Marion, Francis

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Once Marion had shown his ability at [[guerrilla warfare]], making himself a serious nuisance to the British, Governor [[John Rutledge]] (in exile in North Carolina) commissioned him a brigadier-general of state troops.
 
Once Marion had shown his ability at [[guerrilla warfare]], making himself a serious nuisance to the British, Governor [[John Rutledge]] (in exile in North Carolina) commissioned him a brigadier-general of state troops.
  
When Gen. [[Nathanael Greene]] took command in the south, Marion and Lieutenant Colonel [[Light Horse Harry Lee|Henry Lee]] were ordered in January 1781 to attack Georgetown, but were unsuccessful. In April, however, they took [[Siege of Fort Watson|Fort Watson]] and in May, [[Siege of Fort Motte|Fort Motte]], and succeeded in breaking communications between the British posts in the Carolinas. Marion also commanded at the [[Battle of Eutaw Springs]] under General Greene. Strategy for the Eutaw Springs attack is credited to the genius of General Francis Marion, who knew every foot of the Santee swamps and river. This last major battle in South Carolina completely broke the British hold in the South and, more importantly, denied needed aid to the North. Only six weeks later [[Cornwallis]] succumbed to [[Washington]] at [[Yorktown]], and American Independence was assured.<ref>[http://www.theamericanrevolution.org/battles/bat_espr.asp The Battle of Eutaw Springs] ''Theamericanrevolution.org.'' Retrieved May 24, 2008.</ref>
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When Gen. [[Nathanael Greene]] took command in the south, Marion and Lieutenant Colonel [[Light Horse Harry Lee|Henry Lee]] were ordered in January 1781 to attack Georgetown, but were unsuccessful. In April, however, they took [[Siege of Fort Watson|Fort Watson]] and in May, [[Siege of Fort Motte|Fort Motte]], and succeeded in breaking communications between the British posts in the Carolinas.  
 +
 
 +
Marion also commanded at the [[Battle of Eutaw Springs]] under General Greene. Strategy for the Eutaw Springs attack is credited to the genius of General Francis Marion, who knew every foot of the Santee swamps and river. This last major battle in South Carolina completely broke the British hold in the South and, more importantly, denied needed aid to the North. Only six weeks later [[Cornwallis]] succumbed to [[Washington]] at [[Yorktown]], and American Independence was assured.<ref>[http://www.theamericanrevolution.org/battles/bat_espr.asp The Battle of Eutaw Springs] ''Theamericanrevolution.org.'' Retrieved May 24, 2008.</ref>
  
 
After the war, in his 50s, he married his cousin, Mary Esther Videau, 49.
 
After the war, in his 50s, he married his cousin, Mary Esther Videau, 49.

Revision as of 15:21, 24 May 2008

Francis Marion
February 26, 1732 - February 27, 1795
150px
Nickname "The Swamp Fox"
Place of birth Georgetown, South Carolina
Place of death Georgetown, South Carolina
Allegiance Continental Army,
South Carolina Militia
Years of service 1757-1782
Rank Lieutenant Colonel,
Brigadier General

Francis Marion (February 26 1732–February 27, 1795) was a military leader during the French and Indian War, who distinguished himself as a lieutenant of militia in an expedition against the Cherokee Indians that were making raids on frontier settlements in South Carolina.

He rose to prominence as a delegate in 1775 to the South Carolina Provincial Congress. He was named a captain in the 2nd South Carolina Regiment. He became a lieutenant colonel in the Continental Army and later brigadier general in the South Carolina Militia during the American Revolutionary War. His ability to elude British forces by disappearing into swamps resulted in his "Swamp Fox" nickname. It was reportedly given to him by the British commander Colonel Banastre ("Bannister") Tarleton.

He and his men adopted many tactics used by the Indians he fought against and as a result Marion is considered one of the fathers of modern guerrilla warfare, and is credited in the lineage of the United States Army Rangers.[1]His actions played a pivotal role in reviving resistance forces in South Carolina after Charleston was seized by British forces in 1780.

