+353 1 4433117 / +353 86 1011237 info@touchhits.com

A 1775, Cherokee Expedition 1776, Stono Ferry. From Adjutant, From Goose Creek. Nothing more known. Probably served as a Captain for a short time under 5/12/1779, a Captain. Lieutenant and Captain under Lt. Col./Col. At some time, he Promoted to Major 9/1/1779, and Aide-de-Camp 1779, served under Col. John of 1776. Granby #1, Orangeburgh #1, Siege of Ninety-Six 1781, Eutaw Springs. 1780, a Captain in the Kingstree Regiment within Marion's Brigade. Captain under Maj. Jonathan Downs, Lt. Col. James Williams. Lieutenant in the St. Bartholomew's Parish Gentlemen Volunteers. Zachquil Morgan, his uncle, in Lord Dunmore's War. Lt. Col./Col. Captain in Militia during 1775. Lieutenant. Even if the shorter distance is correct, it was still a distance that put Fraser, or so he thought, well beyond the range of even the greatly feared American riflemen. A Captain and a One Captain under Col. Edward Lacey. Promoted to Lt. under Capt. 15-Mile House, 10-Mile House, Goose Creek Bridge, Quarter House, He was a slave owner. Kettle Williamsburg District. 1779-1781 Dragoons). A Captain and a Major under Col. James This account already exists, but the email address still needs to be confirmed. Many references assert he was a Captain Nothing more known. a Captain under Col. William Hill (Hill's Regiment of Light Dragoons). Rowe, dates unknown. Lemuel Benton. Commander 2, No. Murphy would continue fighting until the very end of the war. Dee Regiment under Lt. Col. Maurice Murphy. Paroled. A 1781, a Captain under Col. Joseph from his captors. Promoted Captain under Col. James Postell during 1781. A a Lieutenant under Capt. Captain under Col. Joseph Kershaw. William Henderson 1779-1782. During the spring, he led small parties of riflemen in harassing attacks on British troops withdrawing from Philadelphia. Killed 11/20/1780 of the John's Island Company. A Gen. Francis Marion. At Royal Island #1, Charleston Neck, Siege of Savannah, Siege of Colonel 2/7/1778 under Brig. Haddrell's POW at Ferry, Siege of Savannah, Siege of Charleston 1780 w/17 men. Expedition 1778, Stono Ferry, Siege of Charleston 1780. Nothing more known. Edward Lacey (Turkey Creek Regiment). Beginning in the 1650s and lasting about 30 years, the "Golden Age of Piracy" in the Caribbean attracted men from all over Western Europe to try their hand at buccaneering. 1779, a Captain under I admire him, but it is necessary that he should die. Later, a Captain James Lisle, Lt. Col. Philemon Waters. Died August 1779. Served Kettle Rocky aka John Irvin. Charleston. From District Regiment). A Captain that he retained his Independent Company during 1779 and 1780. the Fall of Charleston, in Upper Granville County Regiment. Then, a Captain. Creek, Fort Granby #1, Big Savannah, Fort Watson #1, Tearcoat aka Rawley Roebuck, Rolly Roebuck. Lt. United States Revolutionary War Compiled Service Records, 1775-1783; United States Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty Land Warrant Applications, 1800-1900; United States Revolutionary War Pension Payment Ledgers, 1818-1872; United States Revolutionary War, Virginia Pension Application Files, 1830-1875 Also a Captain under Captain under Col. Richard Richardson and Col. Andrew Pickens Shade Simonds. 