Military Annals of the Highland Regiments
Fraser's Highlanders
or
Seventy-first Regiment
1775
The rapidity with which the ranks of Colonel Fraser's
regiment of 1757 were completed, its honourable and important services,
and the character it upheld, were known and acknowledged; and by none
more than by his late Majesty, who, with enlightened views of the firm
and incorruptible fidelity, and mistaken but generous loyalty of many of
his northern subjects, omitted no opportunity of exhibiting towards them
the greatest indulgence, of directing their loyalty into the proper
channel, and of securing their affections to his person, family, and
government, from which they had been long unconstitutionally and
unfortunately alienated. Those principles which had withstood so many
years of absence and exile, formed the best security for that loyalty
which was now in its proper place; and, as this was fully proved by the
services of Colonel Fraser and his regiment in the former war, he was by
his Majesty, in the year 1774, rewarded with a free grant of his family
estate, forfeited to the Crown in 1746. In 1775 he was farther
countenanced by receiving Letters of Service for raising in the
Highlands another regiment of two battalions.
By the restoration of his property, he was now in
possession of all the power which wealth and territorial influence could
command ; but his present purpose had less relation to the influence of
wealth, than to the preservation of respect and attachment to his person
and family. Relying on the latter alone, when in poverty, and without
the means to reward, his influence had experienced no diminution, for in
a few weeks he had found himself at the head of 1250 men. So much having
been done in 1757 without the aid of property or estate, no difficulty
was to be expected, now that the case was the reverse. Nor did he find
any; for, with equal ease and expedition, two battalions of 2340
Highlanders were marched up to Stirling, and thence to Glasgow,
in April 1776. The completion of this numerous corps must, no
doubt, have been accelerated by the exertions of his officers, of whom
six besides himself were chiefs of clans, and
all of respectable families, or sons of gentlemen tacksmen, as will be
seen by the following nominal list:
In the preceding list, Sir William Erskine, [Sir
William Erskine entered the Scots Greys in 1743. He was a cornet at the
battle of Fontenoy, and carried a standard, his father, Colonel Erskine,
commanding the regiment. In the morning of the battle, Colonel Erskine
tied the standard to his son's leg, and told him, "Go, and take good
care of your charge; let me not see you separate; if you return alive
from the field, you must produce the standard." After the battle, the
young cornet rode up to his father, and showed him the standard as tight
and fast as in the morning.] Sir Archibald
Campbell, Major Menzies, Major Macdonell of Loch-garry, and Major
Lamont, were officers of great experience, and approved talents, while
threes-fourths of the others were accomplished gentlemen. With such a
selection of officers, and with soldiers of high spirit, good
principles, and robust constitutions, the best state of discipline and
exemplary conduct were doubtless to be expected. But there was not time
to prove what might have been the effect of discipline, for such was the
urgency of the service, that in a few weeks they were marched from
Glasgow to Greenock, where they embarked for immediate service, without
any acquired knowledge of the use of arms.
But, although their stay in Glasgow was short, they,
in a special manner, attracted the notice of the inhabitants. At this
period, 3400 Highlanders of the 42d and 71st, of whom 3000 were raised
and brought from the North in ten weeks, were stationed in Glasgow. The
respectable part of the inhabitants were much struck with the regular
conduct of these men, so different from what they had perhaps been led
to expect. But no part of this conduct was more conspicuous than "the
cordial habits these strangers were in with the people, although so many
of them spoke no English ; and more especially their attachment and
respect to their officers, and the kindness and familiarity with which
the officers talked to their men."
When the regiment was mustered at Glasgow, it was
found that more men had come up than were required: these were
accordingly left behind when the corps marched to Greenock. Officers who
have been in the habit of embarking with troops, on a distant and
dangerous service, have perhaps observed individuals who appeared as if
they would not have been displeased to remain at home. In the present
instance the case was different. Several of the men ordered to be left
behind were so eager to accompany their countrymen and companions, that
they left their officers in Glasgow, and, following the regiment, got on
board in the dark and as their friends there were probably not anxious
to inform against them, they were not discovered till the fleet was at
sea.
While so many were thus eager to serve their country,
others objected to do so, except on certain conditions. The ancient
tenants of Captain Cameron of Lochiel had raised 120 men on his
forfeited estate, and sent them to the regiment to secure him a company.
He was himself confined in London, from a complaint of which he died
that year. His men lamented extremely that they did not meet their chief
and captain at Glasgow, and when the orders for embarkation arrived, he
being still absent, they loudly expressed their sorrow. "They were
Lochiel's men; with him at their head, they were ready to go to any part
of the world, and they were certain some misfortune had happened, or he
would have been with them;" and it required all the persuasive eloquence
of General Fraser [While General Fraser was
speaking in Gaelic to the men, an old Highlander, who had accompanied
his son to Glasgow, was leaning on his staff gazing at the General with
great earnestness. When he had finished, the old man walked up to him,
and with that easy familiar intercourse which in those days subsisted
between the Highlanders and their superiors, shook him by the hand,
exclaiming, "Simon, you are a good soldier, and speak like a man: so
long as you live, Simon of Lovat will never
die;" alluding to the General's address manner, which, as was said,
resembled much that of his father, Lord Lovat, whom the old Highlanders
knew perfectly. The late General Sir George witnessed the above scene,
and often spoke of it with much interest.
] (and he had a great deal) to explain to their satisfaction the
situation of Lochiel, and that they could not more effectually serve
him, and display their attachment and duty, than by embarking with their
comrades. To this they consented with the more cheerfulness, as Captain
Cameron of Fassafearn, a friend and near relation of Lochiel, was
appointed to command them. [Lochiel was
detained in London by a severe illness, of which he had not
recovered when he heard of the conduct of his men, and of
the cause. Forgetting his delicate state of health, he hurried down to
Glasgow; but the fatigue of the journey brought on a return of his
complaint with such violence, that he died a few weeks afterwards,
universally respected and lamented.]
The transports with the 71st sailed in a large fleet,
having the 42d and other troops on board. A violent gale, however,
scattered the fleet, and several of the single ships 1 fell in with, and
were attacked by, American privateers. A transport having Captain,
afterwards Sir Ćneas Mackintosh, and his
company on board, with two six-pounders, made a resolute defence against
a privateer with eight guns, till all the ammunition was expended, when
they bore down with an intention of boarding; the privateer, however,
did not wait to receive the shock, and set sail, the transport being
unable to follow.
At this period General Howe had evacuated Boston, and
the ship left to give notice to vessels not to enter the harbour was
blown off in a gale of wind. Owing to this circumstance, the transport
with Colonel Archibald Campbell and Major Menzies on board sailed into
Boston Harbour, where they were attacked by three privateers full of
men. These they kept off, repulsing several attempts to board, till at
last, when their ammunition was expended, and their rudder disabled by a
shot, the ship grounded under a battery, and they were compelled to
surrender. Major Menzies and seven men were killed, and Colonel Campbell
and the rest were carried prisoners into Boston. The death of an officer
of Major Menzies's judgment and experience was a severe loss to a corps,
where so many of the officers, and all the sergeants and soldiers, were
totally undisciplined. Sir William Erskine, the Lieutenant-Colonel of
the 1st battalion, was a bold and enterprising officer of Elliott's
dragoons in Germany, and possessed a mind, perhaps, of too high a cast
to take pleasure in superintending the drilling of a new corps.
Lieutenant-Colonel Campbell, of the 2d battalion, was distinguished as
an engineer, and. in the scientific parts of the profession, but he was
a perfect stranger to the interior discipline of the line. He was
afterwards Governor of Jamaica, and Commander-in-Chief in India. Could
an hypothesis be grounded on a few facts, Fraser's Highlanders would
prove, that men without discipline, depending entirely on their native
spirit and energy, are capable of performing) in the most perfect
manner, every duty of a soldier. few British regiments ever went into
immediate service with less discipline than this regiment, except
Keith's and Campbell's Highlanders in Germany. In what manner these
corps performed the duty expected of them, the history of the times will
show. Keith's regiment was, indeed, put to a more severe trial in being
so early placed in competition with the veteran and chosen troops of
France. The want of discipline of the troops opposed to Fraser's in
America, rendered the duty in forcing them less arduous; but they
entered on every enterprise with spirit, and were highly conspicuous for
courage, success, and the terror with which their advances inspired the
enemy.
