The Battle of Great Cane Brake was a skirmish fought on December 22, 1775, during the American Revolutionary War in what was then Ninety-Six District, South Carolina, modern Greenville County.
Battle of Great Cane Brake | |||||||
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Part of the American Revolutionary War | |||||||
American Revolution militia reenactors in upstate South Carolina (2016). | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
British Loyalists | South Carolina militia | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Capt. Patrick Cunningham |
Col. Richard Richardson Maj. William "Danger" Thomson | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
500 | 1,300 | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
6 killed wounded unknown 130 captured | 1 wounded |
Background
editWith the coming of the American Revolution, the patriot government in Charles Town was opposed by a large concentration of "King's men" in the upcountry.[1] Both sides recognized the need to cultivate the friendship of the Cherokees in a nearly lawless area of the state; and both sides promised to provide the Indians with ammunition for hunting.
In October 1775, the patriot Council of Safety in Charles Town sent 1,000 pounds of powder and 2,000 pounds of lead to the Indians, but a force of loyalists under the command of Patrick Cunningham intercepted the wagon train. Following an unsuccessful attempt to retake the munitions, the Charles Town leaders determined to break the strength of upcountry loyalism by raising an overwhelming force of militiamen under the command of Colonel Richard Richardson. Heavily outnumbered, the King's men fell back toward the Piedmont. By late December, Richardson had perhaps as many as 5,000 troops under his command and had captured the major loyalist leaders.[2]
Battle
editOn December 21, Richardson ordered 1,300 men under Major William "Danger" Thomson to pursue the loyalists into Indian territory. Thomson marched 25 miles through the night to a camp where loyalists had been sheltering from cold rain and snow flurries in a "Brake of Canes."[3] Because the ground was wet and the loyalists had been burning cane stalks that popped and crackled, Thomson's men nearly managed to surround the camp before being discovered as they attacked at dawn. Cunningham escaped on an unsaddled horse and without his breeches, shouting for every man "to shift for himself." The patriots recaptured the munitions intended for the Cherokees, and they took 130 prisoners, forcing them to sign a document promising not to take up arms again. Only five or six loyalists were killed, though Thomson had to restrain his men from harming the prisoners, some of whom were sent off to Charles Town in chains.[4]
Aftermath
editDespite the Patriot success, an unusual, heavy snowstorm occurred the following day, which caused considerable suffering among the militiamen, who had been called to duty on short notice with inadequate clothing and without tents. Some were permanently injured by exposure and frostbite. Thereafter the episode was known as the "Snow Campaign."[5] Richardson believed that his victory had pacified the upcountry,[6] but the Cherokees soon joined the loyalists in what became a brutal civil war on the South Carolina frontier.[7]
Commemoration
editThe exact location of the skirmish is unknown, although it took place near the Reedy River approximately 7 miles southwest of Simpsonville, South Carolina.[8] There is a state historical marker on Fork Shoals Road south of Old Hundred Road (County Road 565).[9]
Notes
edit- ^ Archie V. Huff, Greenville: The History of the City and County in the South Carolina Piedmont (Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1995), 20-22.
- ^ Huff, 22; Bobby Gilmer Moss, The Patriots in the Snow Campaign, 1775 (Blacksburg, SC: Scotia Hibernia Press, 2007), 18.
- ^ The "canes" were Arundinaria gigantea, a species of bamboo native to the southeastern United States, which before extensive European cultivation was often found in dense "brakes."
- ^ Huff, 23; Moss, 18-19.
- ^ Moss, 19.
- ^ Warren Ripley, Battleground: South Carolina in the Revolution (Charleston: Post-Courier Books, 1983), 12; Richardson to Henry Laurens, January 2, 1776, in R. W. Gibbes, Documentary History of the American Revolution....(New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1855), 246-48.
- ^ Huff, 23-28.
- ^ Huff, 23.
- ^ Historical Marker Database. In 1941, the Behethland Butler Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution erected a marker on South Harrison Bridge Road, north of state highway 418, but the marker was later removed. Alexia Jones Helsley, Hidden History of Greenville County (Charleston: The History Press, 2009), 39.