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http://www.yorkcounty.org/brattonsville/1780-Huck.html
THE 1780 PRESBYTERIAN REBELLION AND THE BATTLE OF HUCK'S DEFEAT
Sam Thomas, Curator of History, Culture &
Heritage Commission of York County
Coming predominantly from former homes in Pennsylvania, Maryland and
Virginia, the first permanent European settlers began arriving in the area
west of the Catawba River during the 1750s. These settlers were
overwhelmingly Scotch-Irish Presbyterians who traveled here by way of the
"Great Wagon Road." Allied by both blood and religious affiliations, the
Scotch-Irish pioneers moved through the Shenandoah Valley and the
present-day towns of Winchester, Lexington, and Roanoke in Virginia, and
eventually pushed south to Salisbury, North Carolina. From here they
drifted southward along the Catawba into South Carolina.
In order
to set the stage for the 1780 Presbyterian Rebellion, we first need to
take a look at the circumstances which drew these people to the "Back
Country." Problems for the Scotch-Irish began in Northern Ireland and the
Ulster Plantation in the early 1700s. Chief among the problems behind the
mass migrations of the "Irish Presbyterians," as contemporary writers
termed them, was the passage of the Test Acts of 1704 and 1705 during the
reign of Queen Anne. By the passage of these acts, Parliament sought to
establish the Anglican Church as the "official" church throughout the
British Isles. The Acts declared that the Presbyterian Church in Ireland
was without legal recognition. Furthermore, the Presbyterian clergy were
forbidden to perform marriage ceremonies and those who had previously been
married within the Presbyterian Church were declared to be living in
fornication. The Acts further stated that any one who subscribed to the
Presbyterian Church could no longer hold any military or civil position,
no matter how minor. This greatly angered most of Ulster as the majority
of the region's officials, from Magistrate to Tax Collector to Postmaster
were Presbyterian. In Londonderry, for instance, 10 of the 12 aldermen and
14 of the 24 burgesses were immediately put out of office for being
Presbyterian even though these same men had fought in the 1689 siege of
Londonderry on the side of the Parliamentary or Cromwellian forces against
the Roman Catholic army of James II.1 This act of betrayal, in the minds of the
Scotch-Irish, laid the foundations for relations which many Scotch-Irish
developed towards the British and the Crown in
particular.
Following the Test Acts, the great Scotch-Irish
migrations began in earnest, as thousands upon thousands left Ulster for
the American colonies where they could practice their Calvinistic brand of
religion. It has been suggested that as much as one-third of the
Protestant population of Ireland left for the American colonies between
1731 and 1768. After 1741 an estimated 12,000 left each year.2 These numbers, however, do not compare to
those which left between the years 1771 and 1773. Many of these came
because of the failed 1770 uprising of Ulster Scot (as they were known in
Northern Ireland) tenants against their landlords in Ulster. Those
involved in the revolts and preceding movement became known as the "Hearts
of Steel" and "Hearts of Oak," or "Steelboys" and "Oakboys." The agrarian
revolts were ruthlessly put down by the British Crown and ring leaders
were rounded up and hung. Thousands sought safety in the American
colonies. During the brief period from 1771 to 1773, an estimated 30,000
fled to the shores of America, a large proportion of them coming directly
to South Carolina and the Backcountry. All total, by the eve of the
American Revolution more than a quarter of a million Ulster Scots, or
Scotch-Irish, had come to the American colonies in less than 50 years.
Some ethnologists have even suggested that the total may be closer to
twice this number.3
Migrating to the American
colonies, most of the Scotch-Irish originally settled in the
mid-Atlantic--particularly Pennsylvania. The Quakers who had earlier
settled Pennsylvania, decided the Scotch-Irish could be very useful to
them as a buffer against the natives to the west. So the new arrivals were
steered toward the western lands of Pennsylvania by the colony's Quaker
officials. As more and more Scotch-Irish entered the colony, however, land
became more difficult to obtain and problems between the Scotch-Irish and
the Quakers increased. In order to rid themselves of the ever increasing
rents and land prices in Pennsylvania these Scotch-Irish once again
migrated. This time traveling southward to the piedmont counties of the
Carolinas.
