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Greene Monument, 1958 (NPS)
The Battle of Guilford Courthouse in the Context of the Southern Campaign
Guilford Courthouse and the Southern Campaign
On March 15, 1781 at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse, Maj. Gen.
Nathanael Greene commanded an army of almost 4,500 American militia and
Continental soldiers against a British army of 1,900 veteran regulars
commanded by Lord Charles Cornwallis. After two and a half hours of
contested fighting, Cornwallis claimed possession of the battlefield,
scoring a tactical victory over the Americans. Historians characterize
the battle as the “highwater mark of British military operations in the
Revolutionary War.”[1] The British victory, however, came with an enormous
cost as Cornwallis’ force suffered over 25% casualties. Greene, on the
other hand, carefully withdrew his soldiers, abandoning the field in
order to preserve the remaining strength of his force. The Battle of
Guilford Courthouse marked the apex of the British campaign in the South
in 1780 and 1781 (Figure 2). The campaign and the toll it took on
Cornwallis’ army set in motion Cornwallis’ decision to march to
Yorktown, VA, where, seven months after the Battle at Guilford
Courthouse, he surrendered his force to Gen. George Washington.

Figure 2: Map showing the “American Revolution in the South,”
National Park Service, undated. Accessed online October 8, 2015:
http://battleofcamden.org/nps7881.pdf.
The Battle of Guilford Courthouse is also the culmination of a series
of battles, beginning with the Battle of Kings Mountain on October 7,
1780, where the Continental Army and American militia units began to
turn the tide of the Revolution against the British Army. Also in
October 1780, Gen. George Washington appointed Nathanael Greene to
command the Continental Army in the South. Greene employed a new
strategy of attrition to frustrate the opposition, in particular
Cornwallis, who repeatedly tried to force Greene into a decisive
battle. On January 17, 1781, Greene’s subordinate, Gen. Daniel Morgan,
decisively defeated a scouting force led by Lieutenant Colonel Banastre
Tarleton at the Battle of Cowpens. Cornwallis mobilized his army and
began to chase Morgan and Greene. Greene led Cornwallis north, evading
capture and avoiding pitched battle with the British. Greene’s strategy
was to wear down Cornwallis, draw him away from his supply depots, and
choose an advantageous time and place to fight.
Greene chose Guilford Courthouse, a rural crossroads in the sparsely
settled North Carolina Piedmont to face Cornwallis. To understand the
role of the Battle of Guilford Courthouse in the American Revolution, it
is necessary to review the broader background of the war and, in
particular, the Southern Campaign of 1780 and 1781.

Signers Monument and Grave (NPS)
Overview of the American Revolution
The American Revolution (1775-1783) arose from growing tensions
between residents of Great Britain’s thirteen North American colonies
and the colonial government, which represented the British crown. In
April 1775, skirmishes between British troops and colonial militiamen in
the towns of Lexington and Concord, Massachusetts, marked the beginning
of the conflict.[2] During the first two years of the American Revolution,
most of the fighting occurred in the Northern Colonies. While Gen.
George Washington commanded the Continental Army to victory at Trenton
and Princeton, New Jersey, in late 1776 and early 1777, the British
still retained the initiative. However, on October 7, 1777, Patriot
forces under the command of Gen. Horatio Gates achieved a significant
victory at Saratoga, New York.[3]
By 1780, after almost five years of fighting, the British Army had
not defeated Washington’s Continental Army and the British public grew
weary of the war. Military strategists, in particular Lord Germain, the
Secretary of State for the Colonies in London, promoted a new strategy
to mobilize Loyalists in the South and reestablish their authority over
the Southern Colonies. These strategists speculated that legions of
Southerners would rush to support the British Army, volunteering as
soldiers or providing supplies. With this local support, they argued the
British Army would end the rebellion in Georgia and the Carolinas.[4]
Subsequently, the British Army would invade Virginia and take control of
the Chesapeake, where they would establish a base from which to attack
Washington’s army from the south.[5]
In May 1780, British forces under Lt. Gen. Sir Henry Clinton,
recently appointed theater commander over the South, successfully
captured Charleston, South Carolina. After only a few days, Clinton
departed Charleston to return to the North, confident that by taking the
political and economic epicenter of the region, the British Army would
enjoy a quick victory over the South. Clinton placed Maj. Gen. Charles
Cornwallis in command of the remaining British Army to implement the
plan formulated by Germain and others: build loyalist support, establish
outposts in the interior of the Carolinas, and defeat the Continental
Army. For the next two years, however, the British found themselves in a
protracted and increasingly frustrating battle with various militia and
Continental Army units.[6]
In July 1780, Cornwallis led his army out of Charleston to invade the
interior of South Carolina. On May 29, 1780, Lieutenant Colonel Banastre
Tarleton, leading a Legion of cavalry and light infantry, soundly
defeated Continental forces under Col. Alexander Buford in the Battle of
Waxhaws near the North Carolina border. Stories of Tarleton’s men
slaughtering American soldiers spread across the countryside,
irreparably damaging the British Army’s reputation amongst
Southerners.[7]
In July 1780, Horatio Gates took command of the newly formed
Continental Army in the South, replacing Gen. Benjamin Lincoln, who
surrendered during the fall of Charleston. Gates led his troops to
confront Cornwallis upon learning that the British Army had moved
towards Camden, South Carolina. Gates called upon local militias and
irregular soldiers to join his force and make a stand against the
British. Several South Carolina militia leaders, including Francis
Marion and Thomas Sumter, were among those to arrive in support. In
August 1780, Gates’ Army outnumbered Cornwallis’, but Gates made
strategic mistakes like positioning untested militia brigades directly
across from the strength of Cornwallis’s line. The charging British
regulars routed the milita on the American flank, resulting in a
devastating defeat for Gates and the Continental Army.[8]
Several local militia leaders, in particular Francis Marion, Thomas
Sumter, and Andrew Pickens, left Gates’ command and independently
pursued hit-and-run campaigns against the British for the rest of the
year. Avoiding a full-scale battle, these militia leaders carried on
harassment attacks that took advantage of their mobility and of their
superior knowledge of the local terrain. The successful campaigns of
Marion, Sumter, and Pickens demonstrated to subsequent Continental Army
commanders a new way to challenge the British Army and galvanized
popular support for the American forces.[9]
After the victory at Camden, with the encouragement of British
military leaders who wanted Cornwallis to extend the campaign into North
Carolina, Cornwallis sent a force led by Maj. Patrick Ferguson toward
Charlotte, North Carolina. As word of Ferguson’s presence and harsh
treatment of local residents circulated across the countryside,
backcountry insurgents moved into the area to confront the British
expedition. On October 6, 1780, Ferguson moved his men into a defensive
position at the top of King’s Mountain and prepared for battle. Over
3,000 mountaineers and irregular units charged, overwhelming the British
forces. Ferguson, the only British officer present at the battle, was
killed and his command was soundly defeated.[10]
The defeat at King’s Mountain temporarily slowed Cornwallis’ advance
into North Carolina. Accordingly, Cornwallis returned the main section
of his army to Winnsboro, South Carolina, to reorganize and resupply. In
doing so, he left behind a series of supply outposts in South Carolina
stretching from Ninety-Six in the west to Georgetown in the east.