[An instance of this
occurred at the battle of Guildford Courthouse, in Virginia, on the 15th
of March 1781. This action was well contested, and although the enemy
were driven back at every attack, they always rallied, and formed a new
front, till towards the end of the action, when a rapid movement of
Fraser's Highlanders brought the regiment so conspicuously in view of
the enemy, and (as appears by the American General's dispatches) made
such an impression, as to induce them to retreat with great
precipitation, and never afterwards to attempt a rally. This impression
on the nerves of the enemy must have been occasioned by their previous
rencounters with the 71st regiment, as they did not wait an actual
attack. Thus it will always be: when soldiers advance with spirit and
energy, it not only ensures present victory, but inspires
a terror that will paralyze an enemy on future occasions, and render
their defeat more easy, if not a matter of certainty.]
Of the disposition and capability of the Highlanders
as soldiers, Sir William Howe had formed an opinion from Fraser's
Highlanders of the Seven Years' War, with whom he had served under
General Wolfe. Influenced probably by this opinion, he brought forward
the 71st to the front immediately on their landing. The Grenadiers were
placed in the battalion under the Honourable Lieutenant-Colonel Charles
Stuart; the other companies were formed into three small battalions, and
formed a brigade under Sir William Erskine, then appointed
Brigadier-General. In this manner, and without any training, except what
they got on board the transports from non-commissioned officers nearly
as ignorant as themselves, these men were brought into action at
Brooklyn, and on no future occasion, even after the experience of six
campaigns, did they display more spirit or soldier-like conduct. Eight
hundred men of the 42d, engaged on this occasion, were, indeed, as young
soldiers as those of the 71st, but then they had had the advantage of
the example of 300 old soldiers, on which to form their military habits
and manners, together with a corps of able officers and sergeants of
long experience, to teach them every necessary duty. Such, indeed, were
the constant and active duties, and incessant marching, actions, and
changes of quarters of the 71st, that little time could be spared; and,
therefore, little attempt was made to give them the polish of parade
discipline till the third year of the war. Field discipline, and forcing
their enemy to fly wherever they met him, (except on two occasions, when
the fault lay not with them), they understood perfectly; and with this
knowledge of discipline, and being besides "trust-worthy and temperate,
brave in the field, conciliating and regular in quarters, wherever duty
called them they were to be found." Possessed of these qualifications as
soldiers, Lords Cornwallis and Moira readily overlooked their want of
polish, and of more correct parade movements. Towards the conclusion of
the third campaign, Major M'Arthur was appointed to the command of the
regiment. He had served in the Scotch Brigade in Holland, and in Keith's
Highlanders, under Prince Ferdinand, and " no officer, in America, was
more a master of mechanical formations and military manoeuvres. The
effect was visible in the exterior of the 71st. It is a doubt with some,
whether the military qualities of the corps were improved. Their
conduct was good after they were drilled. It was equally good, perhaps
more animated and heroic, before they received this military polish." [Dr
Jackson on the Character of the Highlanders as Soldiers.] In
their uncultivated state they were acknowledged to be one of the most
hardy serviceable corps ever raised in the Highlands, and they
contributed to demonstrate how little preparation is necessary for the
execution of every military duty, when men possess the proper elements
of the soldier.
The first proof they gave was, as I have already
noticed, at the battle of Brooklyn. Towards the end of July 1776, they
disembarked in America; and, in the month of August, a very important
duty was assigned them, under their chivalrous commander, Sir William
Erskine, namely, to support the Grenadiers and Guards, the elite of the
British army. "Their spirit and intrepidity were universally
acknowledged;" and if General Grant, who commanded the left wing of the
army, had been permitted to advance with the same ardour which he
himself exhibited at Fort du Quesne in 1758, when Major of Montgomerie's
Highlanders, [See
Vol. I. p. 322.] the battle of Brooklyn
would probably have had a very different conclusion, and might have
given a blow to the enemy which they could not have easily recovered.
While the battalion companies gave this early promise under the command
of Sir William Erskine, the Grenadier companies were no less fortunate
in their commander, Lieutenant-Colonel the Honourable Charles Stuart,
and in the approbation with which their conduct was noticed the same day
on the right wing of the army. Here the same ardour was displayed by the
troops, the same eagerness to push the enemy to the last extremity, and
force them to surrender in the strong position in which they had taken
shelter. But General Howe, desirous, as was said, of saving the lives of
his troops, recalled them. Had they been allowed to advance, the
sacrifice of lives would have been more than compensated by the success
which appeared so certain, by the additional spirit which victory thus
early would have infused into our troops, and by the despondency which
so complete a discomfiture would have occasioned to the enemy.
In the skirmishing warfare of the next campaign, this
regiment had constant employment, and particularly in the expeditions to
Willsbrough and Westfield, with which the campaign of 1777 commenced.
This was immediately previous to the embarkation of the army for the
Chesapeak. In the battle of Brandy Wine they were actively engaged, and
remained in Pennsylvania till they embarked for New York in November.
Here they were joined by 200 recruits, who had arrived in September from
Scotland. These men, with about 100 recovered men from the hospital,
formed a small corps under Captain Colin (afterwards General) Mackenzie.
This corps acted as Light infantry, and accompanied General Vaughan [General
Vaughan, who commanded in the Jerseys during the winter months, placed
such confidence in this regiment, that he kept them constantly near him,
and seldom moved without a party of them.] in an expedition up
the North River, in order to create a diversion in favour of General
Bur-goyne's movements. On the 6th of October, Fort Montgomery was taken
by assault. Captain Mackenzie's corps led the attack, and although so
many were recruits, they exhibited conduct worthy of veterans.
In the year 1778, the 71st regiment accompanied Lord
Cornwallis on an excursion into the Jerseys,
[On this occasion a corps
of cavalry, commanded by the Polish Count Pulauski, were surprised and
nearly cut to pieces by the Light infantry under Sir James Baird.
Indeed, there was hardly a movement, however trifling, in which Sir
James was not engaged. Whenever he was within reach he was generally
first called upon, and he was almost always the first ready. No company
in America was more frequently engaged with the enemy. It was said of
Colonel Abercromby, that more balls passed him without injury than any
other officer; and Sir James and his Light infantry, being always in
front, had the credit of killing more of the enemy than any other
company. ' He was not a Highlander, but when he was appointed to this
company, he studied the character of the people he commanded, he sung
their warlike songs, and was frank and familiar as a chief of old, at
the same time preserving the full authority of a chief in his character
of an officer. He so insinuated himself into their affections, that,
though Highlanders have a predilection for Highland blood, no chieftain
in his glen ever commanded the devotion of Gillien more
unreservedly. They knew his meaning by his whistle, and they flew
with eagerness to obey. He struck the key of the Highlanders' mind in
such a manner, as to produce an action of perfect accord. "With great
personal activity, ardent and fearless, he indulged the propensity of
the Highlanders to close upon the enemy."—Dr Jackson.
Although I have avoided saying any thing in the
praise of living individuals, leaving their actions to speak for
themselves, (except in one great exception, where it was impossible to
touch upon exploits unrivalled in military history, without giving
expression to the feelings they created), I cannot keep back this notice
of Sir James Baird and his Light infantry, which is from a valued
friend, whose talents, penetration, and personal knowledge of the
circumstances, enabled him to form an accurate opinion. The Marquis of
Montrose, Lord Dundee, Sir Robert Murray Keith, and Sir James Baird,
Lowlanders born, and originally strangers to the character, customs,
prejudices, and language of the Highlanders, had the address and talent
to secure their affections, and to attempt and accomplish very daring
and remarkable exploits.
