 |
American Forces Commanded by
Col. Andrew Pickens |
| Strength |
Killed |
Wounded |
Missing/Captured |
| 340 |
27 |
23 |
22 |
|
British Forces Commanded by
Col. James Boyd |
| Strength |
Killed |
Wounded |
Missing/Captured |
| 700 |
40 |
? |
70 |
|
Conclusion: American Victory
Southern theater, 1775-83 |
|
The backwoods of Georgia held many challenges for the British Army. Many of the people in Georgia were strongly anti-British.
On February 11, 100 Patriots attack them while crossing Van(n)'s Creek in spite of being outnumbered by the British force..
On February 14, when Col. James Boyd and 700 British loyalists set up camp along Kettle Creek, they knew to be prepared for an attack. Things were not going well for the Loyalists. Boyd is expecting additional men to assist in a strike against the Patriots. His men are not regulars and dissention fills the ranks. And the skirmish at Vann's Creek alert Cols. John Dooly and Andrew Pickens to the Loyalist's presence in Wilkes County. As was the custom, the Loyalist send scavengers out to find food.
That morning, about 150 men were out searching for food when Pickens attacked. With a combined total of 340 men, the Patriots attacked in 3 columns, Col. Dooly on the right, Pickens in the middle, and Lt. Col. Elijah Clark, Dooly's second in command, on the left. A small advance guard was sent in front of the columns to scout the British. Col. Pickens scouts were surprised by Boyd's Loyalist sentries and opened fire.
Alerted to the attack by the sound of gunfire, Boyd rallied his men and advanced with a small group to the top of a nearby hill, where they waited behind rocks and fallen trees for the Patriots. To the left and right, the men under command of Dooly and Clarke had problems crossing the high water of the creek and nearby swamps.
Pickens continued his advance to the fence on top of the hill, where Boyd's men awaited the advancing Americans. On the approach of Pickens, the Loyalists opened fire. Men at the lead of the column fell victim to the first rounds. Clarke and Dooly, unable to advance quickly through the cane, were helpless. By all accounts, outnumbered and caught by surprise, the Patriots were losing the battle.
After the successful ambush, Boyd ordered his men to retreat to the camp by Kettle Creek. In one of those events frequently labeled as fate, Boyd fell to the ground, dying from a musket ball. Seeing this, his troops panicked and an orderly withdrawal turned into a nightmare for the 600 men under his command.
Pickens rallied and advanced his men towards the Loyalist camp. At the same time, Dooly's men emerged from the swamp. Surrounded on 3 fronts, with the creek to their back, about 450 Tories followed Boyd's second in command, Maj. Spurgen, across Kettle Creek. While they were crossing the creek, Clarke emerged on the other side and charged with 50 men. The Loyalists fled, soundly defeated.
The men who fled the battlefield eventually made their way back to Wrightsville, although some were captured and hung later that year. Pickens, who became famous for his many battles in the Revolutionary War, would later write that Kettle Creek was the "severest chastisement" for the Loyalists in South Carolina and Georgia. Dooly was later brutally murdered by British Regulars.
NARRATIVE
FOR KETTLE CREEK BATTLEFIELD MARKER
This marker was erected in 1979 at the
observance of the 200th anniversary of the Battle Of Kettle Creek. It was a joint
effort by the Washington - Wilkes Historical Foundation, Dr. Turner Bryson, President,
and The Kettle Creek Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Mrs.
John Singleton, Regent. The assistance of State Senator Sam P. McGill, and A.
K. Johnson, Director of the Georgia Commission for the National Bi-centennial
Celebration is gratefully acknowledged.
THE PATRIOTS WHOES NAMES APPEAR ON
THIS MARKER ARE THOSE WHO HAVE BEEN PROVED TO HAVE PARTICIPATED IN THE BATTLE
OF KETTLE CREEK ON FEBRUARY 14, 1779. |
WILKES
COUNTY REGIMENTS,
GEORGIA MILITIA.
(140 MEN)
Col. John Dooly,
Comdr.
Lt. Col. Elijah Clark
Major Burwell Smith
Capt. Alexander
Autry
Capt. John Cunningham
Capt William Freeman
Capt. Daniel Gunnells
Capt. James Little
Capt. Joseph Nail, Sr.
Lt. William Black
Ensign
Jospeh Nail, Jr.
Micajah Brooks
Isham Burke
Owen Fluker
Charle
Gent
Jesse Gordon
William Hammett
James Hays
Jesse Hooper
David Madden
Benijah Noridyke
Archibald Simpson
Peter Strozier Benjamin
Thompson
David H. Thurmond
John Webb
Micajah Williamson
Nathan
Smith |
UPPER
NINETY-SIX REGIMENT,
SOUTH CAROLINA MILITIA. (200 MEN)
Col. Andrew
Pickens, Comdr.
Capt. Andrew Hamilton
Capt. Robert Anderson
Capt.
James McCall
Capt. Joseph Pickens
Capt. Thomas Weems
Capt. Levi Casy
Lt. Joseph Calhoun
Lt. Alexander Ramsey
Lt. Samuel Roseman
Lt. Thomas
Shanklin
Lt. Joseph Wardlaw
Thomas Langdon, MD
William Anderson
John Bird
Willis Breazeal
William Buchanon
Patrick Cain
Francis
Carlisle
William Carruthers
Thomas Cofer
Edward Doyle
Thomas Hamilton
John Harris
William Hutton
Andrew Liddle
John Loard
James Luckie
William Luckie, Jr.
John McAdams
John McAlphin
Joseph McClusky
Elijah Moore
Samuel Moore
Alexander Patterson
Richard Posey
Samuel
Reed
William Speer
John Trimble
William Turk |
FROM
THE AUDITOR GENERAL ACCOUNT BOOK, 1778 - 1780,
William Adams
Alexander Aaron
Robert Anderson
William Baskins
John Beard
David
Beard
Robert Bell
John Bole
John Buchanan
William Brown
Willis
Breazeale
James Cane
John Calhoun
James Caldwell
James Calvert
William Carothers
Samuel Carson
Daniel Carmichael
Alexander Chevas
Thomas Cofer
Cosby
Capt. John Cowan
Thomas Coyle
George Crawford
George Deardon |
RECENT
ADDITIONS TO THE MEMORIAL MARKER
John
Thompson
William Thompson
William Downs
Samuel Whatley,Private
Nathan Barnett
David Hollomon
Austin Webb
Edmund Butler
Absolom
Davis
John Milner
John Barnett |
|