Prior to 1750 the Carolina Backcountry was nearly devoid
of European settlers, but by the time the Revolution reached the region in
1780, the Backcountry contained an estimated population of more than a
quarter of a million.4 Not all of these were Scotch-Irish
Presbyterians. There were smaller numbers of English, Welsh, native Irish,
Swiss, French and Germans included in the population estimates, but the
Scotch-Irish were by far the most numerous.5 (In fact by 1850, Presbyterians were
still the most dominant religious group in York County, claiming 46% of
the county's churchgoing residents.)6
The early makeup of York County
gives us a good example. According to a mid-19th century historian, York
County on the eve of the Revolution was composed of "70% Scotch-Irish; 20%
English; and 10% Welsh, Huguenot and native Irish."7 Although this statement may not be
entirely accurate, as we know there were some Germans and Swiss who
settled in the far northwestern section of the county around kings
Mountain and Kings Creek prior to the war, it certainly shows how strong
the Scotch-Irish were in the development and direction of the
county.
In the 1750s, the first settlers into the South Carolina
Backcountry began arriving in the region and drifted into the eastern part
of York County from Mecklenburg, Lancaster and Chester counties. As there
were no villages established in the region until after the war, the first
residents settled in loose, communal or clannish, family-related groups
called "clachans," much as they had originally done in Ulster, and later
in Pennsylvania and Virginia. These clachans developed around the
Presbyterian Kirks, or meetinghouses, and became the forerunners of the
congregations.8 This congregation generally encompassed a
5 to 10 mile radius centered on the meetinghouse as this was deemed the
distance one could travel for service and back home in the same day.
Within this congregation lived anywhere from 20 to 500 families.9 Charles Woodmason, an Anglican itinerant
minister was sent into the Backcountry as a missionary in the 1760s and
stated that the congregation at Waxhaw was "most surprisingly thick
settled beyond any Spot in England . . . Seldom less than 9, 10, 1200
People assemble of a Sunday."10 With these relatively compact
populations centered around the meetinghouses, the Kirks quickly became
religious and social centers in the Backcountry Scotch-Irish
stronghold.
The Anglican Church, the official church of the colony,
began taking notice of the ever increasing population of Presbyterians in
the Backcountry. In order to try and convert some of these heathens to the
"correct religion," a number of Anglican ministers were sent into the
area. Arriving in the region on the eve of the American Revolution to
administer to the people's religious needs, Charles Woodmason had some
very scathing comments about the residents of the region. The majority of
Woodmason's disgust was, as you might expect, reserved primarily for the
Presbyterians, whom he referred to as those ". . . Ignorant, mean,
worthless, beggarly Irish Presbyterians, the Scum of the Earth, and Refuse
of Mankind."11 Woodmason also made mention of arriving
at a Presbyterian meetinghouse which "had a large Congragation - but
according to Custom, one half of them got drunk before they went home"
that evening from the service.12
In all fairness, the
Presbyterians did not think much of Woodmason either. On one occasion
Woodmason was attempting to deliver a sermon to an assembled group, "But
the Service was greatly interrupted by a Gang of Presbyterians who kept
halooing [hollering] and whooping without [the] Door like Indians."13 On another occasion "they hir'd a Band
of rude fellows to come to Service who brought with them 57 Dogs (for I
counted them) which in Time of Service they set fighting, and I was
obliged to stop." When everything had quieted down, Woodmason tried to
continue, and again the service was interrupted. He further explained his
situation in not seeking charges against this band of ruffians "as all the
Magistrates are Presbyterians, [and] I could not get a Warrant - if I got
Warrants as the Constables are Presbyterians likewise, I could not get
them serv'd - If serv'd, the Guard would let them escape."14
But Woodmason did not concern
himself with just the Presbyterians. Probably the only group he had even
less time for than the Presbyterians were the Baptists, whom he called, ".