]
and after a series of movements and
counter-movements, the two battalions embarked at New York for Georgia
in the month of November.
The object of this expedition—which, along with the
Highlanders, consisted of two regiments of Hessians, a corps of
Provincials, and a detachment of artillery, the whole under the command
of Lieutenant-Colonel Archibald Campbell, (who had been exchanged this
year),—was to take possession of the town of Savannah, in order to
afford support to the loyalists in the province. Captain Hyde Parker
commanded the convoy. The fleet sailed from Sandy Hook on the 29th of
November 1777, and, after a stormy passage, reached the river Savannah
by the end of December. The 1st battalion of the 71st, and the Light
infantry, under the immediate command of the Honourable
Lieutenant-Colonel Maitland, landed without opposition at a short
distance below the town of Savannah. Captain Cameron immediately pushed
forward to attack the advanced post of the enemy stationed beyond the
landing place. As the Light infantry advanced, the enemy fired a volley,
by which Captain Cameron, an « officer of high spirit and great
promise," and three men, were killed'; the rest instantly charged the
enemy, and drove them back on the main body, drawn up in line on an open
plain in rear of the town of Savannah. The disembarkation, with the
necessary arrangements for an attack on the enemy, were soon completed.
Savannah was then an open town, without any natural strength, but
covered on both sides with woods. Colonel Campbell formed his troops in
line, and detached Sir James Baird with the Light infantry through a
narrow path, to get round the right flank of the enemy, while the corps,
which had been Captain Cameron's, was sent round the left. The army
remained drawn up in front, making demonstrations to attack. This so
occupied the attention of the enemy, that they did not perceive the
intentions of the flanking parties, till the signal was given that our
troops had got to their ground. Colonel Campbell instantly advanced,
when the enemy, seeing themselves surrounded, fled in the greatest
confusion. The Light infantry, closing in upon both flanks of the
retreating enemy, they suffered exceedingly; upwards of 100 men being
killed, and 500 wounded or taken prisoners, while the loss on the part
of the assailants consisted only of 4 soldiers killed and 5 wounded. So
easily did the British gain possession of the capital of Georgia,
together with 45 pieces of cannon, shipping, and stores.
Anxious to follow up this favourable commencement,
Colonel Campbell made immediate preparations for advancing against
Augusta, a considerable town in the interior of the province, 150 miles
distant from Savannah. The enemy, not having recovered from the recent
disaster, made no opposition, and the whole province quietly submitted.
Colonel Campbell established himself in Augusta, and detached
Lieutenant-Colonel Hamilton, with 200 men, to the frontiers of Georgia.
During these proceedings, General Prevost had arrived at Savannah from
Florida, and assumed the command. He ordered Augusta to be evacuated,
and the boundaries occupied by the British to be narrowed. The
Americans, emboldened by this retrograde movement, collected in great
numbers, and hung on the rear of the British, cutting off stragglers,
and frequently skirmishing with the rear guards. But although uniformly
repulsed, this retreat dispirited the Loyalists, and left them
unprotected, unable, and now perhaps unwilling, to render assistance.
As General Prevost did not encourage the
establishment of a provincial militia, the Loyalists were left without
arms or employment, and the disaffected formed bands and traversed the
country without control. To keep these in check, inroads were made into
the interior; and in this manner the winter months passed. Colonel
Campbell, who had acted on a different system, obtained leave of absence
and embarked for England, Lieutenant-Colonel Maitland succeeding him in
the command of the 71st regiment.
In the month of February 1779, the enemy collected a
force of nearly 3000 men at Brien Creek, for the purpose of cutting off
the communication, and checking the incursions of the foraging parties.
This position was strong, and defended by upwards of 2000 men, besides
1000 in detached stations. In front was a deep swamp, rendered passable
only by a narrow causeway, and on each flank were thick woods, nearly
impenetrable except on the dryer parts of the swamps which intersected
them; but the position was more open in the rear. Thus situated, the
enemy were enabled to cause considerable annoyance; it was, therefore,
determined to dislodge them. For this purpose, Lieutenant-Colonel Duncan
Macpherson, [This gentleman was son of
Macpherson of Clunie, the chief to whom his clan evinced such
disinterested fidelity and affection in 1743, and the nine subsequent
years. The castle of Clunie, as has been already stated, was burnt by
the troops after the battle of Culloden. During the chief's long
confinement in the cave, his lady fitted up an old malt-kiln as a kind
of temporary residence. Here she was delivered of the son
who commanded in this expedition. As the Highlanders always marked any
extraordinary circumstance, whether personal or otherwise, by some name
or phrase characteristic of the fact, Colonel Macpherson was called
Duncan of the Kiln.] with the first battalion of the
Highlanders, was directed to march upon the front of the position;
Colonel Prevost, and Lieutenant-Colonels Maitland and Macdonald, with
the 2d battalion of the Highlanders, the Light infantry, and a
detachment of Provincials, were ordered to attempt the rear by a
circuitous route of many miles. Notwithstanding this long march through
a difficult country, the movements were so admirably planned, and so
correctly executed, that in ten minutes after Colonel Macpherson
appeared at the head of the causeway in front, Colonel Maitland's fire
was heard in the rear; and Sir James Baird, with the Light infantry, in
"his usual manner," rushing through the openings in the swamps on the
left flank, the enemy, unable to make any effectual resistance, were
quickly overpowered; the loss of the Highlanders being only 5 soldiers
killed, and 1 officer, and 12 rank and file, wounded.
This strong detachment being thus dislodged, General
Lincoln collected a considerable force on the South Carolina side of the
river. Determined to attack this post, General Prevost took the command
of the troops, who had been so successful at Brien's Creek, and crossed
the river ten miles below the position of the enemy. The two battalions
of the 71st were directed to take a circuit of several miles, with a
view of coming on the enemy's rear, while the General advanced on their
front. They entered a woody swamp at 11 o'clock at night, and, guided by
a party of Creek Indians, penetrated through, the water reaching to
their shoulders in the deeper and softer parts of the swamps. In this
condition, with their ammunition destroyed, they emerged from the woods
at 8 o'clock in the morning, less than half a mile in rear of the
enemy's position, and without waiting for the co-operation of General
Prevost, who had not moved from his position ten miles below, the
Highlanders instantly rushed forward, and drove the enemy from their
position at the first charge, and this with such expedition that they
suffered no loss, nor did the enemy, from their short stand and quick
retreat, suffer much.
General Prevost being thus far successful, was
encouraged to penetrate farther into the country; and, meeting with no
opposition, he moved upon Charlestown with such celerity, and arrived
before it so unexpectedly, that, had it been attacked before the
garrison had time to recover from their surprise, it is probable it
would have been taken with little difficulty. The town was summoned to
surrender, but time being allowed to consult, a dispatch arrived in the
mean time from the American General Lincoln, giving notice of his
approach to its relief. General Prevost had no means to carry on a
siege, and as the American force under General Lincoln was stated to be
greatly superior to his own, he thought it advisable to commence a
retreat to his old quarters in Georgia under somewhat gloomy
circumstances. He could not retrace his steps, the Americans being in
arms, and the principal pass on the route occupied. He was, therefore,
under the necessity of attempting to return by the sea-coast, a course
which exposed the troops to much suffering, as they had to march through
unfrequented woods, and salt water marshes and swamps, experiencing a
consequent want of fresh water. Lieutenant-Colonel Prevost, the
Quartermaster-general, and a person of the name of Macgirt, [This
man, with a band of followers, had accompanied the General from Florida,
and from his character and marauding habits, was a very improper guard
to the Quartermaster-General, to whom all the odium of the excesses and
pillage of Macgirt and his band attached, greatly increasing the
disaffection and irritation of the people.] with a party under
his orders, had gone on a foraging excursion, and were not returned from
their operations; and as it was thought necessary that they should be
protected, Colonel Maitland, with a battalion of Highlanders and some
Hessians, was placed in a redoubt of hasty construction at Stono Ferry,
an important pass, while the rest of the troops crossed over to John's
Island. The communication had been kept up by a bridge of boats, but
several of the boats having been removed by the Quartermaster-General,
when he arrived with the fruits of his forage, the communication was
interrupted. This separation of the British force was not to be
neglected by the enemy, who had 5000 men in the immediate neighbourhood.
