Hostilities had begun between British loyalists in …

Years: 1777 - 1777
February
Hostilities had begun between British loyalists in Florida and Patriots loyal to the new nation to the north almost immediately upon the signing of the United States Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776.

The British had spent the remainder of 1776 deflecting Patriot raids from the Georgia side of the St. Marys River.

A log fortress located near the Satilla River in Brantley County, Georgia, has been constructed by William McIntosh, brother of Colonel Lachlan McIntosh, to guard the Georgia frontier against attacks by Tory-sympathizing Floridians and hostile Native American tribes.

The fort is a square log and earth structure about one hundred feet on each side with a bastion at each corner.

The fort is garrisoned by forty men from the 3rd South Carolina Regiment and  twenty Continentals from the 1st Brigade Georgia Militia, under command of Captain Richard Winn.

In the spring of 1777, British forces led by Thomas Brown push across the St. Marys River, capturing Fort McIntosh and raiding Georgia farms for some two thousand head of cattle.

All of the prisoners are released with the exception of two officers who are taken as hostages to St. Augustine, Florida.

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