Family and early life

He was a grandson of Benjamin Marion and Louise d'Aubrey, Huguenots, who were driven from France and came to South Carolina in 1690. Their son Gabriel married Esther Cordes, and Francis was the youngest of the six children of this marriage.

The family settled at Winyah, near Georgetown, South Carolina. Marion was born in midwinter, 1732, at Goatfield Plantation in St. James Parish, Berkeley County. When he was five or six, his family moved to a plantation in St. George, a parish on Winyah Bay. Apparently, they wanted to be near the English school in Georgetown.

When Francis was 15, he decided to become a sailor. He signed on as the sixth crewman of a schooner heading for the West Indies. As they were returning, a whale rammed the schooner and caused a plank to come loose. The captain and crew escaped in a boat, but the schooner sank so quickly that they were unable to take any food or water. After six days under the tropical sun, two crewmen died of thirst and exposure. The following day, the survivors reached shore.

Returning home, Marion assisted his father in the care of his small plantation. In 1759, a year or two after his father's death, he became the owner of his own plantation at Pond Bluff, which was his home for the rest of his life.[2]

Shortly after he settled on his new plantation a war with the Cherokee Indians began. It is supposed that Marion took part in Colonel Montgomery's expedition to the Indian country in 1760, but there is some uncertainty on this point. In 1761 the command in South Carolina devolved upon Colonel James Grant, of the Royal Scots, and he was assisted by a regiment of 1,200 state troops under Colonel Middleton. In this regiment Marion served as lieutenant, under the immediate command of Captain William Moultrie.

His regiment marched from Fort Prince George on June 7, 1761, and a few days afterward fought a bloody battle with the Indians at Etchoee. The conflict was soon over and from this time until 1775 Marion seems to have lived quietly on his plantation.

Service during the Revolution

File:Marion 1017.JPG
Francis Marion - plaque at the South Carolina statehouse

In 1775 he was a delegate to the Provincial congress of South Carolina, which, shortly after the Battle of Lexington, resolved to raise 1,500 infantry, in two regiments, besides a regiment of 450 horsemen. Marion was appointed captain in the second of these regiments, of which Moultrie was colonel. His commission was dated June 21, 1775.

Marion took part in the bloodless capture of Fort Johnson, September 14, 1775, when Lord William Campbell, the royal governor, fled to a British ship in the harbor. He was soon afterward promoted major. In the brilliant victory of June 28, 1776 at Fort Sullivan, which drove the British fleet from Charleston harbor, Marion played an important part, and was soon afterward promoted to the rank of lieutenant-colonel in the Continental Army.

But for much of the next three years, he remained at Fort Sullivan, occupying the time by trying to discipline his troops. In 1779, they joined the Siege of Savannah, which the Americans lost.

As the result of an accident in March of 1780 he broke his ankle while in Charleston. This injury would lead him to leave Charleston to recuperate in the country. As a result he was not captured when the British took Charleston that May. When Charleston fell it seemed all organized resistance in South Carolina had come to an end.

Marion, however, organized a small troop, which at first consisted of between 20 and 70 men— and became the only force then opposing the British Army in the state.

Marion began his famous guerrilla tactics in the northern and eastern districts of South Carolina. His first act was to attack two regiments of British regulars on their way from Camden to Charleston with 150 prisoners; with a loss of only one man killed and one wounded, he threw the enemy into disorder, killed and wounded twenty-seven of their number, and set free all the prisoners.

With his militiamen, Marion showed himself to be a singularly able leader of irregulars. Unlike the Continental troops, Marion's Men, as they were known, served without pay, supplied their own horses, arms, and often their food. All of Marion's supplies that were not obtained locally were captured from the British or Loyalist ("Tory") forces.

Marion rarely committed his men to frontal warfare, but repeatedly surprised larger bodies of Loyalists or British regulars with quick surprise attacks and equally quick withdrawal from the field. After the surrender of Charleston, the British garrisoned South Carolina with help from local Tories, except for Williamsburg (the present Pee Dee), which they were never able to hold. The British made one attempt to garrison Williamsburg at Willtown, but were driven out by Marion at the Mingo Creek.