They, accordingly, pushed forward 2000 men with the artillery. When
their advance was reported, Captain Colin Campbell, [This
gallant officer was son of Campbell of G!endaruel, in Argyleshire.]
with 4 officers and 56 men, was sent out to reconnoitre, and to
act according to circumstances. A thick wood covered the approach of the
enemy till they reached a clear field on which Captain Campbell's party
stood. Disregarding this great inequality of numbers, and anxious to
give time to those in the redoubt to prepare, he instantly attacked with
such vivacity, that the enemy were obliged to form to defend themselves.
A desperate resistance ensued; all the officers and non commissioned
officers of the Highlanders fell, seven soldiers only remaining on their
legs. It was not intended that the resistance should be of this nature.
But most of the party were men who had recently joined from prison,
being some of those taken in Boston Harbour early in the war; and this
being their first appearance before an enemy, they had not yet learned
to retreat, nor had they forgotten what had been always inculcated in
their native country, that to retreat was disgraceful. "When Captain
Campbell fell, he desired such of his men as were able to make the best
of their way to the redoubt; but they refused to obey, as it would bring
lasting disgrace upon them all to leave their officers in the field,
with none to carry them back. "However, the enemy either struck with
this unexpected check from so insignificant a force, or waiting till the
main body came up, ceased firing. The seven men retired carrying their
wounded officers along with them, and accompanied by those of the
soldiers who were able to walk. They were soon
followed by the whole force of the
enemy, determined to overpower Those in the redoubts. In this they
had in one part a partial success; the Hessians having got into
confusion in the redoubt which they occupied, the enemy forced an
entrance, but the 71st having driven back those who had attacked their
part of the redoubt, Colonel Maitland was enabled to detach two
companies of the Highlanders to the support of the Hessians. The enemy
were instantly driven out of the redoubt at the point of the bayonet,
and while they were preparing for another attempt to storm, the 2d
battalion of the Highlanders came up, when the Americans, despairing of
success, retreated at all points, leaving many men killed and wounded.
The resistance offered by Captain Campbell, though
not intended, and contrary, perhaps, to common practice in such cases,
was, notwithstanding, highly honourable to those who made this
determined stand ; for no men need approach nearer to invincibility than
those who fight against the most fearful odds, while life or the power
of motion remains. This undaunted resistance also apparently saved the
redoubt and those who defended it, for the time lost by the enemy in
forcing their way through this little band of true soldiers, afforded
time to their friends in the redoubt to prepare, and likewise to the 2d
battalion in the island to march by the difficult and circuitous route
left open for them.
[The destruction of the
bridge of boats by Lieutenant-Colonel Prevost was the cause of the delay
in bringing to their support the 2d battalion from the is-land,
and, indeed, had nearly prevented their assistance entirely. Two
temporary ferry-boats had been established, but the men who had charge
of them being frightened by the firing, ran away and left the boats
fixed on the wrong side. The enemy perceiving
this from a height on the opposite side, opened a galling
fire from their great guns on the men as they
stood on the banks of the river,
without a cannon to return a shot. Lieutenant Robert Campbell, followed
by a few soldiers, plunged into the water and swam across,
returned he boats, and thus enabled the battalion to cross over to the
support of their friends. This brave and zealous officer
was drowned some years afterwards in an attempt to save an old domestic
who had fallen from a boat into the sea, in crossing from one of the
islands in the Hebrides.]
Nor was the firm
resistance of those within the redoubt (if embankments, hastily
thrown up without guns or any other strength, may be so called) less
honourable, seeing that 520 Highlanders and 200 Hessians successfully
resisted all the efforts of an enemy 5000 strong, (excepting the
momentary impression on the Hessian part of the redoubt,) and this in
comparison of the service performed with a trifling loss, which was only
3 officers and 32 soldiers killed and wounded, while that of the enemy
exceeded the total strength of those attacked.
The port at Stono Ferry being thus secured, and the
Quartermaster-General having returned with his foraging part}', it was
evacuated, and Colonel Maitland retired to the island of Port Royal,
where he was left with 700 men, while General Prevost, with the main
body of the army, continued a difficult and harassing march to Savannah.
In this station General Prevost remained till the
month of September 1779, when the Count D'Estaing arrived on the coast
of Georgia with a fleet of twenty sail of the line, two fifty gun ships,
seven frigates, and a fleet of transports, with a body of troops on
board for the avowed purpose of retaking Savannah. This town, situated
on a sandy plain gently inclining towards the south, was still open; the
river Savannah was in front, with low and swampy grounds on both flanks;
the back of the town was protected by an ab-batis, in such a state of
ruin, as to present little impediment to any enemy. The successful
defence of the garrison, and their ultimate success, were to be
calculated more from their energy and firmness than from their numbers,
or the strength of artificial protection. The garrison consisted of two
companies of the 16th regiment, two of the 60th, one battalion of
Highlanders, and one weak battalion of Hessians; in all, about 1100
effective men. The combined French and American army was said to amount
to more than 12,000 men. With such a
preponderance of force, and with no natural
and very trifling artificial defences, the enemy,
it was believed, would have attacked
the moment they landed, but Count D'Estaing preferring regular
approaches, summoned the town to surrender on capitulation. Time was
demanded, and granted; and, in the absence of Colonel Maitland's
detachment in Port-Royal, delay was of the utmost importance. The
instant this officer was apprised of the appearance and intentions of
the enemy, he set out for Savannah; but the enemy having taken
possession of the principal passes and fords on the creeks and swamps,
he was obliged to take a circuit through morasses and woods
unfrequented, and hitherto supposed impassable. But all difficulties
were overcome by the spirit and perseverance of this excellent officer,
while his detachment were always ready to execute his most arduous
attempts. He arrived at Savannah at a most critical moment, when General
Prevost was hesitating what answer he should return to the summons of
Count D'Estaing. The arrival of Colonel Maitland determined his answer,
and immediate preparations were made for the most determined resistance.
The zeal and talents of Captain Moncrieff, the chief engineer, and the
unremitting exertions and labour of the officers and soldiers, assisted
by the negro population, completed a line of entrenchments with
intervening redoubts, which covered the troops, and placed the town in a
tolerable slate of defence. This important object was complet-ed in less
time than the enemy required for their preparatory approaches. Such was
the celerity with which the works were carried on and completed, that
the French officers declared that the English engineer made his
batteries spring up like mushrooms. Such being the zeal and energy in
preparing for the defence, it may be imagined that the enemy were not
permitted to carry on their advances unmolested; although General
Prevost, owing to the weak-ness of his
garrison, was averse to sorties. However, in the morning of the 24th of
September, Major Colin Graham, with the Light company of the 16th
regiment, and the Highland battalion, dashed out, attacked the enemy,
drove them from their outworks, and then retired with the loss of
Lieutenant Henry Macpherson of the 71st, and 3 privates killed, and 15
wounded, while the enemy lost 14 officers, and 145 men, killed, wounded,
and prisoners.
In the same manner Major Macarthur, with the picquets
of the Highlanders, advanced on the enemy with such caution and address,
that, after firing a few rounds, the French and Americans, mistaking
their object, commenced a fire on each other, by which they lost 50 men;
while, in the mean time, Major Macarthur retired silently without loss,
leaving the combatants to discover their own mistake at their leisure.