Alamnnce/Colonial/Hunter Monument (NPS)
The Southern Campaign: From Cowpens to Guilford Courthouse
After the defeat at Camden, commanding Gen. George Washington
appointed Nathanael Greene to be the Maj. Gen. in command of the
Southern Army. In his letter to the Continental Congress, Washington
wrote of Greene, “in whose abilities, fortitude, and integrity from a
long and intimate experience of them, I have the most entire
confidence.”However, Washington had little advice to give Greene on his
new command. As he wrote on October 22, 1780, “Uninformed as I am of the
enemy’s force in that quarter, or our own, or of the resources which it
will be in our power to command for carrying on the war, I can give you
no particular instructions but must leave you to govern yourself
entirely, according to your own prudence and judgment and the
circumstance in which you find yourself... .”[11]
When Greene arrived in Charlotte, NC in December 1780, the army under
his command consisted of 1,500 soldiers, including only 950 regular
troops. Greene chose to move quickly to gain the initiative against
Cornwallis rather than establishing winter quarters as planned for by
his predecessor Gen. Gates. Greene recognized that the Southern Campaign
would be different from the war in the North, where Washington hoped to
defeat the British in a decisive battle. Greene decided to play to his
troop’s strengths, utilize better knowledge of local terrain, and employ
guerrilla tactics to counter the British superiority in experience and
resources. Greene also wanted to draw Cornwallis deeper into the
Carolinas, removing him from his main supply depots on the coast.[12]
Greene divided his force. He sent Daniel Morgan to threaten the
British garrison at Ninety-Six, South Carolina. Cornwallis, learning of
the movement, decided to attack Morgan first before confronting Greene’s
main army. Cornwallis sent Tarleton towards Ninety-Six and Morgan.
Tarleton chased Morgan, who led the British Legion commander towards
Cowpens, South Carolina. Morgan chose to confront Tarleton on terrain of
his selection, were he determined his men would have an advantage.
Morgan’s troops arrived on the field a day earlier than Tarleton. They
rested, ate, and prepared for battle. Morgan positioned his men in three
successive lines of progressive strength, beginning with militia units
and concluding with his most trusted, battle-tested Continental units.
Tarleton’s troops, tired from a long, forced march, attacked Morgan’s
men at dawn on January 17, 1781. Tarleton made a frontal assault up a
long, gentle incline into the face of the American defense. Morgan had
instructed the militiamen to fire two volleys into the advancing British
line and then fall back. Morgan wanted the successive lines to soften up
the British and Tarleton’s aggressive charge fell into Morgan’s trap.
The first and second lines fired their volleys and then withdrew to
support the third line. The British misinterpreted the Americans’
movements, believing they were retreating. They ran headlong into
Morgan’s third line of fresh regulars. Morgan defeated Tarleton,
inflicting tremendous damage to the British force. Tarleton’s losses
were: 110 dead, over 200 wounded, and 500 captured. Morgan had only 12
killed and 60 wounded.[13]
Cornwallis immediately tried to catch Morgan after the battle, but
could not before Morgan had rejoined Greene’s main force. After Cowpens,
Cornwallis plunged into North Carolina sending his army in pursuit of
Greene and Morgan. Greene purposefully led Cornwallis into a month-long
chase across North Carolina. Morgan placed boats in advance of his
troops to transport his men across rivers. Cornwallis could not keep
pace so at Ramsour Mill, Cornwallis burned his baggage trains in an
effort to increase his speed. As a result, Cornwallis and the British
Army had to depend upon local residents for supplies or result to
plundering for supplies. When Loyalist support was not forthcoming,
Cornwallis’ army did in fact pillage local farms, further alienating
local residents and driving more to support Greene and the Americans.[14]
On January 19, 1781, Cornwallis marched north in pursuit of Greene,
following intelligence gathered by patrols sent out under Tarleton’s
command. The reports from Tarleton “induced Earl Cornwallis to cross
Buffaloe creek and Little Broad river, in hopes of intercepting Gen.
Morgan.” Tarleton explained, “Great exertions were made by part of the
army, without baggage, to retake our prisoners, and to intercept Gen.
Morgan’s corps on its retreat to the Catawba; but the celerity of their
movements, and the swelling of numberless creeks in our way, rendered
all our efforts fruitless.”[15]
The British discovered that Morgan had crossed the Catawba River at
Sherrald’s Ford, while sending some troops and prisoners farther north
to cross at Island Ford. Morgan pushed northward, keeping the swollen
river between himself and his British pursuers. After having spent
several days readying his regiments, Cornwallis’s army marched on
January 28 and then encamped near Beattie’s Ford. At this time, the
Catawba was nearly impassible due to rising waters. Meanwhile, Morgan
had been “collecting the Militia” and “filling all the Private fords to
Make them Impassable.”[16] He also dispatched Brig. Gen. William Lee
Davidson, a former Continental officer, with North Carolina militiamen
to Beattie’s Ford.
While Maj. Gen. Nathanael Greene left his Continental units along the
Pee Dee River under Brig. Gen. Isaac Huger, with orders to march north
to Salisbury, Greene himself set out on January 28 with a guide and
three dragoons on a long journey across south central North Carolina to
Beattie’s Ford.[17] After reaching Morgan on January 30, Greene held a
council of war at Beattie’s Ford with Morgan, Davidson, and cavalryman
Lt. Col. William Washington. According to Greene’s plan, Morgan’s men
were to hold Sherrald’s Ford while Davidson and his militia held the
lower fords as long as possible and then fall back to Salisbury, a major
manufacturing and supply center for the southern Continental army.[18]
As Greene met with his war council, Cornwallis sent a feint led by
Lt. Col. James Webster and the 33rd Foot toward Beattie’s Ford and then
marched to a smaller crossing four miles south, known as Cowan’s Ford.
On February 1, a battle ensued in which a local Tory killed Brig. Gen.
William Lee Davidson. After the battle, Cornwallis moved the majority of
his army across Cowan’s Ford, while Davidson’s remaining men fled
Beattie’s Ford. Once the British forced the crossing at Cowan’s, the
Continentals moved rapidly, marching toward Salisbury by a more
northerly route. Seemingly unaware that the Continentals had fallen back
to Salisbury, Cornwallis dispatched Tarleton with the 23rd Foot and his
legion dragoons to search for Greene.[19] On February 2, Greene evacuated
Salisbury after loading wagons with food, ammunition, and weapons.