The British especially hated Marion and made repeated efforts to neutralize his force, but Marion's intelligence gathering was excellent and that of the British was poor, due to the overwhelming Patriot loyalty of the populace in the Williamsburg area.

His main camp at Snow's Island was actually a low ridge about five miles long and two miles wide. It was protected by the Peedee River on the east, Lynches River on the north and Clark's Creek on the south and west. Swamps and a lake to the west offered even further protection. It would become his favorite and most famous base.[3] In late March of 1781, while Marion repelled and pursued one British attack force, another under Colonel Doyle penetrated to Snow’s Island and destroyed the camp. Marion never used Snow’s Island again after Doyle’s raid.[4]

Col. Banastre Tarleton, sent to capture Marion, despaired of finding the "old swamp fox," who eluded him by traveling along swamp paths. Tarleton and Marion were sharply contrasted in the popular mind. Tarleton was hated because he burned and destroyed homes and supplies, whereas Marion's Men, when they requisitioned supplies (or destroyed them to keep them out of British hands) gave the owners receipts for them. After the war, most of the receipts were redeemed by the new state government.

General Marion Inviting a British Officer to Share His Meal by John Blake White; his slave Oscar Marion kneels at the left of the group.

Once Marion had shown his ability at guerrilla warfare, making himself a serious nuisance to the British, Governor John Rutledge (in exile in North Carolina) commissioned him a brigadier-general of state troops.

When Gen. Nathanael Greene took command in the south, Marion and Lieutenant Colonel Henry Lee were ordered in January 1781 to attack Georgetown, but were unsuccessful. In April, however, they took Fort Watson and in May, Fort Motte, and succeeded in breaking communications between the British posts in the Carolinas.

Marion also commanded at the Battle of Eutaw Springs under General Greene. Strategy for the Eutaw Springs attack is credited to the genius of General Francis Marion, who knew every foot of the Santee swamps and river. This last major battle in South Carolina completely broke the British hold in the South and, more importantly, denied needed aid to the North. Only six weeks later Cornwallis succumbed to Washington at Yorktown, and American Independence was assured.[5]

After the war, in his 50s, he married his cousin, Mary Esther Videau, 49.

Marion served several terms in the South Carolina State Senate starting in 1782, and in 1784, in recognition of his services, was made commander of Fort Johnson, practically a courtesy title with a salary of $500 per annum. He commanded a peacetime militia brigade and served in the South Carolina Assembly until 1790, where he opposed punishing Americans who had remained loyal to the British during the war.

In 1790, Marion became a delegate to the state constitutional convention, and then retired from public life. After a long decline in health, Francis Marion died at his plantation, Pond Bluff, on February 27, 1795.

Gravestone

Marion's grave stone reads:

Sacred to the Memory

of
BRIG. GEN. FRANCIS MARION
Who departed his life, on the 27th of February, 1795,
IN THE SIXTY-THIRD YEAR OF HIS AGE
Deeply regretted by all his fellow citizens
HISTORY
will record his worth, and rising generations embalm
his memory, as one of the most distinguished
Patriots and Heroes of the American Revolution:
which elevated his native Country
TO HONOR AND INDEPENDENCE,
AND
Secured to her the blessings of
LIBERTY AND PEACE
This tribute of veneration and gratitude is erected
in commemoration of
the noble and disinterested virtues of the
CITIZEN;
and the gallant exploits of the
SOLDIER;

Who lived without fear, and died without reproach

He is buried at Belle Isle Plantation Cemetery, Berkeley County, South Carolina.

Legacy

The Francis Marion National Forest near Charleston, South Carolina is named after Marion, as is the historic Francis Marion Hotel in downtown Charleston. Numerous other locations across the country are named after Marion. The city of Marion, Iowa is named after Francis, and the city holds an annual Swamp Fox Festival and parade every summer. Marion County, South Carolina, and its county seat, the City of Marion, are named for General Marion. The City of Marion features a statute of General Marion in its town square, has a museum that includes many artifacts related to Francis Marion, and the Marion High School mascot is the Swamp Fox. Francis Marion University is located nearby in Florence County, South Carolina.