Irritated by these interruptions, impatient of the
slow progress of the siege, and having his fleet riding in an open sea,
exposed to an attack from the British, and in danger of being blown off
the coast, D'Estaing determined on a general assault, in the hope of
finishing the enterprise at one blow; and, confiding in the number and
experience of his troops, he fixed on the 9th of October for making the
attempt. This was done before day-light with the whole French and
American force. Owing to a thick fog, it was still too dark to enable
the garrison to ascertain from what point the principal attack was
intended. However, they were not long in suspense; for the enemy were
seen advancing in three columns, D'Estaing in person leading the right.
The left column, taking too large a circuit, got entangled in a swamp,
and, being exposed to the guns of the garrison, fell into confusion, and
was unable to advance. The others made the attack in the best manner;
but the fire from the batteries was so well directed and effective, that
the heads of the columns suffered exceedingly. Still they persevered;
those in rear supplying the places of those
who fell in front; and, pushing forward till they reached the first
redoubt, the contest became desperate. Many entered the ditch, and some
even ascended and planted the colours on the parapet, where they were
killed. Captain Tawse, of the 71st, who commanded the redoubt, plunged
his sword into the first man who mounted, and was himself shot dead by
the man who followed. Captain Archibald Campbell then assumed the
command, and maintained his post till supported by the Grenadiers of the
60th, when the enemy's column being attacked on both sides, was
completely broken, and driven back with such expedition, that a
detachment of the 71st, ordered by Colonel Maitland to hasten to and
assist those who were so hard pressed by superior numbers, could not
overtake them. The other columns, seeing the discomfiture of their
principal attack, retired without any farther attempt.
In this complete repulse and discomfiture of an
important and apparently irresistible enterprise, was exemplified the
ruinous consequences of hesitation and delay. Had D'Estaing attacked
immediately on landing, before any defences had been raised, and before
Colonel Maitland's detachment had joined, a weak garrison and open town
could have hardly been expected to have made a successful resistance.
General Prevost at Charlestown, and Count D'Estaing at Savannah, fell
into similar errors, and were forced to retreat, whereas an immediate
and resolute attack would, in all probability, have been crowned with
complete success.
The loss of the enemy was estimated at 1500 men
killed, wounded, and prisoners; that of the garrison was 1 captain, 2
subalterns, 4 sergeants, and 32 soldiers, killed; and 2 captains, 2
sergeants, 2 drummers, and 56 soldiers, wounded. 1 he French and
Americans kept possession of their lines till they withdrew their
artillery and stores, when the latter retired towards South Carolina,
and the former to their ships; and thus ended the attack on Savannah,
which, from the state of the place and the
force of the enemy, promised a very different result; but the talents of
the officers, the firmness of the troops, and the excellent, though
hastily constructed, defences, thrown up under the direction of Captain
Moncrieff, the chief engineer, supplied the deficiency of numbers and
strength of walls. [Captain, afterwards
Colonel Moncrieff, and chief engineer under the Duke of York in
Flanders, was killed at Dunkirk, in 1793, universally respected and
lamented, as an able and accomplished engineer, and a brave and high
spirited officer.] The troops in Savannah Were sickly before the
place was attacked; but the soldiers seemed reanimated, and sickness in
a manner suspended, during active operations. As usual in such cases,
however, sickness returned with aggravated violence after the enemy had
been repulsed, and all incitement ceased. Disease, increased by
inactivity and lassitude after extreme exertion, fell with particular
severity on the Highlanders. The battalion under Colonel Maitland had
not ten men sick in the march through the swamps, nor during the siege,
but now one-fourth of their number was in hospital.
[One of the first who died, after the cessation of
hostilities, was the Honourable Lieutenant-Colonel Maitland, son of the
Earl of Lauderdale. He was originally in the Marines, but as this
service did not afford a sufficient field for his active and
enterprising mind, he was transferred to the line, and appointed Major
to Fraser's Highlanders. His arrival at Savannah, at a most critical
moment, inspired confidence in his friends, while it struck the enemy
with surprise, as they did not expect he would be able to penetrate by a
circuitous route, after they had secured the fords and passes. Colonel
Maitland lived in the trenches with the soldiers, and, " by his courage,
his kindness of heart, and affability to his men, secured their
affection and fidelity. His dialect was Scotch:—proceeding from a tongue
which never spoke in disguise, it carried conviction to all. Equally
brave, generous, and unassuming, his memory will be respected while
manly fortitude, unstained honour, and military talents, are held in
estimation. "
During the skirmishing warfare in the Jerseys and
Pennsylvania, in the years 1776 and 1777, he was particularly active.
Ever on the alert, and having his Highlanders always ready, he attracted
the particular notice of General Washington. Some communications having
passed between them as old acquaintances, although then opposed as
enemies, Colonel Maitland sent intimation to the American commander,
that in future his men would be distinguished by a red feather in their
bonnets, so that he could not mistake them, nor avoid doing justice to
their exploits, in annoying his posts, and obstructing his convoys and
detachments; adding, that General Washington was too liberal not to
acknowledge merit even in an enemy. Fraser's Highlanders wore the red
feather after Colonel Maitland's death, and continued to do so till the
conclusion of the war. Such was the origin of the red feather
subsequently worn in the Highland bonnet,
about which some idle tales have been repeated. In
the year 1795, the red feather was assumed by the Royal Highland
Regiment.]
While the battalion companies of the 71st regiment
were thus employed in Georgia and Carolina,
the Grenadiers were at Stoney Point, in the state of New York, having a
small detachment of the corps at the post of Verplanks, in the immediate
neighbourhood. These two posts had been recently taken from the enemy,
who were anxious to regain possession of them; and this service offering
an opportunity to General Wayne of atoning for his recent disaster in
allowing his post to be surprised by Sir Charles Grey, the execution of
this duty was intrusted to him.(See Vol. I.
p. 395.) A body of troops was
accordingly placed under his command; and, at eight o'clock in the
evening of the 15th of July 1779, he took post in a hollow, within two
miles of the forts, and remained there unperceived till midnight, when
he formed his men into two columns, Lieutenant-Colonel Fleury and Major
Stewart leading the advance. A gun-boat, which had been stationed to
cover the principal approach, was absent that night, and the picquet
being placed considerably to the right, one column gained the summit of
the ground on which the fort stood before they were perceived. The
troops being thus unprepared, made a feeble resistance, and surrendered
with the loss of 19 soldiers killed, and 1 captain, 2 subalterns, and 72
soldiers, wounded. The principal part of this loss fell upon the picquet,
commanded by Lieutenant Cumming of the 71st, which resisted one of the
columns till almost all the men of the picquet were either killed or
wounded, Lieutenant Cumming being among the latter.
This misfortune was not attributed to any want of
spirit in the troops. Unfortunately, many British officers undervalued
the military talents of the enemy, which led to a want of vigilance, and
a neglect of procuring proper intelligence ; an object of primary
importance in military operations, particularly on outposts in front of
an enemy. It was an error of this nature that caused the loss of the
Hessian post at Trenton in December 1776, which disaster produced a
total change in the aspect of the war, and led to the most important
consequences. The Hessian commanding officer, ignorant of the language,
despising the Americans, and disregarding even the most common
precautions, the enemy easily discovered the nature of his post, the
disposition of his men, and their negligent manner of conducting the
duty; and were thus encouraged to hazard an attack, the success of which
gave them confidence in themselves, and lowered their respect and dread
of their opponents, to a degree which they had never known before. This
affair of Stoney Point operated in a similar manner.
I now return to Savannah, where the troops who had so
bravely defended it remained in quarters during the winter months of
1779 and 1780, in expectation of the arrival of a force from New York
sufficient to undertake the siege of Charlestown in the spring. In the
month of March, this force arrived, with Sir Henry Clinton at its head.
The place was immediately invested, and the siege pushed with vigour.