. . exceedingly Vain and Ignorant."15 Woodmason also had some rather
derogatory comments for Quakers and Catholics, whom he constantly referred
to as "papists."16
Aside from Woodmason, there were
others who did not think very highly of the Scotch-Irish Presbyterians,
even those with whom they shared like-minded goals. General Charles Lee,
the commander of American forces in Charleston in 1776 when they beat off
the first British attempt to take the province, stated in his will, "I
desire most earnestly that I may not be buried in any church, or
church-yard, or within a mile of any Presbyterian or Anabaptist
meeting-house; for since I have resided in this country, I have had so
much bad company while living, that I do not choose to continue it when
dead."17
During the early years of
settlement, the Charleston officials did not interfere with the
Scotch-Irish settling in the "Back Parts" as they termed it. Just as in
Pennsylvania, the Colonial officials sought to use the Scotch-Irish as a
buffer to the natives. However, as the number of Scotch-Irish emigrants in
the region rapidly grew, the attitudes of the Charleston officials began
to change. Here, in the Carolina Piedmont, the Scotch-Irish enjoyed their
independence. Being so far from the colonial capital in Charleston, the
Presbyterians were allowed to practice their faith and way of living
without worry of interference from the British Crown or Charleston
officials.
As they were the first settlers on the frontier, and for
purposes of self-defense, the Scotch-Irish began military drilling as soon
as they entered the region. Finding themselves sandwiched in between
unfriendly natives to the west, primarily in the form of the Cherokee,
Shawnee and Creek, and English officials in Charleston who tended to turn
their backs on the residents of the backcountry whom they considered
backward and uncivilized, little more than savages themselves, the early
settlers frequently found themselves the targets of Indian raids. As a
result, the militia system in the backcountry was born of
necessity.
In a region so often ignored, the local militia became a
sort of police force, patrolling the area for possible Indian or slave
troubles, and in controlling the seemingly numerous outlaw bands which
roamed the region.18 Militia units, or "Beat Companies" were
formed enrolling every able bodied man on the frontier. Although the
militia system gave some limited military training to the men of the
Backcountry, it never developed enough to enable it to wage an all-out
war. The one advantage, however, which the militia systems brought to the
era was their social organization, and this organizational base
contributed to the state's ability to fight for the next 100 years. As the
American Revolution in the South approached, militia service became
instrumental in turning the tide of war against the British.
Most
of the Scotch-Irish, whether through direct dealings or by way of family
traditions, continued to harbor great resentments against the Crown even
after their settlement, and this in turn brought to the Backcountry a
ready-made group of "born rebels," as one British officer called
them.
In the Backcountry, due to their isolation from the coast,
past resentments could be put aside - at least temporarily. When war
arrived after 1776, at first the Scotch-Irish were rather lukewarm toward
the idea of independence from Great Britain. Here they were content to
remain neutral so long as they were left alone. The conflict as most of
the Scotch-Irish saw it was between the British Crown and the Charleston
aristocrats, whom they resented as much as the British officials and so it
did not involve them. But the problems between the Backcountry and the
Crown finally boiled to the surface in 1780 as "The Presbyterian
Rebellion." In 1778 an unknown Hessian officer recorded his observations
on the war. "Call this war by whatever name you may, only call it not an
American Rebellion: it is nothing more or less than a Scotch-Irish
Presbyterian Rebellion."19 George Washington also remarked on the
contribution to the war effort with a tribute to the Scotch-Irish from his
headquarters at Valley Forge when he declared, "If defeated everywhere
else, I will make my last stand for liberty among the Scotch-Irish . .
."20 It is this Backcountry Rebellion which
is so closely identified with the battles of Kings Mountain, Cowpens,
Hanging Rock and Huck's Defeat.