Greene ordered the militia towards Trading Ford on the Yadkin River. The
next day, Greene and Morgan rode to Trading Ford and watched the army
cross while the river rose rapidly from the rain. Greene and Morgan were
running out of time as Cornwallis was behind them by only a day’s
march.[20]
On February 2, the British marched for Salisbury where they pillaged
food and supplies left by Greene’s army. The following night, the
British vanguard led by Brig. Gen. O’Hara reached Trading Ford. As
elevated water levels prevented Cornwallis from using the Trading Ford,
he followed the Yadkin River upstream to the Shallow Ford, passing
through the Moravian communities of Bethania, Bethabara, and Salem.[21]
After reaching Salem, Cornwallis was in an excellent position to place
his forces between Greene’s army and the Dan River, the next major
watercourse before the Virginia line.[22]
Meanwhile, Greene had marched for Guilford Courthouse with his
Continentals, which they reached by February 7. At Guilford, he met with
Morgan and was soon joined by Huger and Lt. Col. Henry “Light Horse
Harry” Lee, who had traveled from Cheraw, South Carolina.[23] Huger and
Lee camped “in the woods a few hundred yards in the rear of the
courthouse,” along the Reedy Fork Road.[24] On February 9, Greene called a
meeting of his principal commanders where they planned a rapid
withdrawal to the Dan River after noting their terrible strategic
position. Greene thus planned to avoid battle, draw the British as far
as possible from their base, and retire into Virginia to resupply, if
necessary.[25]
To prevent Greene from escaping, Cornwallis continued the pursuit,
which developed into a race for the river fords.[26] The Dan River was
deep and only could be crossed on its upper reaches. Accordingly,
Cornwallis interposed his army between Greene and these fords, hoping
that he might compel the Southern Army to fight. Greene, however, had
prepared for such a contingency and had ordered the construction and
collection of boats on the south bank of the Dan, which enabled his men
to cross to the north side of the river by February 19. After having
“pursued Greene’s army for three weeks, covering some 250 miles over
muddy, frost-encrusted roads, in torrents of rain and sleet, crossed
several major waterways and fought many skirmishes,” Cornwallis had lost
the Race to the Dan.[27]
With Greene and his army on the north bank of the Dan River,
Cornwallis marched to Hillsborough, North Carolina. After arriving there
on February 20, Cornwallis raised the Royal Standard and called upon all
loyal subjects to rally to his assistance. The results were
disappointing, however, and so in a few days they were marching again.[28]
Cornwallis moved west of Hillsborough, mostly in search of provisions,
and established camp on the south side of Alamance Creek between the Haw
and Deep Rivers. Cornwallis troops began to suffer from the Army’s
inability to support itself and to find assistance from Loyalists.
Sergeant Roger Lamb wrote, “Such was the scarcity of provisions at
Hillsborough, that it was impossible to support the army in that
place.”[29]
In the meantime, Greene collected reinforcements and rested his army
in Halifax County, Virginia. Greene’s main objective was to wear down
Cornwallis with piecemeal partisan hit-and run tactics, holding him as
far from his supply base as possible, while simultaneously working to
keep Tory recruitment at minimal levels.[30] On February 22, Greene
crossed back to the south bank of the Dan and remained on the move until
the last of the summoned militia reinforcements could join him.
Detachments from both Armies met in a series of small-unit skirmishes
across the Piedmont: Pyle’s Defeat, Clapp’s Mill, and Weitzel’s Mill.
These smaller actions presaged the larger battle a few days later at
Guilford Courthouse. In the days leading to Guilford, the soldiers
fought in thick woods, across farm fields, and through undulating
terrain cut by meandering streams. Additionally, Greene continuously
added to his knowledge of local roads and rivers near Guilford
Courthouse, developing avenues of access and egress he would use during
the subsequent battle.
Greene sent a force under Lt. Col. Henry Lee to intercept a group of
Loyalists, under the command of Col. John Pyle, that were marching to
join Cornwallis. Coming across two of Pyle’s advance riders who mistook
Greene’s force as the British Army, Lee learned of Pyle’s location and
surprised the Loyalist force. The skirmish resulted in one hundred
Loyalist casualties.[31]
Units from Cornwallis’ and Greene’s armies met again on March 2, 1781
at Clapp’s Mill (also called the Battle of Alamance.) Cornwallis, who
had departed Hillsborough on February 27, stationed his troops on the
south bank of Alamance Creek. Greene moved a portion of his troops a few
miles from the British on the opposite bank, while the main body of
Greene’s army remained several miles away encamped at the Speedwell
Ironworks. Clapp’s Mill was a settlement of German farmers, with an
assortment of farm buildings and open fields. Detachments from the two
armies clashed in the fields surrounding Barney Clapp’s farm, leaving
three Americans dead and 21 British soldiers dead or wounded.[32]
Cornwallis continued his effort to engage Greene in direct conflict.
He moved his army toward the Americans near Weitzel’s Mill. The
Americans’ intercepted a British scouting party and the two forces
engaged in a running fight along the road to the mill. The Americans
lost approximately twelve soldiers and the British losses numbered about
25. The Americans pulled back and retreated towards Guilford Courthouse.
Local militia units and the troops retreating from Weitzel’s Mill joined
Greene’s main army as it marched on March 12th toward Guilford
Courthouse.[33]

Davidson and Nash Arches (NPS)
The Battle of Guilford Courthouse, March 15, 1781
Pre-Battle Positioning of Greene’s Army
The skirmishes occurring before the Battle of Guilford Courthouse
enabled Maj. Gen. Nathanael Greene time to organize and deploy his army
in the dense woods west of the courthouse. The terrain and the sheer
size of Greene’s force contributed to his use of a three-line formation,
similar to the strategy Sumter successfully employed at Cowpens. Greene
positioned two militia lines, one North Carolina and the other Virginia,
supported by a third line comprised of his Delaware, Maryland, and
Virginia Continentals. In addition, Greene placed riflemen and light
troops on each flank while Dragoons covered the extreme flanks. Greene
also placed his artillery in two locations: one at the center of the
first line and the other near the center of the third line.[34]
Greene’s first line of militia consisted of the two North Carolina
brigades. North of the Great Salisbury Road, Greene placed Brig. Gen.
Thomas Eaton’s Halifax District brigade, consisting of approximately
500-600 men. South of the Great Salisbury Road that bisected the
battlefield, Greene placed Brig. Gen. John Butler’s Hillsborough
District brigade, consisting similarly of 500-600 men. Next to Butler,
Col. William Moore commanded the Caswell County militia facing west from
behind a rail fence.[35]
South of the Caswell County troops, Butler placed the Granville
County militia, led by Col. Joseph Taylor. To the left of Taylor’s
regiment, Col. Thomas Farmer and Col. John Taylor commanded two Orange
County militia regiments, including a small detachment of Wake County
men. A third, smaller detachment led by Col. Robert Mebane may have also
been present. To their left were small contingents, probably
platoon-size formations numbering about twenty-five men each, from
Rockingham, Randolph, and Chatham Counties. Further south, Butler posted
the Rowan, Mecklenburg, and Guilford militias of which most of the men
hid in woods while some stood behind the rail fence that ran the length
of the fields to their north.[36]
In the center of this first line, Greene placed two six-pounder field
pieces commanded by Capt. Anthony Singleton of the 1st Continental
Artillery along the Great Salisbury Road. He positioned a company of at
least 40 North Carolina Continentals at the most exposed position on the
first line, behind and on the flanks of Singleton’s artillery.[37]
Records indicate that on the north flank of the first line, Greene
posted Col. Charles Lynch’s Virginia riflemen, Capt. Robert Kirkwood’s
Delaware company, Capt. Phillip Huffman’s Virginia company, Lt. Col.
