7-3 The Path to Victory
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Seeking Loyalist support, the British invaded the South—but
ultimately lost the war there.
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For more than two centuries, the American Revolution has
inspired other people to fight tyranny.
ONE AMERICAN’S STORY
Patriot Nancy Hart glared at the five-armed
Loyalists who burst into her Georgia cabin. Tradition says that the men had
shot her last turkey and ordered her to cook it for them. Raids like this were
common in the South, where feuding neighbors used the war as an excuse to fight
each other. Both Patriots and Loyalists took part in the raids. Many women and
children had moved out of Georgia, but the six-foot-tall, freckled Hart chose
to stay and fight. She could shoot a gun as accurately as any man.
As she prepared the food, Hart planned her
attack. When dinner was ready, the men sat down to eat. Seizing one of their
muskets, Hart quickly shot and killed one man and wounded another. She kept the
gun aimed on the others as her daughter ran for help. A group of nearby Patriots
arrived and hanged the Loyalists.
As Nancy
Hart’s story demonstrates, the fighting between Patriots and Loyalists in the
South was vicious.
Savannah
and Charles Town
The
British believed that most Southerners were Loyalists. Because of this, in 1778
the British decided to move the war to the South. After three years of fighting
in the North, the British were no closer to victory. Although they had captured
Northern cities, they couldn’t control the countryside because they did not
have enough troops to occupy it. The British believed that if they gained
territory in the South, Southern Loyalists would hold it for them.
The
British also expected large numbers of Southern slaves to join them because
they had promised to grant the slaves freedom. Although thousands of African
Americans did run away to join the British, not all of them were set free.
Instead, some British officers sold African Americans into slavery in the West
Indies.
Britain’s
West Indian colonies were a third reason the British invaded the South.
Southern seaports were closer to the West Indies, where British troops were
stationed. If the British captured Southern ports, they could move troops back
and forth between the two regions.
In
December 1778, the British captured the port of Savannah, Georgia. Using
Savannah as a base, they then conquered most of Georgia. In 1780, a British
army led by General Henry Clinton landed in South Carolina. They trapped
American forces in Charles Town (now Charleston), which was the largest Southern
city. When the city’s 5,000 defenders surrendered, the Americans lost almost
their entire Southern army. It was the worst American defeat of the war.
The
Swamp Fox and Guerrilla Fighting
After that
loss, Congress assigned General Horatio Gates—the victor at Saratoga—to form a
new Southern army. Continental soldiers led by Baron de Kalb formed the army’s
core. Gates added about 2,000 new and untrained militia. He then headed for
Camden, South Carolina, to challenge the army led by the British general Lord
Cornwallis.

On the
way, a band of Patriots from South Carolina approached Gates. “Their number did
not exceed 20 men and boys, some white, some black, and all mounted, but most
of them miserably equipped,” wrote an officer. Their leader was Francis Marion,
called the “Swamp Fox.” He provided Gates with helpful knowledge of South
Carolina’s coastal swamplands. Gates sent Marion to destroy boats on the Santee
River behind Camden. This would cut off British communications with Charles
Town.
In August 1780, Gates’s army ran into British
troops outside Camden. The Americans were in no condition to fight. They were
out of supplies and half-starved. Even worse, Gates put the inexperienced
militia along part of the frontline instead of behind the veterans. When the
British attacked, the militia panicked and ran. Gates also fled, but Kalb
remained with his soldiers and received fatal wounds. This second defeat in the
South ended Gates’s term as head of an army and caused American spirits to fall
to a new low.
After Camden, a small British force set out for Charles Town with a column of
American prisoners. Marion’s band overwhelmed the British and freed the
prisoners. Fighting from a base in the swamps, Marion’s men cut the British
supply line that led inland and north from Charles Town. Marion used the
methods of a guerrilla. Guerrillas are small bands of fighters who weaken the
enemy with surprise raids and hit-and-run attacks. Both Patriots and Loyalists
formed guerrilla bands in the South. They carried out vicious raids.
The
Tide Turns
Even battles in the South sometimes turned
vicious. One example was the Battle of Kings Mountain, fought on the border of
North and South Carolina in October 1780. After surrounding a force of about
1,000 Loyalist militia and British soldiers, the Americans slaughtered most of
them. James P. Collins, a 16-year-old American, described the scene.
A VOICE FROM THE
PAST
The dead
lay in heaps on all sides, while the groans of the wounded were heard in every
direction. I could not help turning away from the scene before me with horror
and, though exulting in victory, could not refrain from shedding tears.
James P.
Collins, quoted in The Spirit of Seventy-Six

Many of
the dead had been shot or hanged after they surrendered. The Americans killed
them in revenge for Loyalist raids and an earlier incident in which the British
had butchered Americans. Kings Mountain was one of Britain’s first losses in
the South. It soon suffered more.
Nathanael
Greene
The Battle of the Cowpens was the second serious disaster,
which occurred to the British Army, operating in the Southern States. After
Gates’s defeat at Camden, Washington put a new general, Nathanael Greene, in
charge of the Southern army. Greene was one of Washington’s most able officers.
He had been a Quaker, but his church had cast him out because of his belief in
the armed struggle against the British. Most Quakers are pacifist, or opposed
to war.
Under Greene’s command, the American army
avoided full-scale battles, in which the British had the edge because of
superior firepower. So the American forces let the British chase them around
the countryside and wear themselves out. When the Americans did fight, they did
their best to make sure the British suffered heavy losses.
As the fighting dragged on into its sixth
year, opposition to the war grew in Britain. As a result, some British leaders
began to think that American independence would not be so bad.
The End of
the War
In 1781, most of the fighting took place in
Virginia. In July of that year, the British general Cornwallis set up his base
at Yorktown, located on a peninsula in Chesapeake Bay. From there, his army
could receive supplies by ship from New York.
Washington saw Cornwallis’s decision as a
golden opportunity. In August 1781, a large French fleet arrived from the West
Indies and blocked Chesapeake Bay. These ships prevented the British from
receiving supplies—and from escaping. They also allowed Washington to come from
the North and trap Cornwallis on the peninsula. Washington had enough men to do
this because a large French force led by General Jean Rochambeau had joined his
army.
Washington and Rochambeau moved south. When
British ships tried to reach Cornwallis, French ships drove them back. In the
Battle of Yorktown, the American and French troops bombarded Yorktown with
cannon fire, turning its buildings to rubble. Cornwallis had no way out. On
October 19, 1781, he surrendered his force of about 8,000.
Although
some fighting continued, Yorktown was the last major battle of the war. When
the British prime minister, Lord North, heard the news, he gasped, “It is all
over!” Indeed, he and other British leaders were soon forced to resign.
The
victorious American forces accept the British surrender at Yorktown.
George Washington
is to the left of the American flag.