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Battle of Beaufort

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Battle of Beaufort
Part of the American Revolutionary War
Date February 3, 1779
Location Port Royal Island, South Carolina
Result Patriot victory
Belligerents
Flag of the United KingdomGreat Britain Flag of the United StatesUnited States
Commanders
William Gardner William Moultrie
Strength
200 320
Casualties and losses
40 killed
12 wounded
7-8 killed
18-22 wounded

The Battle of Beaufort (also known as the Battle of Port Royal Island) was a battle in the American Revolutionary War that took place on February 3, 1779 near Beaufort, South Carolina. The British commander of forces at Savannah, Georgia, General Augustine Prevost, sent 200 British regulars to seize Port Royal Island at the mouth of the Broad River in South Carolina. American General Benjamin Lincoln, the American commander in the south, sent General William Moultrie from Purrysburg, South Carolina with a mixed force composed mainly of militia, but with a few Continental Army men, to meet the British advance. The battle was largely inconclusive, but the British withdrew first, eventually returning to Savannah.

Contents

[edit] Background

The British began their "southern strategy" by capturing Savannah, Georgia in December 1778. The British commander there, General Augustine Prevost, detached 1,000 men out of his 4,000-man army to capture Augusta in late January. American General Benjamin Lincoln had gathered a force of 3,500 men at Purrysburg, South Carolina, about 12 miles (19 km) up the Savannah River from Savannah.

Prevost decided to stage a diversion to distract Lincoln while Campbell was en route to Augusta, so he sent 200 men (mostly light infantry from the Florida Rangers militia) and a field piece under Major William Gardner to take control of Beaufort, South Carolina, just up the coast. The expedition, as with many British operations in the South, was based on the expectation that these troops would receive support from local Loyalists. These men sailed up the coast, landed at Beaufort, and occupied the highest ground on Port Royal Island, a rise about 7 miles (11 km) inland known as Gray Hill.

Lincoln sent General William Moultrie, who had distinguised himself in the 1776 defense of Charleston, and 300 men, mostly militia, but accompanied by a few Continentals, to counter this move. This force, which brought three field pieces, crossed onto Port Royal Island at the main ferry crossing.

[edit] Battle

Gardner lined his men up at the edge of some woods at the top of the hill. The Americans approached, lined up, and opened fire, at first with the artillery, and then with musket volleys. The battle continued until both sides began to run short of ammunition, at which point Gardner decided to withdraw, leaving the field to the Americans.

[edit] Aftermath

Gardner was criticized by Prevost for the mauling his detachment received because he left his escape route (the boats) too far away. But it was not Gardner's fault that no Loyalists came to join the British expedition.[1]

The victory of a largely militia force over British regulars was a boost to the Americans' morale. However, severe losses incurred about ten days later at Brier Creek put a damper on American plans to move against Prevost's forces in Georgia.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Wilson, p. 101
  • Gordon, John W (2003). South Carolina and the American Revolution: a battlefield history. Univ of South Carolina Press. ISBN 9781570034800. 
  • Wilson, David. The southern strategy: Britain's conquest of South Carolina and Georgia, 1775–1780. Univ of South Carolina press, 2005. ISBN 9781570035739

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