Word of the Cross Creek meeting had …
Years: 1776 - 1776
February
Word of the Cross Creek meeting had reached members of the Revolutionary North Carolina Provincial Congress a few days after it happened.
The colonies are broadly prosperous on the eve of the American Revolution.
Pursuant to resolutions of the Second Continental Congress, the provincial congress had raised the 1st North Carolina Regiment of the Continental Army in fall 1775, and given command to Colonel James Moore.
Local committees of safety in Wilmington and New Bern also have active militia organizations, led by Alexander Lillington and Richard Caswell respectively.
On February 15 the Patriot forces begin to mobilize.
Moore leads six hundred and fifty Continentals out of Wilmington with the objective of preventing the Loyalists from reaching the coast.
They camp on the southern shore of Rockfish Creek on February 15, about seven miles (eleven kilometers) from the Loyalist camp.
General MacDonald learns of their arrival, and sends Moore a copy of a proclamation issued by Governor Martin and a letter calling on the rebels to lay down their arms.
Moore responds with his own call that the Loyalists lay down their arms and support the cause of Congress.
In the meantime, Caswell leads eight hundred New Bern militiamen toward the area.
The colonies are broadly prosperous on the eve of the American Revolution.
Pursuant to resolutions of the Second Continental Congress, the provincial congress had raised the 1st North Carolina Regiment of the Continental Army in fall 1775, and given command to Colonel James Moore.
Local committees of safety in Wilmington and New Bern also have active militia organizations, led by Alexander Lillington and Richard Caswell respectively.
On February 15 the Patriot forces begin to mobilize.
Moore leads six hundred and fifty Continentals out of Wilmington with the objective of preventing the Loyalists from reaching the coast.
They camp on the southern shore of Rockfish Creek on February 15, about seven miles (eleven kilometers) from the Loyalist camp.
General MacDonald learns of their arrival, and sends Moore a copy of a proclamation issued by Governor Martin and a letter calling on the rebels to lay down their arms.
Moore responds with his own call that the Loyalists lay down their arms and support the cause of Congress.
In the meantime, Caswell leads eight hundred New Bern militiamen toward the area.
Locations
People
Groups
- Scottish people
- Britain, Kingdom of Great
- British people
- North Carolina, Province of (British Colony)
Topics
- American Revolutionary War, or American War of Independence
- American Revolutionary War, Southern theater of the
- Moore's Creek Bridge, Battle of
