Redcoats in Wachovia
October - November 1780
During the Revolutionary War, Moravians in Wachovia were under
extreme pressure from the North Carolina colonial government and British troops
and neighbors were almost evenly divided in their loyalties to crown and Continental
Congress. Religious, industrious, peaceful, and not takers of oaths, the Moravians
asked only to be left alone in their communitarian settlements and were able to
have the state government rescind an order in 1778 that they swear allegiance
to the rebel cause. As the war continued loyalties became more conflicted and
contending troops often demanded supplies and medical support from the Brethren.
Salem was an industrial and craft center in a state with few such resources and
could not avoid demands for services or being accused of partisanship no matter
the sincerity of their protests.
When a British army under General Charles Cornwallis shifted
its attention to the South in 1780, life became increasingly difficult for the
Wachovia settlements. British southern strategy was based on the expectation of
a massive uprising of loyalist support in the Southern colonies would effectively
suppress rebellion. The fall of Charleston and the debacle at Camden in South
Carolina seemed to confirm these hopes as many loyalists joined the commands of
Colonels Banastre Tarleton and Patrick Ferguson. Encounters became more frequent
and vicious. But on the afternoon of Sunday, October 7, 1780 Ferguson’s command
managed to get trapped on King’s Mountain and be overwhelmed in less than an hour
and a half. The royal legions had lingered too long at nearly Gilbert Town (now
Rutherfordton) awaiting orders from Cornwallis in Charlotte and on moving east
found themselves encircled by Whigs from what is today’s east Tennessee, southwest
Virginia, and the Carolina Piedmont. It was no contest and the patriots found
themselves with about six hundred prisoners, most Tory neighbors. Penelope Niven
notes in Old Salem: The Official Guidebook, Bethabara hosted five
hundred soldiers and three hundred prisoners for nineteen days. Tories were
still active in the region and many Moravians remained loyal to the crown so that
Wachovia was still in danger.
Lt. Anthony Allaire of the Loyal American Volunteers, Ferguson’s
adjutant, kept a diary that records the British march from Savannah, attack on
Charleston, the battle of King’s Mountain where he was captured, his evacuation
to Wachovia, and his escape from Bethabara on Sunday, November 5. His entries
tell of the defeat of Ferguson’s army, his four weeks in captivity, escape, and
subsequent return to Charleston. The first extract is concerned with the battle
on the mountain.
Saturday, 7th. About two o’clock in the afternoon twenty-five
hundred Rebels…attacked us…their numbers enabled them to surround us. The
North Carolina regiment seeing this and being out of ammunition gave way.
Capt. DePeyster, on whom the command devolved, saw it impossible to form six
men together; thought it necessary to surrender to save the lives of the brave
men who were left. We lost in this action Maj. Ferguson…had eighteen men killed
on the spot…Of the militia, one hundred were killed including officers; wounded,
ninety; taken prisoners, about six hundred. Rebels lost Brig.-Gen Williams,
one hundred and thirty-five, including officers, killed; wounded, equal to
ours.
During the next six days the victors and their captives moved
nearly seventy miles through not always friendly territory and on October 14 Whig
leaders ordered the execution of three loyal militia officers suspected of stirring
up the countryside.
Sunday, 15th. …the Catawba river was forded at Island
Ford, about ten o’clock at night. Our march was 32 miles. All the men were
worn out with fatigue and fasting-the prisoners having no bread or meat for
two days before…About one hundred prisoners made their escape on this march.
Three days later after marches of almost forty miles, the
tired troops reached Moravian creek, and halted. On October 19th, after
covering twenty-two miles they forded Moravian creek, passed by Wilkes Court
House, and halted. ; They were in Tory territory where Tory women brought
us butter, milk, honey, and many other necessaries of life. Moved at ten o’clock
in the morning and marched fourteen miles to Mr. Headpeth’s plantation, a great
Tory.
Sunday, 22nd. Moved at ten o’clock in the morning.
Obtained liberty to go forward with Col. Shelby to Salem, a town inhabited
by Moravians. Rode ten miles, and forded Yadkin river at Shallow Ford. Proceeded
on fourteen miles further to Salem. Went to meeting in the evening; highly
entertained with the decency of those people, and with their music, Salem
contains about twenty houses, and a place of worship. The people of this town
are all mechanics; those of the other two settlements are all farmers, and
all stanch (sic) to Government.
Monday, 23rd. Lay at Salem in the evening. Two Continental
officers slept at the tavern, on their way to join their army. One Mr. Simons,
a Lieutenant of Col. Washington’s dragoons, pitied our misfortune in falling
into the hands of their militia.
Tuesday, 24th. …marched six to the old town called
Bethabara…This town is about as large as the other; but not so regularly laid
out. The inhabitants very kind to all the prisoners.
Here soldiers and captives remained for several days, their
routine interrupted by a Presbyterian sermon, truly adapted to their principles
and the times; or, rather, stuffed as full of Republicanism as their camp is of
horse thieves and jawing between Rebels and their captives almost led to the
execution of a prisoner.
Tuesday, 31st. Rode to Salem… This night very cold;
froze ice a quarter of an inch thick-the first this fall.
Thursday, 2nd. Took a walk to Bathania, three miles
from Bethabara. This town contains about thirty houses; it is regularly laid
out.
Sunday, 5th. Set off from Bethabara with Lieut. Taylor,
Lieut. Stevenson, and William Gist, a militia-man, about six o’clock in the
evening. We marched fifteen miles to Yadkin river; forded it, found it very
disagreeable. We continued on twenty miles farther to Mr. Miller’s plantation,
an exceeding good subject. Here we arrived just at daybreak the next morning.
After slipping away from Bethabara, Allaire and his small
contingent worked their way south, finding safe haven with Tory families who helped
guide them through contested territory. In an extremely cold fall they negotiated
the Brushy Mountains in ten days without confronting their foes, crossed the Pacolet
and Tyger rivers in South Carolina, and reached the security of the British base
at Ninety Six, SC, on November 24. Five days later he was in Charleston having
traveled three hundred hard and dangerous miles in twenty-four days. He retired
from military service in 1783 and settled in New Brunswick where he died June
6, 1839, at the age of eighty-three years.
With their defeat at King’s Mountain, British strategy began
to unravel. Although parts of the Piedmont remained strongly Tory, the drive for
a loyal militia lost its appeal. Tarleton’s command and David Fanning’s Tory horde
were still dangerous but the flanks of General Nathaniel Greene’s army were more
secure. After Tarleton’s army was routed on January 17, 1781 by General Daniel
Morgan’s forces at Cowpens, SC, a few miles from King’s Mountain, Lord Cornwallis
was left only with his own immediate command. In February he was in Salem which
was in chaos on his departure. A major encounter without a clear victor with Greene’s
army shortly thereafter at Guilford Court House set the British on the road to
Yorktown where they surrendered in October 1781, a year after their defeat at
King’s Mountain. Wachovia had survived despite its neutrality and uncertain allegiance
and was at last free to repair the damages of war and restore order in the three
towns.
Comment.
Kings Mountain and Cowpens National Military Parks are easily
accessible from I-85 between Gastonia, NC, and Spartanberg, SC. National Park
Service publications about the parks and the battles are well done and provide
legible maps of the routes of the opposing forces converging on Kings Mountain.
Lyman C. Draper’s Kings Mountain and Its Heroes, Cincinnati, Peter
G. Thomson, 1881; New York, Dauber & Pine, 1929, offers the most complete story
of the encounter and includes Allaire’s diary and other valuable appendices.
JHF. July 19, 2002
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