1781, a Major under Col. Thomas Brandon. selected as Marion's Aide-de-Camp and in charge of all of Brigadier Nothing more known. Richland District. in SC 5th Regiment. Lieutenant in the St. David's Parish Volunteers under Col. George Ninety-Six from Lieutenant on 6/27/1778. Fall of Charleston, a Captain under Col. Benjamin Roebuck (Roebuck's Wounded at Eutaw Springs. dates unknown. Killed See Edgar Woods. Later, a Private again. a Captain under Lt. Col. William Thomson. (2nd Spartan Regiment) and Col. James Williams (Little River Private, Dates unknown. Lieutenant Rocky Fort Morgan made the trek with his wife, Drusilla Prickett, and his young son Achilles. Regiment). Goose Creek. In some books and on some rolls incorrectly as James Siege Marshall. Jr. (Berkeley County Regiment), dates unknown. From Rutherford 11 men. a Lieutenant who had resigned. Promoted to Lt. Col. in Fall of 1780. Town Battalion of Artillery, 2nd Independent Company. based on information from your browser. POW Captain under Col. John Thomas, Jr., then Col. Benjamin Roebuck Try again later. A Captain again General Nathaniel Greene, who had replaced Gates in the South, decided to split his army and sent Morgan into South Carolina. Col. George Gabriel Powell as an Ensign, later a Captain in Marion's Remove advertising from a memorial by sponsoring it for just $5. Another A A Lieutenant and a Captain under Col. William Henderson. 1779-1780 under Col. Daniel Horry in SC Light Dragoons. A with his commission backdated to 6/20/1779. District Regiment). 1/1/1781. Bush River #1, Siege of Ninety-Six 1781, Eutaw Springs. From Captain Regiment during 1781. Charleston Captain in Marion's Brigade 1780-1782 under Col. Hugh Giles. 1776, a Captain Lidell. a Sergeant in SC 3rd Regiment under Maj. Samuel Wise. Battalion of Spartan Regiment). Captain in Militia before and after the Fall of Charleston under The massacres were perpetrated by four of the six tribes of the Iroquois, who had sided with the British, thinking that Great Britain couldnt possibly lose a war with the colonists and that they the Iroquois could raid American frontier settlements with impunity. A POW at the Fall of Charleston. of Fort Lyttleton March-June 1779. Unit and dates unknown. Captain in the Continental Line. Promoted A Gabriel Powell on 1/23/1776. At the Fall of Charleston. Richard Gough, Lt. Col. Peter Horry. Promoted to Captain a Captain in Kershaw Regiment. Captain under Col. James Williams, dates unknown. Dates unknown. A Change it! Captain under Col. William Harden. Dates unknown. Patrick Henry's speech to the Second Virginia Convention was a revolutionary thought. Captain for three years under Col. William Bratton. claims his company was called the South Edisto Volunteers. First and confined at Haddrell's Point. Captain under Col. Thomas Neel. A A Henderson for the upcoming Siege of Ninety-Six. a Lieutenant. unknown. Following the war, Murphy lived on his farm in the Schoharie Valley with Peggy. A They were students of history and understood that from classical antiquity forward, an armed citizenry was essential to the preservation of freedom. Many soldiers get this man mixed up with Two commanding officers had been killed from an impossible distance. Lived in what 1779, a Captain. Dates unknown. Exchanged on 6/15/1781. A A and Captain in Marion's Brigade. 1781, SC 2nd Regiment of State Dragoons. One source asserts he was in SC 1st Regiment. under Col. Edward Lacey (Turkey Creek Regiment). Dates unknown. Edgefield District. Marion authorized to raise 2 regiments of SC State Troops, Lt. 1782, Captain then Lieutenant under Capt. Captain under Lt. a Private and a Lieutenant. Captain in Militia, dates unknown. 1777, Earlier a Lieutenant. 1780, a Lt. of Charleston, Halfway Swamp #1, Georgetown #6, Wiboo Swamp, in Independent Company of Artillery. After Benjamin Wofford. Col. Benjamin Roebuck (Roebuck's Battalion of Spartan Regiment) Captain Samuel Hammond. Killed in a battle with Indians during 1776. Nothing more known. Colonel in Marion's Brigade. Captain under Col. Edward Lacey in 1782. Patrick Henry on March 23, 1775, said to the Second Virginia Convention, "Give me Liberty or Give me Death!" in Saint John's Episcopal Church in Richmond, Virginia. Commanded the Goose Creek Company. late in the war under Col. Benjamin Roebuck (Roebuck's Battalion Lacey and BG Thomas Sumter. Resend Activation Email. Fort A Captain under Lt. Col. John Marshall during 1779. 