William Washington’s Continental dragoons, and at least two mounted
companies of militia dragoons. Archaeologist Lawrence E. Babits and
research historian Joshua B. Howard, however, suggest that Lt. Col.
William Washington’s Continental dragoons probably were not on this
flank because of heavy brush and the lack of any pathways adequate for
horsemen. Instead, they may have been in the open space north of the
courthouse where the army had camped in early February.[38]
The second line was three hundred to 350 yards behind the first line.
Greene anchored the southern flank with William Campbell’s Virginia
riflemen, Joseph Winston’s Surry and Wilkes County, North Carolina,
riflemen, in addition to Lee’s Legion dragoons and infantry. Greene
posted the Virginia militia to the east of (behind) the North
Carolinians in a dense tangle of underbrush and woods. North of Great
Salisbury Road, Greene positioned Brig. Gen. Robert Lawson’s brigade of
Virginians, comprised of men from the central and eastern part of the
state. Lawson assigned Col. Beverley Randolph’s regiment, consisting of
men from Powhatan, Amelia and Cumberland Counties, to the brigade’s
northern (right) flank. South of Randolph stood Col. John Holcombe’s
regiment, which included men from Amelia, Charlotte, Mecklenburg, and
Powhatan Counties. The smallest regiment in Lawson’s brigade, consisting
of only a few companies from Mecklenburg, Powhatan, and Brunswick
Counties, held the position closest to the road.[39]
Brig. Gen. Edward Steven’s brigade, mostly consisting of men from the
lower Shenandoah Valley, stood south of Great Salisbury Road. Closest to
the road and south of Skipwith’s men, Stevens placed Col. Peter
Perkins’s Pittsylvania County regiment. South of Perkins’s men, Stevens
placed Col. Nathaniel Cocke’s regiment, most of which came from
Lunenburg County but also included companies from Halifax County and
Prince Edward. South of Cocke’s men, Stevens positioned Col. George
Moffett’s Augusta County regiment. The southernmost unit of Seven’s
brigade was the regiment from Rockbridge and Augusta Counties under Col.
Samuel McDowell.[40]
One of McDowell’s men, Samuel Houston, provided a statement that
described the tree cover along the second line and its effect on the
course of the battle. Houston stated, “When we marched near the ground
we charged our guns. Presently our brigade major came, ordering us to
take trees as we pleased. The men run to choose their trees, but with
difficulty, many crowding to one, and some far behind others. Presently
the Augusta men, and some of Col. Campbell’s men fell in at right angles
to us.”[41] Houston’s account suggests that the tree cover south of the
road may have been less thick than McDowell’s position. It also
indicates that during the battle the Virginia militia fought more as
skirmishers rather than in a linear formation.[42]
Greene posted his third line more than 500 yards to the east, behind
the Virginians. The line consisted of Maryland, Delaware, and Virginia
Continentals under Col. Otho Holland Williams and Brig. Gen. Isaac
Huger. Greene and his staff sat on their horses behind the third line
near the courthouse, 60 yards to the rear of the 1st Maryland. Col. John
Gunby and Lt. Col. John Eager Howard led the 1st Maryland, which Greene
had posted in a copse of woods on the slopes of the slight ridge in the
center of the Continental line.[43] Greene posted the 2nd Maryland, led by
Lt. Col. Benjamin Ford, closest to the Great Salisbury Road with its
left flank turned at a right angle from the crest of the ridge to the
roadbed.[44]
Brig. Gen. Isaac Huger led the Virginia brigade, which consisted of
the 1st and 2nd Virginia Regiments of 1781. Greene positioned them
furthest north of the road, hidden in the woods along the west-facing
slope. Since the vale bulges east at this point, they were well to the
rear of the 1st Maryland’s axis. Facing northwest along the slope
bordering the southern edge of the vale’s eastern extension, Greene
placed the 2nd Virginia between the 1st Virginia and the 1st Maryland.[45]
Between the Virginia regiments, Greene positioned his second section
of artillery. Capt. Lt. Ebenezer Finley commanded these two six-pounders
along with two lieutenants and 26 enlisted men. Several smaller militia
units, most of them light horse, waited near Guilford Courthouse behind
the third line. Another mounted detachment of about 100 men, under Col.
Francois Lellorquis, the Marquis de Malmedy, and Baron de Gloeback,
eventually formed north of the courthouse although they did not arrive
in time for the fight. Pension accounts also suggest that supplied at
least two light horse companies from Guilford County, commanded by
Captains Thomas Cook and Daniel Gillespie, were nearby but did not
participate in the battle.[46]
Greene had his men, which totaled over 4,000, positioned in the field
by 11:00 A.M. on March 15, 1781. Green then rode up and down the first
line and gave a speech imploring the militia to “fire two volleys and
then retire.”[47] Shortly afterwards Greene rode to the third line. Soon
after Greene’s departure, Lee arrived with his men and, likely unaware
of Greene’s oratory, gave his own speech to the North Carolinians on the
first line. Subsequently, Lee and his men rode to their position on the
south flank, suggesting that there was possibly a lane, or path,
connecting the first line to the flank.[48]
Around 1:30 PM, the North Carolina Militia spotted British soldiers
400 yards to their west. The citizen soldiers watched anxiously as a
long column of British soldiers advanced down the descent and across a
small creek toward Joseph Hoskins’s house. Cornwallis had arrived.[49]
Advancement of the British Army
Soon after discovering Greene’s troops blocking Great Salisbury Road,
Cornwallis situated his forces and readied his men for battle. He
ordered Leslie, Webster, and O’Hara to advance and deploy their men into
a line extending north and south of the road. As the units crossed
Horsepen Creek, they moved into the woods about a hundred yards west of
Joseph Hoskins’s farmstead.[50]
As these first British troops found their positions, they faced a
bombardment of solid shot fired by Anthony Singleton’s artillery, which
had advanced several yards in front of the North Carolina militia line.
