Battle of Camden

United States history [1780]
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Quick Facts
Date:
August 16, 1780
Location:
Camden
South Carolina
United States
Participants:
United Kingdom
United States
Context:
American Revolution

Battle of Camden, A decisive battle in the American Revolution, fought in South Carolinaon August 16, 1780, and yielding a British victory, one of the most crushing defeats ever inflicted upon an American army.

British subjugation of rebel American colonies in the South depended on control of outposts and supply depots. The largest was at Camden, South Carolina, about 115 miles (185 km) inland from the coast. In August 1780, an American force under Major General Horatio Gates marched to capture it.

When Lieutenant General Charles Cornwallis learned of Gates’s approach, he left his headquarters at Charleston, assembled 2,200 regulars and Loyalists, and marched north from Camden to confront the Americans. Gates was a poor field commander whose victory at Saratoga, which earned him the southern command, was due to more talented subordinate leaders, among them Benedict Arnold. His southern army of about 3,700 was mostly local militia with a small core of 900 veteran Continentals from Maryland and Delaware, as well as a contingent of untested Virginia riflemen and more experienced forces from North Carolina. Unaware of the other’s presence, the armies marched toward one another.

American Colonial Flag, popularly attributed to Betsy Ross, was designed during the American Revolutionary War features 13 stars to represent the original 13 colonies.
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On 15 August Gates fed his men a meal of molasses and cornmeal that gave many of them. already suffering from dysentery, diarrhea. Despite this, he ordered a night march toward Camden. Before dawn the next morning his advance party encountered British scouts, and both armies halted until daylight.

Both commanders placed their most reliable troops on their right, so the British regulars under Lieutenant Colonel James Webster faced the weaker Virginia militia. As at Saratoga, Gates placed himself to the rear. As Webster’s line of regulars advanced, the militia line crumbled with hardly a shot fired. The North Carolinians, at the centre of the line, also abandoned the field. Webster then wheeled left and attacked the flank of the two Continental regiments that had been pressing the Loyalists hard. Outnumbered and trapped, the Continentals were overwhelmed. Few escaped except Gates, who fled on horseback.

Though only 324 British were killed or wounded, the Americans suffered more than 2,000 casualties, including the noted Prussian general Johann DeKalb, and lost large amounts of military supplies. More than 1,000 Americans were taken prisoner. It was the worst American defeat in the field and left the British in temporary control of the southern colonies. While enhancing the reputation of Cornwallis, the battle ruined the career of Gates, who was replaced. The victory opened the way to a subsequent British invasion of North Carolina. The British stopped a second American attack on Camden under General Nathanael Greene on April 25, 1781, at Hobkirk’s Hill, but, worn down by colonial guerrilla harassment, they burned and evacuated the town the following month. Greene’s capable leadership, as compared to Gates’s. led directly to Cornwallis’s surrender at Yorktown, Virginia, in the fall of that year.

Raymond K. Bluhm