By the time of the Revolution, the
congregations were referred to collectively as "the Irish settlements" by
contemporary writers. When writing their memoirs, many of the rebel or
Whig leaders constantly referred to recruiting in the Irish settlements
and calling men out of the congregations. It was in the Irish settlements
and Presbyterian congregations that anti-British sentiment was the
strongest. Nearly all of the men who fought at Kings Mountain were drawn
from the Presbyterian settlements west of the Catawba. As the late
Chalmers Davidson of Davidson College once wrote, "The seeds of resistance
to British authority were sown in the Presbyterian Churches that made
captains and colonels out of deacons and elders."21
At the forefront of this
anti-British attitude were the Presbyterian ministers. One Presbyterian
minister sent the men of his congregation out to chase after Patrick
Ferguson with the words, ". . . go forth and wield the Sword of the Lord
and of our Gideons."22 William Martin, Presbyterian minister in
the Fishing Creek area of Chester County, was arrested by the British in
1780 and charged with "preaching rebellion from the pulpit."23 Once again our good friend Woodmason
offers some insights into the teachings of the Presbyterian ministers.
"Not less than 20 Itinerant Presbyterian . . . Preachers are maintain'd by
the Synod of Pennsylvania . . . to traverse this Country Poisoning the
Minds of the People - Instilling Democratical and Common Wealth Principles
into their Minds - Embittering them against the very Name of Bishops, and
all Episcopal Government and laying deep their fatal Republican Notions
and Principles - Especially - That they owe no Subjection to Great Britain
- That they are a free People."24 Because of their strong feelings against
the Crown, strengthened by what has been called the "Presbyterian Ethic,"
the Scotch-Irish settlements and their meetinghouses, as well as the homes
of their ministers and leaders became rallying points for those of like
sentiments, while at the same time gathering the wrath of the British and
their Tory allies.25 As a result, many of the Scotch-Irish
settlements became targets of Tory raids and destruction during the course
of the war. Patrick Ferguson had made it known that upon leaving Kings
Mountain, he intended to "spend one night in Bethel Church, leave it in
ashes by day-light . . . and be on the east side of the Catawba before
nightfall."26
Banastre Tarleton, in his memoirs
of the campaigns in the South in 1780 and 1781, makes mention of a "short
expedition [by Colonel Lord Rawdon in June 1780] into a settlement of
Irish, situated in the Waxhaws." When Rawdon left the settlement the
church had been burned because, "All Presbyterian churches are shops of
sedition," as he put it.27 Tarleton further made reference to the
Scotch-Irish when he wrote, ". . . the Irish were the most averse of all
other settlers to the British government in America."28 A British Lieutenant captured after
Kings Mountain and marched into North Carolina as a prisoner also made
comment concerning the outlandish beliefs of the Scotch-Irish
Presbyterians. "Here we heard 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."
One
noted English historian of the 19th century later remarked that,
"Throughout the revolted colonies . . . the foremost, the most
irreconcilable, the most determined in pushing the quarrel to the last
extremity, were the Scotch-Irish . . ." Presbyterians.30 Even George Bancroft, the great
religious historian of the late 19th century once claimed, ". . . the
first voice publicly raised in America to dissolve the connection with
Great Britain came, not from the Puritans of New England, nor the Dutch of
New York, nor the planters of Virginia, but from the Scotch-Irish
Presbyterians."31 British Colonel George Turnbull made
reference to the Scotch-Irish of York, Chester and Lancaster Counties in a
June 1780 report to Lord Cornwallis when he wrote, "[they] keep the candle
of rebellion still burning in the backcountry."32
The events which pushed the
people of the Backcountry into vocal opposition to Royal authority were
twofold and came in 1780. First, the proclamation by Sir Henry Clinton
that every male resident of the colony would be required to fulfill his
duty to the Crown as an English citizen. This meant they would be
compelled to serve as loyalists troops. This was something the
Scotch-Irish Presbyterians had no intention of doing.
The second
event occurred in the early summer of 1780 with a series of "invasions"
into the region; first by Banastre Tarleton and his "Green Dragoons" (or
as they were more often referred to throughout the Backcountry, the
"Bloody Scout"), and subsequently by Lord Cornwallis on two separate
occasions.
Both of these events were preceded by the British
occupation of Charleston in May 1780. With British control of Charleston,
Great Britain seemed poised to regain all of the province of South
Carolina and complete another step in their ultimate goal of victory in
the South.
British strategy in the South hinged on making use of
local troops in recovering the southern colonies, beginning with Georgia.