However, the dense woods adjacent to the road prevented Singleton’s
blasts from fully reaching the British regiments.[51] Responding to the
American artillery fire, Cornwallis ordered Lieutenants McLeod, Smith,
and O’Hara to advance their pieces to the front and return fire. While
the artillery duel lasted at least twenty minute, both sides suffered
only minor casualties. Subsequently, the Americans withdrew their guns,
as there is no evidence suggesting their active participation when the
British attacked the first line.[52]
While under bombardment, Cornwallis situated Webster’s brigade north
of the road, with the 33rd Foot holding the left flank and the 23rd Foot
the right. South of the road stood the 71st Highlanders and the Von Bose
Regiment.[53] To support the main line, Cornwallis positioned the Guards
Grenadiers and the 2nd Guards Battalion across the road, centered behind
the 23rd and 71st. Farther south, he placed the 1st Guards Battalion to
support Maj. Gen. Leslie and the right wing. North of the road,
Cornwallis stationed the jaegers and the Guards light infantry behind
the 2nd Guards. Across the lane from them, Tarleton’s British Legion and
the 17th Light Dragoons stood in reserve.[54]
In an after-action report, Cornwallis explained his plan: “The woods
on our right and left were reported to be impracticable for cannon; but
as that on our right appeared more open, I resolved to attack the left
wing of the enemy.”[55] Presumably, Cornwallis was referring to a second
smaller open field in front of the American left flank, although his
statement may reflect that the woods south of the road were less dense
than the woods on the north side.[56] Shortly after noon, the British army
advanced through the dense underbrush and woods toward Greene’s first
line. Johann Du Buy commented, “As the whole country is covered with
woods and forests, it was impossible to see the enemy, much less their
position.”[57]
Within minutes of advancing, the 23rd and 71st entered an open field
“wet and muddy from the rains which had recently fallen,” roughly 400
yards from the North Carolina militia line on the other side of a rail
fence.[58] The British regiments soon realized they would have to cross
two fence lines before reaching the Americans. The first fence was
located on the western edge of the field and the second was roughly 200
yards in front of the American line north of the road and 150-175 yards
of the Americans positioned south of the road.[59] After the British
crossed the open field north of the road, the attack on the American
first line began.
The First Line
As the British came into view, the North Carolina militiamen holding
the first line prepared for the assault.[60] British Captain Thomas
Saumarex noted the conditions of the battlefield, “The Royal Welsh
Fusiliers had to attack the enemy in front, under every disadvantage,
having to march over a field lately ploughed, which was wet and muddy
from the rains which had recently fallen. The regiment marched to the
attack under a most galling and destructive fire, which it could only
return by an occasional volley.”[61]
According to Babits and Lawrence, the British 23rd and 71st marched
forward, leaving both of their flanks temporarily exposed because the
33rd to the north and the Von Bose to the south fell behind as they
moved through more densely wooded areas.[62] The 71st marched across the
open field before reaching the midfield fence. At this point, the
Highlanders crossed the fence, reformed their ranks, and resumed moving
forward. To their right, the Hessians were moving southeast into
position and extending their line.
Von Bose’s commanding officer, Maj. Johann Du Buy, stated that as the
men following Von Bose moved through the woods, they found “a deep
ravine in front of us with high banks filled with water. We crossed it
with much difficulty and then came to a fenced-in wheat field, on the
other side of which was the enemy consisting of about 1,000 Continental
troops and militia en ligne. We tore down most of the fences on our side
and jumped over the others without, however, being inconvenienced by the
enemy, although they were not more than 300 yards distant. I formed the
battalion into line with the utmost dispatch and ran to meet the enemy
in tolerable order.”[63] This “deep ravine,” according to Babits and
Howard, was likely the lower, western end of a watercourse that today
crosses the Hoskins Farm site. The leftmost companies of the Von Bose
regiment entered the southernmost field about 220 yards west of the
Americans holding the first line. William Campbell, leading the Virginia
riflemen on the southern flank, recalled that the British “immediately
advanced upon our Troops, upon which the firing of small Arms
began.”[64]
According to reports from Greene, Tarleton, and Lee, the American
militia first fired when the British crossed the middle fence lines,
approximately 140-150 yards away from the American position. Accounts by
those British and Americans actually engaged at the first line suggest
the main volley came later, when the British were closer to the first
line, some accounts suggesting the distance was only 35-50 yards.
Campbell’s Virginia riflemen, posted on the ridgeline just beyond the
southern edge of the field and riflemen positioned on the first line’s
southern end, likely engaged the British first, peppering them with shot
as the British soldiers advanced toward the first line. The first line
of American militia waited until the British got within “killing
distance” for their less accurate muskets.[65]
Having crossed the middle fences, the British north of the road
advanced on the American line. The 23rd moved forward, leaving their
left flank exposed to enemy fire. When the Welch Fusiliers came within
range of the North Carolinian’s muskets, the veteran redcoats broke into
a run charging toward the inexperienced Americans.[66]
The North Carolina militia fired. British Capt. Thomas Saumarez
reported the 23rd received “a most galling and destructive fire.”[67] To
the 23rd’s right, the 71st crossed 150 yards of open field before they
too came under fire. Granville County militiaman John Watkins wrote that
along the left of the American line “orders were given not to fire until
the Enemy passed two dead trees standing in the field through which they
was to approach us, about 100 yards from the fence.”[68]
The Hessians marching on the 71st right also suffered. Hessian
sergeant Koch explained: “About 100 yards from the enemy line, they
delivered a general fire and 180 men of our von Bose Regiment
immediately fell.”[69] The British and Hessians regrouped and returned
fire. On the left end of the British line, the 33rd probably did not
fire at the American first line because their approach took them through
deep woods. They continued to march north towards Lynch’s Bedford County
riflemen and the Continental infantry under Capt. Robert Kirkwood and
Lt. Philip Huffman.[70]
The North Carolina militia broke ranks as the British and Hessian
soldiers charged with fixed bayonets. Wetwood Armistead’s stated that
his entire company fled in the face of the assault. Many of the men fell
to the rear, behind Lawson’s and Stevens’s brigades who formed the
second American line. The Virginians had received orders to let the
North Carolinians pass through so they could reorganize with the third
line near the courthouse. Other militiamen made their way to the
northern and southern flanks and disappeared into the woods beyond, as
the British “charged with such impetuosity as to cause them to
retreat.”[71]
As the 23rd and 71st broke through the North Carolina center, the
33rd and Von Bose, on either side of the center thrust, attacked
Kirkwood and Lynch on the northern flank and Campbell, Winston, and Lee
on the southern. As these units moved forward, they separated from the
units in the center. As the 33rd advanced to the northeast, the 23rd
tried to hold the line together by moving north. As a result, the
British center developed a gap. In response, Brig. Gen. O’Hara led the
2nd Battalion of Guards under James Stuart and the Guards Grenadier
Company into the space. Cornwallis also sent the light infantry of the
Guards and the Jägers into the woods to support the 33rd on the left.
O’Hara advanced the 1st Battalion of Guards to cover the Hessians’right.