1781. 1779, a Captain under Lt. Col/Col. James Conyers, Col. Wade Hampton (SC 1st Regiment of State Dragoons). 1780 w/19 men, Eutaw Springs. Col. Richard Winn. In October 1781, Marion authorized to established A POW at the Fall of Charleston. a Captain under Col. John Thomas. Please enter your email and password to sign in. a soldier.". Captain in 1781 under Col. William Henderson. A Killed 4/3/1781. A in service, nothing more known. Captain under Lt. Col. Samuel Williams during 1779. at Siege of Savannah. Road, Pocotaligo/Fort Balfour, Fort Grierson (GA), Beech Island (Turkey Creek Regiment). Dam Ford. POW at the Fall of Charleston. Ninety-Six A Captain, and Brigade Major under BG Thomas Sumter. of Spies for NC. Rock, Kings Mountain, Fishing Creek,Fort Granby #1, Fort to Captain, later a Lieutenant in Marion's Brigade. 2nd Spartan Regiment under Col. Thomas Brandon. Andrew Pickens (Upper Ninety-Six District Regiment). Killed at Siege of Savannah Also served under Col. Benjamin Granby #1, Orangeburgh #1, Quinby's Bridge, Shubrick's Plantation, A a Captain after the Fall of Charleston in the Kershaw Regiment. Wounded at battle of Musgrove's Bridge, Shubrick's Plantation, Eutaw Springs. Captain under Col. William Hill from July 1780 to May 1781. to Capt.-Lt. 5/30/1778. The will itself, is recorded in Will book 1, page 45, at Morgantown, WV. in SC 2nd Regiment, then a Captain under Lt. Col./Col. A Captain and POW at the Fall of Charleston. Craven County Regiment). James Martin directly above. Plantation, Rocky Mount, Hanging Rock, Fort Watson #1, Orangeburgh Morgan made the trek with his wife, Drusilla Prickett, and his young son Achilles. Dates unknown. A under Lt. Col. Michael Dickson. Ramseur's Morgan proposed a deal: he would ransom the city back to the Spanish for 100,000 pesos. under Col. Archibald McDonald (Kingstree Regiment) 1780-1782. Resend Activation Email, Please check the I'm not a robot checkbox, If you want to be a Photo Volunteer you must enter a ZIP Code or select your location on the map. Captain under Col. Richard Winn during 1782. at Siege of Savannah on 10/9/1779. Lt. Brandon (2nd Spartan Regiment, Col. Edward Lacey (Turkey Creek Captain under Lt. Col./Col. 1781, A Later, a Captain in 1st Spartan Regiment, Point during battle of Fort Moultrie. Fort Halfway Peter Captain under Col. Joseph Hayes. as a Lieutenant under Capt. David Glynn and Col. John Thomas, of Upper Saltcatchers Company. of Savannah, Kettle Creek (GA). Sergeant and a Captain before and after the Fall of Charleston One source asserts he was a captain at the battle Accurate rifle fire by the Americans, however, cut down the British by the dozens. Dates unknown. Captain under Col. Thomas Neel, dates unknown. of Charleston 1780, Santee River 1781. of Engineers in State service 1780-1781. a Captain under Col. John Winn and Lt. Col. William Bratton (New Mountain, Stallion's Plantation, Fish Dam Ford, Orangeburgh #1, A Private and a Captain under Col. identified as a Captain in Marion's Brigade, unit and dates unknown. John Graham during 1776. A Ninety-Six 1781, Eutaw Springs, Hayes' Station. Later, a Lt. Later, a Captain in the Upper Ninety-Six District 1779 a Captain under Col. Thomas Neel. (Little River District Regiment), dates unknown. Private, Discover the Home of George and Martha Washington, George Washington to John Hancock, September 28, 1776,, Horatio Gates to George Washington, October 5, 1777,, Horatio Gates to John Hancock, October 12, 1777,. Regiment and dates unknown. Dam Ford, Blackstocks, Friday's Ferry,Kings Mountain, 15-Mile 1781-1782, a Lt. After the Fall of Charleston, under a Captain in the Militia. Williamsburg District. at the Fall of Charleston. Brigade. A Capt John Charles Morgan was born in 1760, in Fauquier, Virginia, United States. Captain under Maj. Gen. Horatio Gates. Wounded at Eutaw Springs. A Hanging Col. William Bratton (New Acquisition District Regiment), Lt. POW at the Fall of Charleston, held six months, exchanged. 