The Loyalists, in the meeting of the …
Years: 1775 - 1775
November
The Loyalists, in the meeting of the morning of November 22, agree to withdraw across the Saluda River and the Patriots agree to destroy the fort.
Both sides are to return prisoners taken since November 2 and not interfere with each other's communications with their respective political leaders.
The Patriot leaders are also required to surrender their swivel guns, although they will be returned three days later.
The truce also includes reinforcements for both sides, terms that the Council of Safety claims do not apply to Colonel Richardson's force.
The reasons why the Loyalists had chosen to negotiate the truce are unknown.
Governor Campbell describes the Loyalists as lacking in effective leadership, and historian Martin Cann speculates that it may have been caused by Colonel Richardson's preparations or approach.
Richardson had mobilized twenty-five hundred men, which will grow by the end of November to more than four thousand.
This force will scour the back country, arresting or driving away most of the Loyalist leadership.
The campaign will effectively end on December 22, when fifteen inches (thirty-eight centimeters) of snow will fall on the area.
Richardson's men, unprepared for the snow, will make a difficult trek back to the lowlands.
Some of the Loyalist leaders who escape Richardson's expedition, including most notably Thomas Brown, will flee to West Florida where they will join regular and irregular forces serving with the British.
These events will result n the end of large-scale Loyalist activity in the southern Appalachians, although what is in many ways a civil war will become progressively more brutal in the following years.
Ninety Six will become a British outpost after the 1780 Siege of Charleston, and will be besieged in 1781 by forces under the command of Nathanael Greene.
Although Greene will be forced to lift that siege by the approach of a relief force, the British will abandon Ninety Six not long afterward.
Both sides are to return prisoners taken since November 2 and not interfere with each other's communications with their respective political leaders.
The Patriot leaders are also required to surrender their swivel guns, although they will be returned three days later.
The truce also includes reinforcements for both sides, terms that the Council of Safety claims do not apply to Colonel Richardson's force.
The reasons why the Loyalists had chosen to negotiate the truce are unknown.
Governor Campbell describes the Loyalists as lacking in effective leadership, and historian Martin Cann speculates that it may have been caused by Colonel Richardson's preparations or approach.
Richardson had mobilized twenty-five hundred men, which will grow by the end of November to more than four thousand.
This force will scour the back country, arresting or driving away most of the Loyalist leadership.
The campaign will effectively end on December 22, when fifteen inches (thirty-eight centimeters) of snow will fall on the area.
Richardson's men, unprepared for the snow, will make a difficult trek back to the lowlands.
Some of the Loyalist leaders who escape Richardson's expedition, including most notably Thomas Brown, will flee to West Florida where they will join regular and irregular forces serving with the British.
These events will result n the end of large-scale Loyalist activity in the southern Appalachians, although what is in many ways a civil war will become progressively more brutal in the following years.
Ninety Six will become a British outpost after the 1780 Siege of Charleston, and will be besieged in 1781 by forces under the command of Nathanael Greene.
Although Greene will be forced to lift that siege by the approach of a relief force, the British will abandon Ninety Six not long afterward.
Locations
People
Groups
- Germans
- Scottish people
- English people
- Cherokee, or Tsalagi (Amerind tribe)
- Thirteen Colonies, The
- British people
- Britain, Kingdom of Great
- South Carolina, Province of (British Colony)
- West Florida
- Patriots (American Revolution)
- Loyalists (American Revolution)
Topics
- American Revolutionary War, or American War of Independence
- Snow Campaign
- American Revolutionary War, Southern theater of the
- Savage's Old Fields, Siege of