Greene’s first line had extended the British battle line and forced
Cornwallis to deploy his reserves early in the battle.[72]
From the beginning of the battle, Lynch’s Bedford riflemen north of
the road, and Campbell’s and Winston’s riflemen on the southern flank
fired at the advancing British. The battlefield on the left flank of the
British, in front of the 33rd was thick with trees. John Larkin, a
Guilford County man who served alongside Kirkwood’s men said that the
men were not in traditional battle line, but spread out behind trees.
Shortly after the North Carolina militia line collapsed, Kirkwood and
Lynch began to withdraw to the east towards the second line, drawing the
British forward.[73]
The Second Line
The Virginians posted along the second line could not see the
advancing British army but could hear the battle raging and see the
North Carolina militia regiments falling back. There was approximately
400 yards between the first and second lines of Greene’s army. North of
Great Salisbury Road, on the British left, the 33rd moved through the
woods following a stream as they tried to remain connected to the 23rd
on their right. The 23rd crossed open fields under fire from the
opposing Virginia riflemen. Once they had reached the top of the slope
in their front, the 33rd turned east and began driving towards the
American right flank. By the time they passed the now abandoned first
line, the light infantry and the Jägers were in position to protect the
33rd’s left flank. Pushing forward, the 33rd drove back the right end of
American second line.[74] North of the road, Lawson ordered Randolph’s
and Holcombe’s Virginia regiments forward when the British troops came
into view.
As Randolph’s and Holcombe’s regiments met the 23rd, the Guards
Grenadiers and the 2nd Guards Battalion, sent to fill the gap during the
British assault on the first line, arrived. The Guards Grenadier angled
north and struck Holcombe’s left flank. The battle for the second line’s
northern half rapidly dissolved into a series of sharp skirmishes as
small squads and platoons of Virginians and British infantrymen fought
hand to hand in the woods.[75] The British eventually gained the advantage
and pushed the middle of the American right flank backwards.
Around this time, according to participant accounts, Cornwallis
appeared near the front to lead the attack. Seargent Lamb recalled:
“I saw Lord Cornwallis riding across the clear ground. His lordship
was mounted on a dragoon’s horse (his own having been shot), the
saddlebags were under the creature’s belly, which much retarded his
progress, owing to the vast quantity of Underwood that was spread over
the ground; his lordship was evidently unconscious of the danger. I
immediately laid hold of the bridle of his horse, and turned his head. I
then mentioned to him, that if his lordship pursued in the same
direction, he would in a few moments be surrounded by the enemy, and,
perhaps cut to pieces or captured. I continued to run along the side of
the horse, keeping the bridle in my hand, until his lordship, gained the
23rd regiment, which was at that time drawn up in the skirt of the
woods.”[76]
South of Great Salisbury Road, the British advanced much more slowly.
The 2nd Guards Battalion along either side of the road attacked the
Virginians under Brig. Gen. Edward Stevens. Here, the battle also
dissolved into separate skirmishes and close quarters fighting. During
the fighting, Brig. Gen. Stevens fell wounded after receiving a shot
through the thigh. He ordered a retreat and the right half of his
command immediately fell back towards the rear. The southern portion of
Steven’s troops, under Maj. Alexander Stuart, stood their ground because
they had yet been attacked.
According to Babits, the fractured character of the battle line was a
result of Greene’s strategy and the nature of the battlefield. Greene’s
of using multiple lines had broken the British line as different units
advanced at different rates. Also, British troops may have followed
paths across the undulating terrain, resulting in an indirect march
across the battlefield.
On the right, Von Bose and the 1st Guards attacked the American
southern flank, formed by troops under Col. William Campbell, Captain,
Andrew Wallace, and Lt. Col. Henry Lee. “Light Horse” Lee withdrew to
the southeast. The 1st Guards on the far right of the British line
followed Lee becoming separated from the rest of their line. Stuart’s
men, having thus far avoided active battle, attacked the unprotected
left flank of the British. Lee and Campbell also turned and attacked the
now vulnerable Guards. The combined Continental troops inflicted
significant casualties, but a group of Hessian troops arrived in time to
prevent total destruction of the 1st Guards. The Hessians drove the
Virginians back, at which point the American’s withdrew. The Hessian did
capture a few Virginians, but most escaped towards the third line near
the courthouse.
The British troops were now spread out across the line of battle,
fighting separate, disconnected skirmishes with the Americans. They
succeeded pushing much of the second line backwards, but at the expense
of ammunition, men, and energy. As they renewed the advance, Greene’s
third line of fresh Continental infantry waited.
The Third Line
Greene placed his final line of tested Continental soldiers
approximately 8 00 yards behind the second line. While they reportedly
could not see the action, the waiting troops could hear the battle
approaching them.
Lt. Col. John Eager Howard wrote that “the first [Maryland] regiment
under Gunby was formed in a hollow, in the wood, and to the right [west]
of the cleared ground about the Court house. The Virginia Brigade under
Genl. Huger were to our right. The second [Maryland] regiment was at
some distance to the left of the first, in the cleared ground, with its
left flank thrown back so as to form a line almost at right angles [to
the] 1st regt.” Babits explains that the 2nd Maryland was largely south
of Great Salisbury Road with a few units on the north side. He also
suggests that there was a gap between the two Maryland battalions.
Huger, presumably, occupied the line between the road and the edge of
the ridge overlooking the valley between the second and third lines. The
land on this portion of the battlefield fell away into a densely wooded
gully in front of the Americans. On the Great Salisbury Road, between
the two divisions, Greene posted the surviving North Carolina
Continentals and Singleton’s two six-pound cannon.[77]
Lt. Col. Samuel Hawes’s Virginia Continentals occupied the line to
the right of the 1st Maryland. In front of these two regiments, Captain
Lt. Ebenezer Finley had two six-pound cannon positioned on the terrace
overlooking the valley ready to fire upon a British advance. Beyond,
Col. John Greene’s Virginia regiment occupied a wooded slope on the edge
of the valley. On the far right of the American Line, Col. Charles Lynch
and Capt. Robert Kirkwood had their regiments in line. Many of the
Virginia militiamen joined one of these regiments after they withdrew
from the second line.[78]
The 33rd Foot, the Jägers, and the 2nd Battalion of Guards approached
the northernmost right flank of the American third line opposite Lynch
and Kirkwood. The 33rd arrived first and immediately attacked.
Continental fire drove them back and the 33rd withdrew to a high point
across the vale opposite the Americans. The 2nd Guards attacked next in
the direction of the 2nd Maryland. The Marylanders, because they were in
position along the road, were exposed to British artillery fire.