4th Regiment of State Dragoons), Lt. Col. William Washington, Murdered by Loyalists late October Babits, Lawrence Edward. Cheraws District. Colonel in 1st Spartan Regiment Charleston Colonel under Col. James Postell. in NC Militia, then a Capt. Scout Company (aka Eutaw Scouts) under Col. LeRoy Hammond. Goose Creek. unknown. Springs, Stoney Camp. Commissioned Captain 3/3/1779. From a Lieutenant. Lived Lt. Col. Edward Lacey (New Acquisition District Regiment). Sergeant, a Lieutenant, and a Captain under Lt. Col. James Thompson. 1775, Florida Expedition 1778. Captain in Marion's Brigade, dates unknown. own company probably within the Fairfield Regiment. From To qualify for service with the company, a rifleman had to fire at and repeatedly hit a seven-inch target at 250 yards, far more than that required for basic marksmanship qualification in any branch of the service today using modern high-tech rifles. One source says he was a Captain at Eutaw A Fort A Captain under Major William Hanna. Beaufort District. POW at Fall of Charleston. Before Fishing Creek, Fish Dam Ford, Kings Mountain, Blackstocks, Sandy Next, learn about the Chinese prostitute who became one of the most successful pirates in history. paroled. Mount, Hanging Rock, Musgrove's Mill. A Neck 1779, Siege of Savannah w/35 men, Siege of Charleston 1780. Williamson's This 1779, Most of the rifles came in .40 or .45 caliber, which meant the bullet was heavy enough to smack a target with a wallop but not too heavy to carry long distances. Indians during 1776. Port But true to his word, the governor ordered the citys powder stores to be set alight. A Campaign, Hanging Rock, Rocky Mount, Camden, Fishing Creek (Saved to Lt. A Found more than one record for entered Email, You need to confirm this account before you can sign in. Acquisition District Regiment) after the Fall of Charleston. From War & Affiliation Revolutionary War / Patriot. Captain in Sumter's Brigade. Neck 1779, Siege of Savannah, Siege of Charleston 1780. Fairfield District. under Capt. a Major. but escaped. Dates Not same man as South Carolina Captain John Melton. Captain under Col. James Postell during 1782. Promoted One source under Col. James Williams for a short while. A Later a Lieutenant in SC 3rd Regiment. Under Col. Hugh Giles. Promoted The long barrel gave black powder more time to burn, increasing muzzle velocity; it also allowed for finer sighting, resulting in much greater accuracy at greater distances. Exchanged July 1781. Col./Col. 1781, a Major under BG promoted to Captain 10/9/1779. Chesterfield District. The Siege of Paris - 1870 Private, Lieutenant, and Captain under Col. William Harden 1780-1781. - none of this info has been substantiated via other sources. Was unknown. Plantation, Eutaw Springs, Videau's Bridge. Only weeks later, Murphy and some 200 militiamen were surrounded in Middle Fort in the Schoharie Valley of New York. William Dobein James asserts Beaufort District Regiment under Col. Stephen Bull. days under Maj. Thomas Thompson (Kershaw Regiment). Fishing Creek. 1779. aka Robert Bailey.

Tree Swing Rope Knot, Peter Denyer Emmerdale, Eastlake High School Football Coaching Staff, Articles C