In Washington, DC, Marion Park is one the four "major" or large parks in the Capitol Hill Parks constellation. The park is bounded by 4th & 6th Streets and at the intersection of E Street and South Carolina Avenue in southeast Washington, DC. [6] The town of Marion, IN as well as Marion, MA, formerly Sippican, are also named after Francis Marion. Marion County, Indiana which the city of Indianapolis is a part of, is also named for the general. The town of Marion, Alabama is named after Francis Marion, as are Marion County, Arkansas; Marion County, Ohio; Marion, Illinois; Marion, Virginia; and Marion County, Illinois. The Junior Military College Marion Military Institute located in Marion, Alabama has an organization called Swamp Fox which is attributed to Francis Marion.

In 2006 the U.S. House of Representatives approved a monument to Francis Marion, to be built in Washington, D.C. sometime in 2007–08. The bill, however, died in the U.S. Senate and was reintroduced in January, 2007. The Brigadier General Francis Marion Memorial Act of 2007 passed the US House of Representatives in March of 2007, and the U.S. Senate in April of 2008. The bill was packaged into a consolidated public lands bill (S. 2739) and passed both houses.

President George W. Bush signed the bill into law on May 8, 2008 as Public Law #110-229.[7]

Notes

  1. Brigadier General Francis Marion
  2. Francis Marion, Revolutionary War 'Swamp Fox' Americanrevolution.com. Retrieved May 24, 2008.
  3. Snow's Island- Tps.cr.nps.gov. Retrieved May 24, 2008.
  4. South Carolina Department of Archives and History Nationalregister.sc.gov. Retrieved May 24, 2008.
  5. The Battle of Eutaw Springs Theamericanrevolution.org. Retrieved May 24, 2008.
  6. National Park Service - Marion Park: http://www.nps.gov/cahi/historyculture/cahi_marion.htm
  7. http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d110:SN02739:@@@X

See also

  • List of places named for Francis Marion
  • Early history of Williamsburg, South Carolina
  • Oscar Marion, slave of Francis Marion and Revolutionary War soldier
  • The Swamp Fox (TV series), a 1950s television series produced by Walt Disney and starring Leslie Nielsen, this TV series inspired the 1960 Parker Brothers board game by the same name.
  • The Patriot (2000 film), whose lead character was partly based on Marion

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
  • Bass, Robert D. 1974. Swamp Fox: the life and campaigns of General Francis Marion. Lexington, S.C.: Sandlapper Store. ISBN 0878440518
  • Boddie, William Willis. 1995. History of Williamsburg: something about the people of Williamsburg County, South Carolina, from the first settlement by Europeans about 1705 until 1923. Baltimore, Md: Clearfield Company. ISBN 0806345632
  • Boddie, William Willis. 2000. Traditions of the Swamp Fox: William W. Boddie's Francis Marion. Spartanburg, S.C.: Reprint Co. ISBN 0871525283
  • Cornelius, Kay, and Arthur M. Schlesinger. 2001. Francis Marion: the Swamp Fox. Revolutionary War leaders. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 0791059766
  • Gerson, Noel B. 1974. The Swamp Fox, Francis Marion. Atlanta: Mockingbird Books. ISBN 0891760016
  • Gregg, John M., and William Willis Boddie. 1995. A roster of patriots who served with Francis Marion. Hemingway, S.C.: Three Rivers Historical Society. OCLC 36477594
  • Myers, Jonathan, and Lola Myers. 2003. Swamp Fox. Apalachin, NY: Ambition Studios. ISBN 0974600008
  • Simms, William Gilmore. 2007. The life of Francis Marion. Charleston, SC: History Press. ISBN 9781596292635

External links

All links retrieved May 23, 2008.


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