According to Cornwallis, “The second battalion of Guards first gained
the clear ground near Guilford Court-house, and found a corps of
Continental infantry, much superior in number, formed in the open field
of the left [north] of the road.”[79] The 2nd Maryland tried to move its
line to meet the British marching from the west. The 2nd Guards, coming
across the valley in front of the third line, re-formed their
battle-line, fired a series of volleys, then charged. The 2nd Guards
dislodged the 2nd Maryland and captured Singleton’s cannon near Great
Salisbury Road.[80] The 1st Maryland led a counter attack against the
Guards whose advance had exposed their left flank. North Carolina
militiaman Nathaniel Slade described the scene, “this conflict between
the brigade of Guards and the first regiment of Marylanders was most
terrific, for they fired at the same instant, and they appeared so near
that the blazes from their guns seem to meet.”[81] Washington’s 3rd
Continental light dragoons then attacked the Guards from the rear.
Cornwallis, who witnessed the counter attack, recalled that the 2nd
Guards Battalion was “immediately charged and driven back into the field
by Col. Washington’s dragoons, with the loss of the 6-pounders they had
taken.”[82] Having taken substantial casualties, the Guards fell back.
As the 1st Maryland moved back towards the courthouse to reform their
line, several British regiments appeared in the valley below them. At
this point, Greene ordered a withdrawal to save his army. Greene wrote
after the battle that “they having broken the 2d Maryland Regiment, and
turned our left flank, got into the rear of the Virginia brigade; and
appearing to be gaining on our right, which would have encircled the
whole of the Continental troops, I thought it most advisable to order a
retreat.”[83] Green’s Virginia regiment covered the withdrawal. Soon, the
remaining British regiments arrived to pursue the withdrawing
Continentals but the Virginians successfully harassed the exhausted
British enough that they broke off the chase. According to Otho Holland
Williams, “the enemy did not presume to press our rear with any spirit
they followed only three miles where the regular troops halted and a
great many of the milita formed.”[84]
Greene led his troops away from the battle along Reedy Fork to the
predetermined meeting location at Speedwell Ironworks on Troublesome
Creek. He had sent his army’s baggage and supply wagons there prior to
the battle. Lee’s dragoons escaped the battle along Great Salisbury
Road and rejoined Greene later. Greene ordered his commissaries to
distribute two days’ rations and a gill of rum to each soldier. The
British stayed on the battlefield near the courthouse, camping that
night surrounded by the dead and wounded. A cold rain fell on the
British troops. They had little food and the rain prevented fires to
warm them on a cold night. According to Babits, “The men had last eaten
at 4:00P.M. on 14 March, consuming the last of their four ounces of beef
and four ounces of bread per man. Since then they had marked nearly
fifteen miles, fought several intense skirmishes, and engaged in a major
battle.[85]
On March 18, Cornwallis departed Guilford Courthouse, marching his
troops south to New Garden. For two days, he allowed his troops to rest
at the Quaker village. He then headed east looking to find “some place
for rest and refitment.”[86] Eventually, Cornwallis withdrew all the
way to Wilmington, where he had lines of communication with Clinton, in
the North, and the garrison in Charleston.
The Battle at Guilford Courthouse was technically a tactical victory
for the British who drove the Continentals off the battlefield. They
captured 1,300 small arms, four American six-pounders, two ammunition
wagons, and other helpful supplies. The Americans, however, extracted a
price for Cornwallis’ nominal victory. Of the 1,934 men Cornwallis led
into battle that morning, the British reported 93 killed, 413 wounded
and 26 missing. Greene officially had 4,400 men at Guilford, though not
all saw action. The battle cost the Americans: 79 killed, 184 wounded,
and 1,046 missing. Of the 1,046 missing, 885 were militia.[87]
After the Battle of Guilford Courthouse
The Southern Army under Greene stayed in the region after Guilford
Courthouse, making regular attacks on remaining British outposts. Greene
reported, “I am determined to carry the War immediately into South
Carolina.”[88] Greene’s men attacked garrisons at Hobkirk’s Hill,
Ninety-Six, and Eutaw Springs, forcing the British to withdraw their
soldiers towards the coast to more secure garrisons. Except for
Charleston and Wilmington, Greene effectively controlled the interior of
South and North Carolina.
In April 1781, Cornwallis departed Wilmington and marched his army
north towards the Virginia and the Chesapeake. He met some resistance
along the way, fighting minor skirmishes with North Carolina militia
units. He positioned his Army on the peninsula between the York and
James River, near Yorktown, where he waited for reinforcements. Gen.
Washington, apprised of Cornwallis’ movements and Greene’s victories in
the South, changed his own plans. He abandoned his siege of the British
Army in New York City and force-marched his main army over five hundred
miles to Virginia intending to crush Cornwallis and inflict a fatal blow
to the British Army. Supported by French troops, Washington surrounded
Cornwallis in Yorktown. On October 17, 1781, Cornwallis surrendered to
Washington. While fighting continued for the next two years, the
surrender of Cornwallis effectively deprived the British of any
realistic opportunity to defeat the Continental Army.[89]
Cornwallis failed to win the Southern Campaign because of his own
mistakes and because of Greene’s superior tactics. Cultivating Loyalist
support in the Carolinas’ was essential to the British effort, but the
actions of Cornwallis and his subordinates effectively alienated
residents of the backcountry. Greene also rose to the moment, adapting
military tactics to achieve his objective of wearing down the British.
He recognized, unlike Horatio Gates who stumbled headlong into Camden,
that his force would not likely win a conventional campaign against the
better-trained British Army. Greene had to rely upon unpredictable
militia units to support his trained regular soldiers; and Greene used
the militias effectively. He allowed the militias to disperse at
strategic moments, reducing the logistical demands of his Army and
speeding his evasive maneuvers out in front of Cornwallis.[90] Greene
learned that he could reform his troop strength by calling the militias
back at strategic moments, as he did for the Battle of Guilford
Courthouse. Greene was also patient, willing to evade Cornwallis until
the conditions better suited his troops. Perhaps most significantly,
Greene could accept a partial, tactical defeat, surrendering the field
of battle after a conflict, while avoiding a larger, operational defeat
that would result in the complete surrender of his army. He did not
press the battle at Guilford Courthouse towards a decisive conclusion,
for example, but held back his reserves and withdrew in good order in
order to fight another day. Greene’s “victory in defeat” strategy
allowed him to sap the strength of an imposing enemy while preserving
his own army.[91]
After the war, Nathanael Greene returned to his home in Rhode Island.
South Carolina and Georgia awarded him plantations as a token of
gratitude of his service during the war. Greene sold the South Carolina
plantation to settle his debts. In 1785, he moved his family to Mulberry
Grove, the plantation outside of Savannah, Georgia that had been the
home of the former loyalist lieutenant governor John Graham. On June 19,
1786, Greene died at age forty-four after a brief illness.[92]
Between May 1780 and December 1782, when the British evacuated
Charleston, the American and British forces fought more than 40 battles
and skirmishes across Georgia and the Carolinas. While many of the
engagements were tactical victories for the British Army, American
troops prevented the British from achieving their objective of raising
Loyalist support and driving the Continental Army from the region.