The defence was good, and the loss of the besiegers considerable. The
commanding engineer, Captain Moncrieff, was indefatigable; and being
fearless of danger in his own person, he was the less careful of the
lives of others. He had now served two years with the 71st, and
"believing that he could not gratify a Highlander of that regiment more
than by selecting him for honourable and dangerous service, he generally
expressly applied for a party of the corps for all exposed duties." [Dr
Jackson.]
After the surrender of Charlestown, Lord Cornwallis
was appointed to command the southern provinces. The 71st composed part
of his force, and advanced with him into the interior. In the beginning
of June the army reached Cambden, a central place fixed upon for the
head-quarters.
In July the enemy having
assembled in force in the frontiers of the province, the British
outposts were called in, and the whole collected and encamped in the
neighbourhood of Cambden, the number of firelocks not exceeding 2500,
while the enemy, under General Gates, exceeded 7000 men stationed at
Rugley's Mill, nearly twelve miles distant. The British general moved
from Cambden at 12 o'clock on the night of the 15th of August, with an
intention of surprising and attacking the enemy. The American general
moved from his ground at the same hour, and with a similar view of
attacking the British. The hostile armies met half
way, before 3 o'clock in the morning. The moon was full, and the
night without a cloud. Some shots were exchanged by the advanced guards,
but both generals, ignorant of each other's force, declined a general
action, and lay on their arms till morning. The ground on which they lay
was a sandy plain with straggling trees, but a part of the ground on the
left of the British was soft and boggy. Each army formed the line of
battle. The Light infantry of the Highlanders, and the Welsh Fusileers,
were on the right; the 33d regiment, and the Volunteers of Ireland,
occupied the centre; the Provincials were on the left, with the marshy
ground in their front. While the army was thus forming, Captain Charles
Campbell, who commanded the Highland Light companies on the right,
placed himself on the stump of an old tree to reconnoitre, and observing
the enemy moving as with an intention of turning his flank, he leaped
down, saying to himself, "I'll see you damned first;" and calling to his
men, "Remember you are Light infantry; remember you are
Highlanders:—charge!"—The attack was rapid and irresistible, and being
made before the enemy had completed the movement by which they were to
surround the right of the British, they were broken and driven from the
field, before the battle commenced in the other
parts of the line. When it did commence it was well supported on both
sides, the centre of the enemy gaining ground. There was a pause for
some minutes, neither side firing or advancing, when Lord Cornwallis
ordered the corps in the centre to open to their right and left, till a
considerable space intervened; he then directed the Highlanders, "who
began to be impatient at being left in the rear, while their friends
were fighting in front," to move forward and occupy the vacant space.
When this was done, his lordship cried out, "My brave Highlanders, now
is your time!" They instantly rushed forward; "the charge was like a
torrent; the 33d and Volunteers of Ireland accompanied the Highlanders,
the enemy was penetrated and completely overthrown." [Letter
from Dr Chisholm of Bristol, an eyewitness.] But the British
charge did not strike on the whole of the American line. The thickness
of the smoke prevented distinct vision, and such parts of the enemy's
line, particularly the right, as had not been acted on by the charge,
continuing to advance, gained the ground on which the Highlanders had
been originally placed as a reserve. Here they gave three cheers for
victory; but the smoke clearing up, they quickly saw their mistake; and
a party of the Highlanders turning up on them, the greater part threw
down their arms, while the remainder fled in all directions. The victory
was complete, and decided by the bayonet, a very decisive instrument in
a firm and steady hand. The loss of the British was 1 captain, 1
subaltern, 2 sergeants, and 64 soldiers, killed; 2 field officers, 3
captains, 12 subalterns, 13 sergeants, and 213 soldiers, wounded. The
Highlanders lost Lieutenant Archibald Campbell, and 8 soldiers, killed;
and Captain Hugh Campbell, Lieutenant John Grant, 2 sergeants, and 30
privates, wounded. [In a letter from a
respectable and intelligent eyewitness, Dr Chisholm of Bristol, the
writer states, that there were many acts of individual prowess, the
troops having several times closed on the enemy. "One will suffice. A
tough stump of a Sutherland Highlander, of the name of Mackay,
afterwards my own bat-man, entered the battle with his bayonet perfectly
straight, but brought it out twisted like a cork-screw, and with his own
hand had put to death seven of the enemy."]
The battle of the 16th of August was decisive as a
victory, so far as related to the field of action;
but General Sumpter, with a strong corps, occupied positions on
the Catawba River, which commanded the road to Charlestown, and from
which it was necessary to dislodge him. For this purpose, Colonel
Tarleton was appointed to command the Cavalry and a corps of Light
infantry, under Captain Charles Campbell of the 71st regiment. The heat
was excessive ; many of the horses had failed on the march, and not more
than forty of the infantry were together in front, when, on the morning
of the 18th, they came in sight of Fishing Creek, and saw a smoke at a
short distance on their right. The sergeant of the advanced guard halted
his party, and went forward with caution to ascertain the cause of the
smoke. In a few minutes he saw an encampment, with arms piled, and with
few sentinels, and no picquets. No persons were stirring except a few
employed in cooking; the rest lay in groups apparently asleep, as if
harassed by a long march. The sergeant reported what he had seen to
Captain Campbell, who commanded in front, and as not a moment was to be
lost, as a discovery of their situation might have led to serious
consequences, Captain Campbell, with his usual promptitude, formed as
many of the cavalry as had come up, and with the forty of the Highland
Light infantry, rushed forward, and directing their route to the piled
arms, quickly secured them and surprised the camp. The success was
complete; a few men were killed; nearly 500 prisoners surrendered, and
the rest dispersed in all directions. General Sumpter fled without his
coat. Thus the object of the expedition was in a few minutes
accomplished, (before Colonel Tarleton came up), and with trifling loss,
had it not been for the death of Captain Campbell, who was killed by a
random shot, which in a great measure counterbalanced the joy of so easy
a victory. " His death rendered his own men in a manner frantic, for he
had secured the affections of those he commanded in a most singular
degree." [Captain Campbell was son of Mr Campbell of Ardchattan. "He was
a young man of promptitude and decision, and
gave promise that he would be an honour to his profession and to his
country."]
These partial successes were soon followed by a
reverse. The Americans rallied, and threatened the frontiers of South
Carolina, cut off Major Ferguson at King's Mountain, [Major
Fergusson was brother of Pitfour. He was appointed Major to Fraser's
Highlanders, but commanded a corps of Riflemen which bore his name. "He
possessed original genius, was ardent and enthusiastic, and considered
as visionary by the disciples of the mechanical school of war. By zeal,
animation, and a liberal spirit, he gained the confidence of the mass of
the people, and laid foundations on which the loyally disposed, who were
numerous in the southern provinces, would have been organized and
disciplined, and greatly outnumbered the disaffected. No man in that
army was better calculated for such a task; his ardour was not to be
checked by common difficulties. Directing the conduct of men
unaccustomed to strict discipline; instead of commanding obedience,
silence, and close attention to the routine of duty, he, with an address
which none but a man who studies and applies the principle which
regulates the actions of the human mind could be supposed to possess,
led them step by step to accomplish the duties of experienced soldiers.
At King's Mountain he was overpowered by numbers, and fought and fell
like a Spartan." (Dr Jackson.)] and fought Colonel Tarleton at
Blackstocks, and also at Cowpens.
In December 1780, the American General Morgan made an
inroad into South Carolina with about 1100 men. Colonel Tarleton was
detached to oppose him with the 7th or Fusileers, the first battalion of
Fraser's Highlanders, (both weak in numbers), a detachment of the
British Legion, and 300 cavalry. On the morning of the 17th January
1781, intelligence was received that General Morgan was in front, with
his force drawn up on a rising ground, thinly covered with pine trees;
the front line being on the crown of the rising ground, and the second
400 paces in rear of the first line. The British were hastily formed:
the Fusileers, the infantry of the Legion, and the Light infantry, were
in front; the Highlanders and Cavalry formed the Reserve. The line was
ordered to advance rapidly, as soon as it was formed. Exhausted by
running, it received the fire of the enemy at the distance of thirty or
forty paces. The effect of the fire was considerable: it produced
something like a recoil, but not to any extent. The fire was returned,
but not with vivacity or impression; and it continued ten or twelve
minutes in a state of balance, both parties keeping their ground. The
Light infantry made two attempts to charge, but were repulsed with loss.