After securing their southern neighbor, the British would advance
northward into South Carolina and beyond, eventually linking up with
British troops in New York. With this in mind, British Lord Cornwallis
began moving into the interior of South Carolina in the late Spring of
1780, establishing his headquarters at Camden. From here he set about
creating a number of forward outposts, consolidating his forces,
recruiting loyalists in the region, and trying to quell the rising unrest
in the Backcountry. Being unsuccessful in his venture of raising large
numbers of loyalists in the area, Cornwallis was forced to depend more on
his regular loyalist troops from Pennsylvania and New York.
In
July, 1780, with the double goal of trying to recruit more loyalist
supporters in the region of York and Chester Counties, and punishing those
who had declared for the rebel cause, Matthew Floyd dispatched part of his
loyalist force from the British post at Rocky Mount, under the command of
Captain Christian Huck, to ferret out rebels where ever they could be
found and made to pay. Huck had been a prominent lawyer in Philadelphia
prior to the war and journeyed south with Cornwallis and Tarleton. Huck
seemed to display an intense hatred for the Scotch-Irish Presbyterians and
in the Backcountry he found a great opportunity for carrying on his type
of war. In the summer of 1780 he found himself commanding a mixed force of
British Dragoons and Tory militia.
The capture or destruction of
three prominent individuals and their followers were quickly identified as
targets for Huck's force - William "Billy" Hill, John McClure and William
Bratton. In early July, 1780, Huck and his band arrived at Hill's Iron
Works in eastern York County. For some time, Hill had been in the habit of
supplying iron shot for the rebel forces in the region, and Huck was
determined to destroy the works and capture Hill in the process. Easily
brushing aside the rebel guard at the works, but finding much to his
disappointment that Hill was not at home, Huck proceeded to burn the iron
works and Hill's home to the ground. With part of the mission complete,
the loyalists moved farther south in search of the elusive rebels,
establishing their headquarters at White's Mill in southern York
County.
At the same time British forces were moving through York
County west of the Catawba River, Thomas Sumter had established the main
rebel camp east of the Catawba in northern Lancaster County on Clem's
Branch. Being informed that Huck was at White's Mill, William Bratton and
John McClure with their men set out from the rebel encampment to destroy
the notorious Tory. Along the way Bratton and McClure were joined by
others; Edward Lacey, William Hill, John Moffett, Andrew Love, Samuel
Watson, James Moore, John Chambers, John Mills, Thomas Neal, James
Mitchell, John Nixon, James Wallace and Richard Winn, along with their
men. No other battle fought in the Carolina Backcountry, including Kings
Mountain and Cowpens, would bring together such a concentration of local
rebel leaders.
The numbers involved on both sides are extremely
difficult to pin down due to the many different accounts and the fact that
the rebel forces seem to have converged on Huck from different directions.
For the rebels, accounts state that the numbers taking part in the attack
range from 75 to 800. For the most part we are able to come up with at
least four major rebel groups involved in the attack on Huck; Bratton
& McClure, Hill & Neal, Lacey, and Moffett. Using first and second
hand accounts from these major groups as a basis for determining numbers,
we come up with a rebel force numbering in the neighborhood of 500
men.
We face the same problem in trying to pinpoint the number of
Tory forces. While both Hill and Lacey set the Tory strength at 500,
Tarleton lists Huck's force at about 110 men and officers.33 The British estimate is a good starting
point as these were the official numbers in Huck's force, but did not
include local militia. In traversing the countryside up and down Fishing
Creek however, Huck would probably have picked up a few converts. The
figure of 120 to 150 would seem to be more in line with the differing
accounts.
From White's Mill, Huck continued southward into
present-day Chester County where he proceeded to burn the home and study
of the Rev. John Simpson, minister of Fishing Creek Presbyterian Church;
and the home of John McClure. After a stay in Chester County attempting to
locate the rebels, Huck pushed northward to the home of William Bratton.
Finding no rebels in arms there, he continued on up the road to the home
of James Wiliamson where the main part of the British force encamped for
the night on July 11.