President Gerald Ford March 1976 (NPS)
Endnotes
1See for example: “History and Culture,” National Park Service,
accessed October 1, 2015, http://www.nps.gov/guco/learn/historyculture/index.htm.
2“Stories from the Revolution,” National Park Service, accessed
October 1, 2015, http://www.nps.gov/revwar/
about_the_revolution/capsule_history.html
3“The American Revolution: 1763-1783,” The Library of Congress,
accessed October 1, 2015, http://www.loc.gov/teachers/classroommaterials/presentationsandactivities/presentations/timeline/amrev/
4John Shy, “British Strategy for Pacifying the Southern Colonies,
1778-1781,” in The Southern Experience in the American Revolution, ed.
Jeffery J. Crow and Larry E. Tise (Chapel Hill, NC: The University of
North Carolina Press, 1978), 160.
5Lawrence Edward Babits and Joshua B. Howard, Long, Obstinate, and
Bloody: The Battle of Guilford Courthouse (Chapel Hill, NC: The
University of North Carolina Press, 2009), 6.
6Ibid.
7Frances Kennedy, The American Revolution: A Historical Guidebook
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014), 214.
8Henry Lumpkin, From Savannah to Yorktown: The American Revolution
in the South (Lincoln, NE: to Excel Press, 2000), 64.
9Scott D. Aiken, The Swamp Fox: Lessons in Leadership from the
Partisan Campaigns of Francis Marion (Annapolis: US Naval Institute
Press, 2012).
10Dameron, David J., King’s Mountain: The Defeat of the Loyalists,
October 7, 1780 (Cambridge: Da Capo Press, 2003).
11“The American Revolution, 1763-1783: Revolutionary War: Southern
Phase, 1778-1781,” Library of Congress, accessed July 1, 2015,
http://www.loc.gov/teachers/classroommaterials/presentationsandactivities/presentations/timeline/amrev/south/greene.html
12William Gilmore Simms, The Life of Nathanael Greene, Major General
in the Army of the Revolution (New York: Derby and Jackson, 1856), 116.
13Lawrence E. Babits, A Devil of a Whipping: The Battle of Cowpens
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1998) and “The Battle
of Cowpens,” National Park Service, accessed October 1, 2015,
http://www.nps.gov/cowp/learn/ historyculture/the-battle-of-cowpens.htm.
14Babits, Long, Obstinate, and Bloody, 13-14.
15Quoted in ibid., 15.
16Quoted in ibid., 16.
17Ibid.
18Ibid., 17-18.
19Ibid., 22.
20Ibid., 25-26.
21Ibid., 27.
22Ibid., 28.
23John Buchanan, The Road to Guilford Courthouse: The American
Revolution in the Carolina’s (New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1997),
351.
24Babits, Long, Obstinate, and Bloody, 29.
25Ibid.
26Courtland T. Reid, Guilford Courthouse National Military Park,
North Carolina, Historical Handbook Series No. 30 (Washington, D.C.:
National Park Service, Department of the Interior, 1959; reprint 1960).
27Babits, Long, Obstinate, and Bloody, 36.
28Reid, Guilford Courthouse National Military Park, North Carolina.
29Buchanan, The Road to Guilford Courthouse, 360.
30John Hairr, Guilford Courthouse: Nathanael Greene’s Victory in
Defeat, March 15, 1781, Battleground America Guides (Da Capo Press,
2002), 70.
31John S. D. Eisenhower and W. J. Wood, Battles of the
Revolutionary War: 1775-1781 (Cambridge: Da Capo Press, 2003), 240-241.
32Reynolds, William R. Andrew Pickens: South Carolina Patriot in the
Revolutionary War (Jefferson, NC: McFarland and Co., 2012), 247.
33Babits, Long, Obstinate, and Bloody, 39.
34Ibid., 59.;Thomas E. Baker, Another Such Victory: The Story of the
American Defeat at Guilford Courthouse That Helped Win the War for
Independence (New York: Eastern Acorn, 1981), 43-45.
35Babits, Long, Obstinate, and Bloody, 59-60.
36Ibid., 60-61. Lawrence E. Babits and
Joshua B. Howard, Fortitude and Forbearance: The North Carolina
Continental Line in the Revolutionary War, 1775-1783 (Raleigh, NC: North
Carolina Office of Archives and History, 2004), 152.
37Babits, Long, Obstinate, and Bloody, 61-62.
38Ibid., 62. Baker, Another Such Victory, 44-45.
39Babits, Long, Obstinate, and
Bloody,64-66.
40Ibid., 66-67.
41Quoted in ibid., 68.
42Ibid.
43Ibid., 68-
44Ibid., 70-71.
45Ibid., 72-74.
46Quoted in ibid., 77.; Buchanan, The Road to Guilford Courthouse,
373.
47Babits, Long, Obstinate, and Bloody, 72-74.
48Ibid., 77-78.
49Buchanan, The Road to Guildford Courthouse, 374.
50Ibid., 94.
51Ibid.
52Buchanan, The Road to Guilford Courthouse, 374.
53Ibid.
54Ibid., 96.
55Ibid.
56Ibid.
57Ibid.
58Ibid.
59Ibid., 99.
60Ibid., 100.
61Ibid., 101.
62Ibid., 102.
63Ibid., 103.
64Ibid., 101-02.
65Ibid., 104.
66Ibid.
67Ibid., 106.
68Ibid., 108.
69Ibid.
70Ibid., 108-09.
71Ibid., 113.
72Ibid., 114.
73Ibid., 114-15.
74Ibid., 117.
75Ibid., 119.
76Ibid., 122.
77Ibid., 142.
78Ibid., 143.
79Ibid., 147.
80Ibid., 148-49.
81Ibid., 152.
82Ibid., 153.
83Ibid., 164.
84Ibid., 170.
85Ibid., 164-71.
86Ibid., 180.
87Buchanan, The Road to Guilford Courthouse, 380.
88Ibid., 181.
89David Lee Russell, The American Revolution in the Southern
Colonies (Jefferson, NC: McFarland and Company, 2000), 302.
90Dennis Conrad, “General Nathanial Greene,” in General Nathanael
Greene and the American Revolution in the South, ed. Gregory D. Massey
and Jim Piecuch (Columbia, SC: The University of South Carolina Press,
2012), 15.
91Jim Piecuch, “The Evolving Tactician: Nathanial Greene at the
Battle of Eutaw Springs,” in General Nathanael Greene and the American
Revolution in the South, ed. Gregory D. Massey and Jim Piecuch
(Columbia, SC: The University of South Carolina Press, 2012), 214-15.
92Gregory Massey, “The Transformation of Nathanael Greene,” in
General Nathanael Greene and the American Revolution in the South, ed.
Gregory D. Massey and Jim Piecuch (Columbia, SC: The University of South
Carolina Press, 2012), 257.
Text from Historic Resource Study, Guilford Courthouse National Military Park, WLA Studio, January 2017.

Alamance/Colonial/Hunter Monument (NPS)
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