The action making no progress, the Highlanders were ordered up; and,
rapidly advancing in charge, the enemy's front line moved off
precipitately ; and the second, which had as yet taken no share in the
action, observing confusion and retrograding in their front, suddenly
faced to the right, and inclined backwards; a manoeuvre by which a space
was left for the front line to retreat, without interfering with the
ranks of those who were now to oppose the advance of the Highlanders,
"who ran in, with characteristic eagerness, desirous to take advantage
of the confusion which appeared among the enemy." But the confusion was
only in the front line; for Colonel Howard, commanding the enemy's
Reserve, threw in a fire upon the 71st when within forty yards of the
hostile force. The fire was destructive; nearly one-half of their number
fell; and those who remained were so scattered, having run over a space
of five hundred yards at full speed, that they could not be united to
form a charge with the bayonet, "the mode of attack in which their
superiority lay." They were checked; but they did not fall back
immediately, probably expecting that the first line and cavalry would
push forward to their support. This did not happen ; and, after some
irregular firing between them and Colonel Howard's Reserve, the front
line of the latter rallied, returned to the field, and pushed forward to
the right flank of the Highlanders, who now saw no prospect of support,
while their own numbers were diminishing, and the enemy increasing. They
began to retire, and at length to run, the first instance of a Highland
regiment running from an enemy!!! This retreat struck a panic
into those whom they left in the rear, who fled in the greatest
confusion: order and command were lost; the rout became general; few of
the infantry escaped; and of the cavalry, who put their horses to full
speed, not a man was taken.
The fate of the action was decided by the destructive
fire of the Americans' second line. The Highlanders, when they were
checked and repulsed, being five hundred paces in advance of the others,
stood at some distance in the rear, after they retreated, and had formed
into some compact order. If they had been supported, they might have .
made a soldier-like retreat, or taken a position till relieved by Lord
Cornwallis's army.
[The panic seemed
general. A party of the cavalry retreated with such expedition, that
they lost their way, and encountered a party of the enemy's cavalry of
nearly the same strength. Each party marched up at full trot,
threatening mutual destruction. They drew up at the distance of ten
paces, and dared each other to advance. Both were timid, and not a man
moved. Cornet Paterson, of the 17th Light Dragoons (a troop of which was
attached to Tarleton's Legion), coming up at that instant, and indignant
at seeing such backwardness in British troops, penetrated the ranks,
dashed at Colonel Washington, who commanded, and, in the act of making a
stroke at him, was cut down by the colonel's orderly sergeant. The enemy
immediately retired; the British followed a few paces, but did no
execution.]
The action of the Cowpens was serious, if not
disastrous, in its consequences to the array, inasmuch as it inspired
confidence into the enemy, and brought defeat and disgrace on our
troops, who, in every other instance, had been victorious. The name of
the officer who commanded had been connected with frequent victories,
and his corps was particularly dreaded by the Americans. The affair of
Cowpens converted this feeling into one of a very different description.
To the Highlanders it was particularly unfortunate, as being the first
instance of defeat. But, as they were the most advanced in the attack,
and the last in the retreat, and as their conduct before and afterwards
was unexceptionable, it may be presumed, that, if they had been properly
led on and supported, their conduct at Cowpens would have been worthy of
the reputation they had acquired in all the other actions in which they
had been engaged. The troops who fought at Stono Ferry ought to have
died in the field at Cowpens. In this affair, as in almost all defeats,
the loss was considerable, in killed, wounded, and prisoners: it
exceeded 400 men.
The dispositions made by the enemy on this occasion
appear to have been judicious; and the conduct of the American Colonels,
Howard and Washington, in wheeling and manoeuvring their corps, and in
throwing in such destructive volleys on the Highlanders, would have been
creditable to the most experienced veterans. The former success, which
had uniformly attended the numerous enterprises of the officer who
commanded the British on this occasion, had given him a degree of
confidence that in a great measure led to the disaster which followed.
The troops were hurried into action, without any previous examination of
the ground, or of the disposition of the enemy; and so strong was the
impression on the minds of the officers of the Highland regiment that
the fault did not lie with their men, that they made a representation to
Lord Cornwallis, not to be employed again under the same officer. His
Lordship complied with their request.
After this affair, increased exertions were made to
follow the main body of the American army, under General Green, who
retreated northward. All superfluous baggage was destroyed; officers
only reserving a few necessaries. The two battalions of the 71st, now
much reduced, were consolidated into one, and formed in brigade with the
Welsh Fusileers and 33d regiment. The country was so open, that there
was no chance of forcing an action with the enemy; but much skirmishing
took place on the march to Guildford Court House, where, on the 16th of
March, General Green, believing himself sufficiently strong to oppose
his assailants, drew up his army in order of battle. This was done in
three lines: the first occupied the edge of a wood, with a fence in
front of Hogstie Farm; the second was at some distance in the rear, in a
wood of stunted oaks; the third was posted in the more open parts of the
woods, and some cleared ground.
The British line was formed of the German regiment of
De Bos, the Highlanders, and Guards, under the Honourable General
Leslie, on the right; and the Welsh Fusileers, 33d regiment, and second
battalion of Guards, under Brigadier-General Charles O'Hara, on the
left; the Cavalry were in the rear, supported by the Light infantry of
the Guards and the German Yagers. The attack commenced at one o'clock.
The Americans, covered by the fence in their front, maintained their
position with confidence, and reserved their fire till the British were
within thirty or forty paces. At this short distance, their fire was
destructive to Colonel Webster's brigade, nearly one-third being killed
or wounded. The Brigade returned the fire, and rushed forward on the
enemy, who abandoned their fence, and retreated on the second line. The
ground was level, but the wood was so thick and difficult, that, though
the fire rolled in torrents, few were killed on either side. It
was different on the more open ground, where the regiment of De Bos and
the 33d regiment met with more determined resistance, having retreated
and advanced repeatedly before they succeeded in driving the enemy from
the field. In the mean time, a party of the Guards pressed on with
eagerness, without observing a body of cavalry placed on the right flank
as a reserve, who charged them in flank, broke their line, and killed
several men. The enemy, who had retreated, seeing the effect of this
charge, halted, turned their face to the field, and recommenced firing.
In this state, and while the Hessians were hotly engaged, the
Highlanders, who had rapidly pushed round the flank, appeared on a
rising ground in the rear of the left of the enemy, and, rushing forward
with shouts, made such an impression on the Americans, that they
immediately fled, abandoning their guns and ammunition, without
attempting farther resistance.
Thus ended the battle of Guildford, in which, from
the intricacy and difficulty of the ground, and the closeness of the
woods, which rendered the bayonets useless, the enemy retreating from
one spot, and re-appearing on another, the different corps fought
separately, each depending on its own firmness; and, as the contest was
carried on against an enemy greatly more numerous, the issue was for
some time doubtful. But, although Lord Cornwallis gained the battle,
General Green reaped the fruits. The British placed those who were badly
wounded in a house in the neighbourhood, and left them and the
country to the mercy of the enemy. The total loss of the British was 7
officers, 8 sergeants, 1 drummer, and 93 soldiers, killed ; and 20
officers, 26 sergeants, 5 drummers, and 388 rank and file, wounded. The
Highlanders lost Ensign Grant, and 11 soldiers, killed; 4 sergeants, and
46 soldiers, wounded.