Upon entering the Rocky Creek settlement in
Chester County, the rebel forces learned that Huck was no longer at
White's Mill, but instead was moving northwestward back into York County.
Pushing on, the rebels arrived at the Williamson home before daylight on
the 12th and made plans for a dawn attack. Dividing their force in two,
the rebels placed one group to the north of the house while the other
circled around to the east. At daybreak, as the British were just climbing
out of their bedrolls, the attack began. Surprised by the suddenness of
the attack, the British were thrown into chaos. Twice, the British tried
unsuccessfully to mount a counterattack. Dashing from the Williamson
house, Huck swung up onto his horse and waving his sword attempted to
rally his force to meet the rebel threat. Thomas Carroll, sighting Huck,
took aim and shot the Tory leader in the head. The British now lost what
organized resistance they had and the fight became a running battle back
to the south toward the Bratton house where some of the last fighting took
place.
The battle lasted a little over an hour and cost the British
25 to 50 killed, several times that number wounded, and 29
captured.34 As was custom for both sides during the
war in the Backcountry, mercy was not freely given upon successful
completion of a battle. Several of those captured were later hung. The
only rebel casualty reported was a man by the name of Campbell.35 On July 15, Lord Cornwallis reported to
his superior, Lord Clinton, "the Captain is killed, and only twelve of the
legion and as many of the militia escaped."36
The battle of Huck's Defeat was
not a major affair in military history, but for the rebellion in the
Carolina Backcountry it marked a turning point in public opinion. William
Hill, in his memoirs, commented on the far ranging magnitude of the
victory; "It had the tendency to inspire the Americans with courage &
fortitude & to teach them that the enemy was not invincible."37 Edward Lacey also commented: "The entire
overthrow of Huck's army was the first repulse the British arms had met
with in South Carolina, after she was by many considered a subdued
province, and proved that the British bayonet was not invincible."38 The morale of the rebels was greatly
enhanced, for this was the first success by the loosely-knit rebels over
British forces in the South since the first British attack on Charleston
in 1776 and the first check to British advances since the fall of
Charleston six weeks earlier. The defeat of Huck brought many new recruits
into the rebel camps throughout the region, and at the same time, forced
most Tories to either flee or remain quiet. The counties of York and
Chester were cleared of any open show of British support. At no other time
during the course of the war would another Tory leader attempt to quell
this hotbed of rebel activity. Even Patrick Ferguson stayed west of the
Broad River on his northward march into North Carolina, only to turn back
south and toward destruction as soon as he set foot in York
County.
Although the battle of Huck's Defeat involved fewer numbers
than the battles of Kings Mountain and Cowpens, which have both
overshadowed the former, the destruction of Huck and his force on that
early morning of July 12, 1780 set into motion a series of events which
would lead to Kings Mountain in October, Cowpens in January, 1781, and
finally to Yorktown in October of that same year. The period from summer
1780 to winter 1781 proved to be a pivotal six months for the British in
their overall war strategy. With the reception he received in the
Backcountry, Lord Cornwallis was persuaded to look more northward for
salvation instead of this "nest of Presbyterian hornets" in which he found
himself.
In the end it was the men of Backcountry, our ancestors,
who proved to be the turning force in the fight for independence and the
creation of the United States. We can take great pride in saying that the
war for independence, fought without success in the North for over four
years, was won in just six months of fighting between the Catawba and the
Broad rivers of South Carolina. And if it had not been for the
Scotch-Irish Presbyterians we might all be speaking the "Queen's English"
today.
FOOTNOTES
1 Gaius Jackson Slosser, ed., They Seek a Country: The
American Presbyterians (NY: The Macmillan Company, 1955) 6-7.
2 Slosser, Seek a Country, 8.
3 Slosser,
Seek a Country, 8.
4 Slosser, Seek a Country, 66;
John Solomon Otto, The Southern Frontiers, 1607-1860 (NY: Greenwood Press,
1989) 65.
5 Prior to the American Revolution, of the
34 earliest churches founded in an 18 county region of the Carolina
Piedmont stretching from Rowan County, North Carolina to Fairfield County,
South Carolina, 31 of them were Presbyterian.
