Quick Facts
Date:
October 7, 1780
Location:
South Carolina
United States
Participants:
loyalist
United States
Context:
American Revolution

Battle of Kings Mountain, battle in the American Revolution, fought on October 17, 1780, that saw an American victory over a larger loyalist detachment in South Carolina during the British campaign in the South. It was one of few battles of the Revolution fought solely between Americans.

In 1780, Sir Henry Clinton, the chief commander of British forces in North America, lay siege to Charleston, South Carolina, which surrendered to him on May 12. Clinton turned over command of his forces in the South to Major General Charles Cornwallis, who, on August 16, delivered a crushing defeat to General Horatio Gates at the Battle of Camden. Confident that he had neutralized his enemy, Cornwallis then decided to move his army against the Americans in North Carolina. He assigned Major Patrick Ferguson and his force of Loyalists to secure the region to the west of the mountains.

Ferguson was a competent British officer, familiar with the frontier style of warfare. At first Ferguson was successful in dispersing the numerous but uncoordinated rebel militia bands east of the Blue Ridge Mountains. However, when he threatened to cross west of the mountains and lay waste to the countryside of the "over-mountain men" living there who did not swear allegiance to the king, he reignited their resistance.

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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A large number of American militia groups gathered under Colonel William Campbell and began searching for Ferguson and his 1,000 Loyalists. Concerned, Ferguson requested reinforcements from Cornwallis, writing, “Three or four hundred good soldiers, part dragoons, would finish the business.” He then set up camp on "Kings Mountain," a long, narrow, rocky ridge with wooded, boulder-strewn slopes, to await those reinforcements. He did not prepare anything more than rudimentary defensive positions, and he concentrated his men at either end of the hilltop. Campbell selected 900 of the best of the militia contingents then assembling at Cowpens, 35 miles distant, and marched them to Kings Mountain. There he divided his force into eight smaller groups, each under the command of its own colonel, to surround and attack the ridge. At about 3:00 in the afternoon, Campbell’s militiamen advanced up the ridge on all sides, firing their rifles.

When the Loyalists made bayonet counterattacks, the Americans withdrew in the rugged terrain, then returned to the attack, seizing the southwestern summit. Gradually the ring closed around Ferguson’s Loyalists until they were squeezed into a small area at the northeastern end of the ridge. Ferguson, the only British soldier present at the battle, was shot dead off his horse by at least eight musket balls as he tried to break out. A senior Loyalist officer then raised a surrender flag.

The American victory devastated Loyalist support in the South and stalled Cornwallis. Suffering from yellow fever, he withdrew his forces from Charlotte, North Carolina, to his winter camp at Winnsboro, South Carolina, not far from the site of his earlier victory at Camden. In December 1780 General Nathanael Greene arrived at Charlotte, which Cornwallis had called “a hornet’s nest of rebellion,” and assumed leadership of the Southern Department of the Continental Army, which he then led into South Carolina in pursuit of Cornwallis’s forces.

The Battle of Kings Mountain was the first of a series of setbacks that ended in the eventual collapse of the British campaign in the South, followed by the Battle of Cowpens and the Battle of Guilford Courthouse. Those losses marked the beginning of the end of Britain’s efforts to subdue and retain its American colonies. Indeed, Thomas Jefferson declared that Kings Mountain was “the turn of the tide of success.”

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The site of the battle is now the 4,000-acre Kings Mountain National Military Park, one of two devoted to the Revolutionary War.

Losses: American, 29 dead, 58 wounded; Loyalists, 250 dead, 163 wounded, 668 captured.

Raymond K. Bluhm

American Revolution

United States history
Also known as: American Revolutionary War, United States War of Independence, War of Independence
Quick Facts
Also called:
United States War of Independence or American Revolutionary War
Date:
1775 - September 3, 1783
Location:
United States
Top Questions

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The American Revolution was an insurrection carried out by 13 of Great Britain’s North American colonies that began in 1775 and ended with a peace treaty in 1783. The colonies won political independence and went on to form the United States of America. The war followed more than a decade of growing estrangement between the British crown and a large and influential segment of its North American colonies that was caused by British attempts to assert greater control over colonial affairs after having long adhered to a policy of salutary neglect.

Until early in 1778 the conflict was a civil war within the British Empire, but afterward it became an international war as France (in 1778) and Spain (in 1779) joined the colonies against Britain. Meanwhile, the Netherlands, which provided both official recognition of the United States and financial support for it, was engaged in its own war against Britain (see Anglo-Dutch Wars). From the beginning, sea power was vital in determining the course of the war, lending to British strategy a flexibility that helped compensate for the comparatively small numbers of troops sent to America and ultimately enabling the French to help bring about the final British surrender at Yorktown in 1781.

Setting the stage: The two armies

The American colonies fought the war on land with essentially two types of organization: the Continental (national) Army and the state militias. The total number of the former provided by quotas from the states throughout the conflict was 231,771 soldiers, and the militias totaled 164,087. At any given time, however, the American forces seldom numbered over 20,000; in 1781 there were only about 29,000 insurgents under arms throughout the country. The war was therefore one fought by small field armies. Militias, poorly disciplined and with elected officers, were summoned for periods usually not exceeding three months. The terms of Continental Army service were only gradually increased from one to three years, and not even bounties and the offer of land kept the army up to strength. Reasons for the difficulty in maintaining an adequate Continental force included the colonists’ traditional antipathy toward regular armies, the objections of farmers to being away from their fields, the competition of the states with the Continental Congress to keep men in the militia, and the wretched and uncertain pay in a period of inflation.

By contrast, the British army was a reliable steady force of professionals. Since it numbered only about 42,000, heavy recruiting programs were introduced. Many of the enlisted men were farm boys, as were most of the Americans, while others came from cities where they had been unable to find work. Still others joined the army to escape fines or imprisonment. The great majority became efficient soldiers as a result of sound training and ferocious discipline. The officers were drawn largely from the gentry and the aristocracy and obtained their commissions and promotions by purchase. Though they received no formal training, they were not so dependent on a book knowledge of military tactics as were many of the Americans. British generals, however, tended toward a lack of imagination and initiative, while those who demonstrated such qualities often were rash.

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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Because troops were few and conscription unknown, the British government, following a traditional policy, purchased about 30,000 troops from various German princes. The Lensgreve (landgrave) of Hesse furnished approximately three-fifths of that total. Few acts by the crown roused so much antagonism in America as that use of foreign mercenaries.