The British retired southward in the direction of
Cross Creek, the Americans following close in the rear; but nothing of
consequence occurred. Cross Creek, a settlement of emigrant Highlanders,
had been remarkable for its loyalty from the commencement of the war,
and they now offered to bring 1500 men into the field, to be commanded
by officers from the line, to find clothing and subsistence for
themselves, and to perform all duties whether in front, flanks, or rear;
and they required nothing but arms and ammunition. This very reasonable
offer was not accepted, but a proposition was made to form them into
what was called a provincial corps of the line. This was declined by the
emigrant Highlanders, and after a negotiation of twelve days, they
retired to their settlements, and the army marched for Wilmington, where
they arrived on the 17th of
April, expecting to find supplies, of which they now stood in
great need. [Among these settlers was a gentleman of the name of Macneil,
who had been an officer in the Seven Years' War. He joined the army with
several followers, but soon took his leave, having been rather sharply
reprimanded for his treatment of a republican
family. He was a man of tall stature, and commanding
aspect, and moved, when he walked among his followers, with
all the dignity of a chieftain of old.
Retaining his loyalty, although of. fended with the reprimand, he
offered to surprise the republican garrison, governor, and council,
assembled at Willisborough. He had three hundred followers, one-half of
them old country Highlanders, the other half born in America, and the
offspring of Highlanders. The enterprise was conducted with address, and
the governor, council, and garrison, were secured without bloodshed, and
immediately marched off for Wilmington, Macneil and his par-tv
travelling by night, and concealing themselves in swamps and woods by
day. However the country was alarmed, and a hostile force collected. He
proceed- . ed in zig-zag directions, for he had a perfect knowledge of
the country, but without any provisions except what chance threw in his
way. When he had advanced two thirds of the route, he found the enemy
occupying a pass which he must open by the sword, or perish in the
swamps for want of food. At this time he had more prisoners to guard
than followers. "He did not secure his prisoners by putting them to
death;" but, leaving them under a guard of half his force on whom he
could least depend, he charged with the others sword in hand through the
pass, and cleared it of the enemy, but was unfortunately killed from too
great ardour in the pursuit. The enemy being dispersed, the.party
continued their march disconsolate for the loss of their leader; but
their opponents again assembling in force, the party were obliged to
take refuge in the swamps, still retaining their prisoners. The British
commander at Wilmington hearing of Macneil's enterprise, marched out to
his support, and kept firing cannon in expectation the report would
reach them in the swamps. The party heard the reports; and knowing that
the Americans had no artillery, they ventured out of the swamps towards
the quarter whence they heard the guns, and meeting with Major
(afterwards Sir James) Craig, sent out to support them, delivered over
their prisoners half famished with hunger, and lodged them' safely in
Wilmington. Such partisans as these are invaluable in active warfare.]
After a short delay at Wilmington, Lord Cornwallis
re- solved to penetrate to Peterborough, in Virginia, and to form a
junction with Major-General Philips, who had recently arrived there from
New York with 3000 men. And now the British had to traverse "several
hundred miles of a country chiefly hostile, frequently deserted, and
which did not afford one active or zealous friend; where no intelligence
could be obtained, and no communication established." On the 26th of
April the army marched from Wilmington, and reached Peterborough on the
20th May, here the united forces amounted to 6000 men, and proceeded
thence to Portsmouth, on the march to which, and when
preparing to cross the river at St James's Island, the Marquis
de la Fayette, ignorant of their number, made a gallant attack
with 2000 men on Colonel Thomas Dundas's brigade. Fayette was repulsed,
but not without a art resistance, the approach of night favouring his
retreat.
After this skirmish Lord Cornwallis marched to
Portsmouth, and thence to Yorktown, where a position was taken on the
York river on the 22d of August. This encampment was formed on an
elevated platform, nearly level, on the bank of the river, and of a
sandy soil. A ravine of about forty feet in depth, and more than one
hundred yards in breadth, extended from the river on the right of the
position; a line of entrenchments, with a horn-work, formed the centre;
and an extensive redoubt beyond the ravine on the right, and two smaller
redoubts on the left, also advanced beyond the entrenchments,
constituted the principal defence of the camp. These defences had not
been completed when the enemy took up a position at the distance of two
miles from the British camp. Previous to this period, they had received
great reinforcements both by sea and land. The Count de Grasse had
arrived with a strong fleet, having troops on board, and General
Washington and the Count de Rochambeau had united their forces,
amounting in all to 7000 French, and 12,000 Americans. The troops in
Yorktown did not exceed 5950 men.
The enemy lost no time in commencing operations;
batteries were erected, and approaches made in the usual manner. During
the first four days the fire was directed against the redoubt on the
right, which was reduced to a heap of sand, but no storm was attempted,
the enemy directing their whole force to the left, as the redoubts on
that side were considered more assailable. A storm was attempt-i the
redoubts were carried, and the guns turned on the other
parts of the entrenchments. [One
of these redoubts had been manned by some soldiers of the 71st.
Although the defence of this redoubt was as
well contested as that of the others, the regiment
thought its honour so much implicated, that a petition was drawn up by
the men, and carried by the commanding officer to Lord Cornwallis, to be
permitted to retake it. There was no doubt of the success of the
undertaking by men actuated by such a spirit, but as the retaking was
not considered of importance in the existing state of the siege, the
proposition was not acceded to.] The situation of the
besieged was now become very critical; the whole encampment was open to
assault, exposed to a constant and enfilading fire, and numbers were
killed in carrying on the common duties. In this dilemma it occurred to
the General to decamp at midnight with the elite of his army,—to
cross the river, and leave a small force in the works to capitulate for
the sick and wounded, the former being very numerous. The measure was
bold, and would have succeeded, had it not been defeated by the accident
of a violent squall of wind, which;, rendered the passage of the river
dangerous, if not impracticable. The first division had embarked, and
some boats had gained the opposite shore at Gloucester Point, when the
storm commenced, and induced the General to countermand the enterprise,
and to make immediate proposals of capitulation. The terms were drawn up
in the usual manner, and the troops marched out with their arms and
baggage on the 8th October 1781, and were afterwards sent to different
parts of the country.
The loss of the garrison was 6 officers, 13
sergeants, 4 drummers, and 133 rank and file, killed; and 6 officers, 24
sergeants, 11 drummers, and 284 soldiers, wounded: the 71st lost
Lieutenant Thomas Fraser and 9 soldiers killed; and 3 drummers and 19
soldiers wounded.
And thus ended the military service of this army,
which had marched and countermarched nearly two thousand miles in less
than twelve months, during which they had had no regular supply of
provisions, or of necessaries,—had forded many large and rapid rivers,
some of them in face of an enemy,—had fought numerous skirmishes and two
pitched battles, and in every skirmish and every battle, one affair only
excepted, had been victorious; and yet such was the unfortunate issue of
all their exertions, that no success, however gallantly achieved, led to
the usual confluences of victory. On all occasions where Lord Cornwallis
met General Green, the former gained the day, but afterwards retired and
left the country open, surrendering the advantages usually resulting
from a victory to the enemy he had beaten.
Fraser's Highlanders were now prisoners, and not
being exchanged till the conclusion of hostilities, they did not perform
any other service. In what manner they discharged the duties which they
were called to perform, will be partly seen by the foregoing narrative.
The numerous military details, and the consequent necessity of
compression, have prevented me from particularly noticing the moral
conduct of these men. I may now, however, state shortly, that it was in
every way equal to their military character. Disgraceful punishments
were unknown. Among men religious, brave, moral, and humane, disgraceful
punishments are unnecessary. Such being the acknowledged general
character of these men, their loyalty was put to the test, and proved to
be genuine. When prisoners, and solicited by the Americans to join their
standard and settle among them, not one individual violated the oath he
had taken, or forgot his fidelity or allegiance; a virtue not generally
observed on that occasion, for many soldiers of other corps joined the
Americans, and sometimes, indeed, entered their service in a body.
On the conclusion of hostilities the men were
released, ordered to Scotland, and discharged at Perth in 1783.