6
Arnold Shankman, et al, York County, South Carolina; Its People and Its
Heritage (Norfolk, VA: The Donning Company, 1983), 36.
7 Evening Herald, 30 October 1931.
8 Otto,
Southern Frontiers, 55-56.
9 Slosser, Seek a Country,
68.
10 Woodmason, Charles. The Carolina Backcountry
on the Eve of the Revolution. (Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North
Carolina Press, 1953) 14.
11 Woodmason, Carolina
Backcountry, 60.
12 Woodmason, Carolina Backcountry,
12.
13 Woodmason, Carolina Backcountry,
17.
14 Woodmason, Carolina Backcountry,
45.
15 Woodmason, Carolina Backcountry,
22.
16 Woodmason, Carolina Backcountry,
241.
17 Christopher Hibbert, Redcoats and
Rebels: The American Revolution Through British Eyes (NY: Avon Books,
1990) 344.
18 This vigilante type of justice system
was evidenced by the "Regulator Movement" of the South Carolina
Backcountry from the mid 1760s to early 1770s, and centered around York,
Chester and Lancaster Counties. For more information on the Regulator
Movement in South Carolina see Richard Maxwell Brown's The South Carolina
Regulators.
19 Ronnie Hanna, Land of the Free
(Lurgan, Co. Armagh, N. Ireland: Ulster Society Publications Limited,
1992) 1.
20 Hanna, Land of Free, 82.
21 Chalmers Davidson, "The Colonial Scotch-Irish of the
Carolina Piedmont," typewritten, unpublished manuscript, date
unknown.
22 The Rev. Samuel Doak of the Watauga
Settlement in what is now northeastern Tennessee (then northwestern North
Carolina), October 1780.
23 George Howe, History of
the Presbyterian Church in South Carolina (Columbia, SC: Duffie &
Chapman, 1870) 500-501.
24 Woodmason, Carolina
Backcountry, 240-241.
25 The Presbyterian Ethic,
explained by David Caldwell in 1775 stated, ". . . God would not produce a
timely miracle just to rescue people from their bondage. Instead the
Creator had long ago implanted into man's nature a capacity for civic
responsibility. God had taught men to consider themselves His stewards,
had given them talents and opportunities, and expected them to make the
most of those endowments;" Robert M. Calhoon, Religion and the American
Revolution in North Carolina (Raleigh, NC: North Carolina Department of
Cultural Resources, 1976) 9.
26 R.A. Webb, History
of the Presbyterian Church of Bethel (Privately Printed: Bethel
Presbyterian Church, 1938) 13.
27 Ernest Trice
Thompson, Presbyterians in the South, Volume One: 1607-1861 (Richmond, VA:
John Knox Press, 1963) 92; Howe, Presbyterian Church in South Carolina,
483.
28Banastre Tarleton, A History of the Campaigns
of 1780 and 1781 in the Southern Provinces of North America (NY: Arne
Press, 1968) 86.
29 From the diary of Lieutenant
Anthony Allaire, of Ferguson's Corps; Lyman C. Draper, King's Mountain and
its Heroes (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1967)
512.
30 Thompson, Presbyterians in South, Vol. 1,
88.
31 Thompson, Presbyterians in South, Vol. 1,
90.
32 Tarleton, Campaigns in the South.
33 Tarleton, Campaigns in the South, 93, 121; See also, Henry
Lumpkin, From Savannah to Yorktown: The American Revolution in the South
(NY: Paragon House Publishers, 1987) 83.
34 Lumpkin,
Savannah to Yorktown, 83.
35 Battle of Huck's Defeat
(Yorkville, SC: Tidings From The Craft, 1895) 6.
36
Tarleton, Campaigns in the Southern Provinces, 121.
37 A.S. Salley, Jr., Col. William Hill's Memoirs of the
Revolution (Columbia, SC: The State Company, 1921) 10.
38 M.A. Moore, Sr., The Life of Gen. Edward Lacey
(Spartanburg, SC: Douglas, Evins & Co., 1859) 11.
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