| Ongoing Campaigns | After Action Report |
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225th Anniversary of the Victory
at Kings Mountain,
October 7, 2005
October 7th, 2005 threatened rain but held off.
The day was misty, with some light sprinkling, when members
of various Patriotic organizations met atop Kings Mountain to honor
the men who had fought there to secure American liberty.![]() Color Guards from 6 states assembled before the bronze plaque affixed to the obelisk atop Kings Mountain plateau, and the site of the Patriot's victory. ![]() In a display of pageantry and patriotism, the Color Guard advances their colors. ![]() NSSAR Secretary General, Judge Nathan White addresses the gathering. ![]() The wreath garden at Kings Mountain, Oct. 7, 2005 A Photo Gallery of this event may be found here. |
The Battle of Kings Mountain,
October 7, 1780
Historians
consider the Battle of Kings Mountain to be the "turning point in the
South" in America's War for Independence. The victory of Patriots over
Loyalist troops destroyed the left wing of Cornwallis' army. The battle
also effectively ended, at least temporarily, the British advance into
North Carolina. The victory of the Overmountain Men allowed
General Nathanael Greene the opportunity to reorganize the American
Army.
In September, 1780, Cornwallis invaded North Carolina. To protect his troops from guerilla attack, Cornwallis ordered Maj. Patrick Ferguson to move northward into western North Carolina before joining the main British Army in Charlotte. In late September, Ferguson camped at Gilbert Town (near present day Rutherfordton). He sent a message to Colonel Isaac Shelby, whom he considered to be the leader of the "backwater men." The message said that if Shelby and his men did not stop their opposition to the British, Ferguson would march his army over the mountains, hang their leaders and "lay the country waste with fire and sword." The Patriots would have none of it. On September 25, Patriot leaders and Colonels Charles McDowell, John Sevier, Isaac Shelby and William Campbell gathered at Sycamore Shoals on the Watauga River (near present day Tennessee). They marched five days over the snow covered mountains to the Quaker Meadows Plantation owned by McDowell's family (in present day Morganton). There, they were joined by more frontiersmen including those serving under Benjamin Cleveland and Joseph Winston. The troops, who came to be known collectively as the Over Mountain Men, marched toward Gilbert Town and Ferguson. Late on October 6, Ferguson received word from his spies that Americans were close behind him. Camping at Kings Mountain, near the North Carolina border, he sent a message to Cornwallis requesting reinforcement. Kings Mountain is an outlying portion of the Blue Ridge Mountains. A heavily rocky and wooded area, the mountain rises 60 feet above the plain surrounding it. The campsite was supposedly an ideal place for Ferguson to camp because the mountain has a plateau at its summit. The Scot considered the summit too steep to be scaled.Ferguson was right in believing that his would be attackers would expose themselves to musket fire if they attempted to scale the summit. But Ferguson did not realize his men could only fire if they went out into the open, exposing themselves to musket fire. Most of the Patriot troops were skilled hunters who routinely killed fast moving animals. On this day, Ferguson's men would not find escape an easy task. The fighting began around 3 p.m. when some of Ferguson's men noticed the Patriot soldiers surrounding the mountain. After a brief skirmish, the shooting began in earnest when two of the Patriot regiments opened fire on the Loyalists simultaneously. The Loyalists fired back but the Patriots were protected by the heavily wooded area. During the battle, Patrick Ferguson commanded his men with the use of a silver whistle. Many Patriot fighters later recalled hearing the sound of Ferguson's whistle over the sound of the rifle fire. The whistle and the checkered hunting shirt he wore over his uniform made the Scottish commander quite noticeable on the battlefield. After nearly an hour of fighting, Ferguson suddenly fell from his horse. One foot was hanging in his stirrup -- several, perhaps as many as eight bullets were in his body. Some accounts say he died before he hit the ground. Other accounts say that his men propped him against a tree, where he died. Ferguson was the only British soldier killed in the battle -- all others were Americans, either Loyalist or Patriot. Ferguson's second in command then ordered that a white flag of surrender be hoisted. Despite the call for surrender by the Loyalists, the Patriots could not immediately stop their men from shooting. Many Patriots remembered that the infamous Colonel Tarleton had mowed down Patriot troops at Waxhaw despite the fact that the troops were trying to surrender. Eventually, the fighting at Kings Mountain stopped. Cornwallis was shaken when the news of Ferguson's defeat reached his headquarters. He remained in Charlotte only a few days before withdrawing back into South Carolina. From the Battle of King's Mountain, Peggy Beach, 1997 |
| Future Planning |
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January
14, 2006 - 225th
Anniversary, Battle of Cowpens, SC (SAR Wreath Laying Ceremony,
Revolutionary War Reenactments) February 10 & 11, 2006 - 225th Celebration of the Crossing of the Dan, South Boston, VA February 18 & 19, 225th Anniversary Reenactment of the Battle at Cowan's Ford, Huntersville, NC February 24 & 25, 2006 - Spring 2006 National Meeting for Trustees, Committees, and Officers, Louisville, KY February 25 & 26, 2006 - Celebration of the Battle at Moore's Creek Bridge, Currie, NC March 4, 2006 - Board of Managers meeting (BOM), Raleigh, NC March 18 & 19, 2006 - 225th Anniversary Reenactment of the Battle of Guilford Courthouse, Greensboro, NC April 7 - 9, 2006 - NCSSAR Annual Convention, North Raleigh Hilton hotel, Wake Forest Road, Raleigh, NC May 13, 2006 - 10th Annual Celebration of Patriot's Day, Alamance Battleground State Historic Site July 8 - 12, 2006 - NSSAR 116th Annual Congress , International Hotel, Dallas, TX Underlined links indicate a hyperlink to another Webpage with more information about a particular event
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| Crossroads |
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Three members of the
Alamance Battleground
Chapter of the NCSSAR , Compatriots Sam Powell, Jeff Bright and Jim
Gillgam have set out to prove that the history of Revolutionary War
battle sites in Alamance County is still open to discovery.
They
went metal detecting, first to a colonial era mill site, then to a
spring located near the Clapp’s Mill battlefield, and finally
to
the Clapp’s Mill battlefield , where they found the artifacts pictured below. Some of these articles came from a campsite where Banastre Tarleton had camped around the time of the Battle at Clapp’s Mill (4 March 1781).
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| PAGE 1 | INDEX OF ARTICLES | PAGE 2 |