in Charleston Harbor for the Americans
was a disaster. In December 1779, four frigates had arrived on orders from
Congress under the command of Commodore Abraham Whipple, which were joined
by four ships from South Carolina and two French ships. There were 260 guns
afloat and forty guns at Fort Moultrie. Before the British ever arrived,
Whipple informed Maj. General Benjamin Lincoln that the flotilla could not
defend the bar that blocked the entrance to Charleston Harbor.
General Lincoln questioned Commodore Whipple's conclusion, but
Whipple was backed up by a naval board. Whipple chose to first withdraw to
the mouth of the Cooper River. Meanwhile the British began their approach on
March 20th. When Whipple saw the size of the British attack fleet, he
scuttled the ships at the entrance of the river. On April 8th, the British
fleet moved in with fire only from Fort Moultrie.
On April 12th, Lt. General Henry Clinton ordered Lt. Col. Banastre
Tarleton and Major Patrick Ferguson to capture Monck's Corner. It was a
crossroads just south of Biggins Bridge near the Santee River. Five hundred
rebels under General Isaac Huger were stationed there with orders from
General Lincoln to hold the crossroads so that communications with
Charleston would remain open.
On the evening of April 13, 1780, Lt. Colonel Tarleton gave orders
for a silent march. Later that night, they intercepted a messenger with a
letter from Huger to Lincoln and thus learned how the rebels were deployed.
At three o'clock in the morning on the 14th, the British reached the
American post, catching them completely by surprise and quickly routing
them. Following the skirmish, the British fanned out across the countryside
and effectively cut off Charleston from outside support.
Synopsis:
On April 2nd, siege works were begun about 800 yards from the American
fortifications. During the first few days of the siege, the British
operations were under heavy artillery fire. On April 4th, they built
redoubts near the Ashley and Cooper Rivers to protect their flanks. On April
6th, a warship was hauled overland from the Ashley River to the Cooper River
to harass crossings by the besieged to the mainland.
At this point on the 12th, Lt. General Henry Clinton ordered Lt.
Colonel Banastre Tarleton to secure the far bank as described previously in
the Background. Governor John Rutledge left the city on the 13th. On the 21st
a parlay was made between Lincoln and Clinton, with Lincoln offering to
surrender with honor. That is, with colors flying and marching out fully
armed, but Clinton was sure of his position and quickly refused the terms. A
heavy artillery exchange followed.
On April 23rd, Lt. General Charles Cornwallis crossed the Cooper
River and assumed command of the British forces blocking escape by land.
Finally on April 24th, the Americans ventured out to harass the siege works.
The lone American casualty was Tom Moultrie, brother of William Moultrie. On
April 29th, the British advanced on the left end of the canal that fronted
the city's fortifications with the purpose of destroying the dam and
draining the canal.
The Americans knew the importance of that canal to the city's
defenses and responded with steady and fierce artillery and small arms fire.
By the following night, the British had succeeded in draining some water. By
May 4th, several casualties had been sustained and the fire had been so
heavy that work was often suspended. On the 5th, the Americans made a
countermove from their side, but by the 6th, almost all of the water had
drained out of the heavily damaged dam and plans for an assault began.
On that same day, May 6th, Fort Moultrie surrendered. On May 8th,
General Clinton called for unconditional surrender from Maj. General
Benjamin Lincoln, but Lincoln again tried to negotiate for honors of war. On
May 11th, the British fired red-hot shot that burned several homes before
Lincoln finally called for parlay and to negotiate terms for surrender. The
final terms dictated that the entire Continental force captured were
prisoners of war. On May 12th, the actual surrender took place with General
Lincoln leading a ragged bunch of soldiers out of the city.
The senior officers including Maj. General Benjamin Lincoln
eventually were exchanged for British officers in American hands. For all
others in the Continental army, a long stay on prison boats in Charleston
Harbor was the result, where sickness and disease would ravage them. The
defeat left no Continental Army in the South and the country wide open for
British taking. Even before Lincoln surrendered, the Continental Congress
had already appointed Maj. General Horatio Gates to replace him.
The British quickly established outposts in a semicircle from
Georgetown to Augusta, Georgia, with positions at Camden, Ninety-Six,
Cheraw, Rocky Mount and Hanging Rock in between. Parole was offered to back
country rebels and many accepted, including Andrew Pickens. Soon after
securing Charleston, Lt. General Henry Clinton gave command of the Southern
Theatre to Lt. General Charles Cornwallis and on June 5th, he sailed north
back to New York.
General Clinton's one order to General Cornwallis before he left, was
to maintain possession of Charleston above all else. Cornwallis was not to
move into North Carolina if it jeopardized this holding. Clinton also had
ordered that all militia and civilians be released from their parole. But in
addition, they must take an oath to the Crown and be at ready to serve when
called upon by His Majesty's government. This addition angered many of the
locals and led to many deserting or ignoring the order and terms of their
parole.
Conclusion:
This was a severe blow to the colonies. It was the greatest loss
of manpower and equipment of the war for the Americans and gave the British
nearly complete control of the Southern colonies.
*courtesy of the Patriot Resource
Recommended readings: (Click on link to purchase)
Title: Celia Garth : A Story of Charleston in the Revolution || Author: Gwen Bristow || ISDN: 1-87785-358-5 || Released: February 2000 | |
This fictionalized account of the woman in Frances "Swamp Fox" Marion's life shows the American Revolution in the South from a woman's perspective. It provides historic insight within a fictionalized account and emphasizes the role this woman, and many like her, played in the war. Would have published it again myself. I have been waiting 40 years to own a copy of my own, having read it 6 or 7 times the year I was 13. It would appeal to any Anne River Siddons fan. Many find this as one of the best all time fictional books regarding the period in our history. |
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