As well as I can remember, some time in
August, in the year 1780, Col. McDowell, of North Carolina, with three
or four hundred men, fled over the mountains to the settlements of
Holston and Watauga, to evade the pursuit of a British officer by the
name of Ferguson, who had the command of a large detachment of British
and Tories. Our militia speedily embodied, all mounted on horses--the
Virginians under command of Col. William Campbell, and the two western
counties of North Carolina, now Tennessee, under Cols. Isaac Shelby and
John Sevier; and as soon as they joined McDowell, he re-crossed the
mountains, and formed a junction with Col. Cleveland, with a fine
regiment of North Carolina militia.
We were now fifteen or eighteen hundred
strong, and considered ourselves equal in numbers, or at least a match
for the enemy, and eager to bring them to battle; but Col. McDowell, who
had command, appeared to think otherwise, for although Ferguson had
retreated on our crossing the mountains, he kept us marching and
counter-marching, for eight or ten days without advancing a step towards
our object. At length a council of the field-officers was convened, and
it was said in camp, how true I will not pretend to say, that he refused
in council to proceed without a general officer to command the army, and
to get rid of him, the council deputed him to Gen. Greene, at
Head-Quarters, to procure a General. Be this as it may, as soon as the
council rose, Col. McDowell left the camp, and we saw no more of him
during the expedition.
As soon as he was fairly gone, the council
re-assembled, and appointed Col. William Campbell our commander, and
within one hour after, we were on our horses and in full pursuit of the
enemy. The British still continued to retreat, and after hard marching
for some time, we found our progress much retarded by our footmen and
weak horses that were not able to sustain the duty. It was then resolved
to leave the footmen and weak horses under the command of Capt. William
Neil, of Virginia, with instructions to follow as fast as his detachment
could bear.
Thus disencumbered, we gained fast upon the
enemy. I think on the 7th [6h] day of October, in the afternoon, we
halted at a place called the Cowpens, in South Carolina, fed our horses,
and ate a hasty meal of such provisions as we had procured, and, by dark
mounted our horses, and after marching all night, crossed Broad river by
the dawn of day; and although it rained considerably in the morning, we
never halted to refresh ourselves or horses.
About twelve o'clock it cleared off with a
fine cool breeze. We were joined that day [really, the night before] by
Col. Williams, of South Carolina, with several hundred men; and in the
afternoon fell in with three men who informed us that they were just
from the British camp, that they were posted on the top of King's
Mountain, and that there was a picket-guard on the road not far ahead of
us. These men were detained lest they should find means to inform the
enemy of our approach, and Col. Shelby, with a select party, undertook
to surprise and take the picket; this he accomplished without firing a
gun or giving the least alarm, and it was hailed by the army as a good
omen.
We then moved on, and as we approached the
mountain, the roll of the British drum informed us that we had something
to do. No doubt the British commander thought his position a strong one;
but our plan of attack was such as to make it the worst for him he could
have chosen. The end of the mountain to our left descended gradually to
a branch; in front of us the ascent was rather abrupt, and to the right
was a low gap through which the road passed. The different regiments
were directed by guides to the ground they were to occupy, so as to
surround the eminence on which the British were encamped; Campbell's on
the right, along the road; Shelby's next, to the left of him; Sevier's
next, and so on, till last the left of Cleveland's to join the right of
Campbell's, on the other side of the mountain, at the road.
Thus the British Major found himself
attacked on all sides at once, and so situated as to receive a galling
fire from all parts of our lines without doing any injury to ourselves.
From this difficulty, he attempted to relieve himself at the point of
the bayonet, but failed in three successive charges. Cleveland, who had
the farthest to go, being bothered in some swampy ground, did not occupy
his position in the line till late in the engagement. A few men drawn
from the right of Campbell's regiment, occupied this vacancy; this the
British commander discovered, and here he made his last powerful effort
to force his way through and make his escape; but at that instant
Cleveland's regiment came up in gallant style; the Colonel, himself,
coming by the very spot I occupied, at which time his horse had received
two wounds, and he was obliged to dismount.
Although fat and unwieldy, he advanced on
foot with signal bravery; but was soon re-mounted by one of his
officers, who brought him another horse. This threw the British and
Tories into complete disorder, and Ferguson seeing that all was lost,
determined not to survive the disgrace; he broke his sword, and spurred
his horse into the thickest of our ranks, and fell covered with wounds,
and shortly after his whole army surrendered at discretion. The action
lasted about one hour, and for most of the time was fierce and bloody.
I cannot clearly recollect the statement of
our loss, given at the time, but my impression now is that it was two
hundred and twenty-five killed, and about as many or a few more wounded;
the loss of the enemy must have been much greater. The return of the
prisoners taken was eleven hundred and thirty-three, about fifteen
hundred stand of arms, several baggage wagons, and all their camp
equipage fell into our hands. The battle closed not far from sundown, so
that we had to encamp on the ground, with the dead and wounded, and pass
the night among groans and lamentations.
The next day, as soon as we could bury our
dead, and provide litters to carry our wounded, we marched off to regain
the upper country for fear of being intercepted by a detachment from the
army of Lord Cornwallis, for we were partly behind his quarters, between
him and the British garrison of Ninety Six. A British surgeon, with some
assistants, were left to attend their wounded; but the wounded Tories
were unprovided for, and their dead left for their bones to bleach upon
the mountain.
That afternoon we met Capt. Neil coming on
with his detachment, and encamped for the night on a large deserted Tory
plantation, where was a sweet potato patch sufficiently large to supply
the whole army. This was most fortunate, for not one in fifty of us had
tasted food for the last two days and nights, that is, since we left the
Cowpens. Here, the next morning, we buried Col. Williams, who had died
of his wounds on the march the day before. We still proceeded towards
the mountains as fast as our prisoners could bear.
When we had gained a position, where we
thought ourselves secure from a pursuit, the army halted for a day, and
a court was detailed to inquire into various complaints against certain
Tories for murders, robberies, house-burning, &c. The court found
upwards of forty of them guilty of the crimes charged upon them, and
sentenced them to hang; and nine of the most atrocious offenders were
executed that night by fire-light, the rest were reprieved by the
commanding officer.
We set off early next morning, and shortly
after the rain began to fall in torrents, and continued the whole day,
but, instead of halting, we rather mended our pace in order to cross the
Catawba river before it should rise and intercept us; this we effected
late in the night, and halted by a large plantation, when Major
McDowell--brother of the Colonel, and who commanded his brother's
regiment the whole route, and was a brave and efficient officer--rode
along the lines, and informed us that the plantation belonged to him,
and kindly invited us to take rails from his fences, and make fires to
warm and dry us.
I suppose being the last of October, and
every one, from the Commander-in-Chief to the meanest private, was as
wet as if he had just been dragged through the Catawba river. We rested
here one day, and then proceeded, by easy marches, to the heads of the
Yadkin river, where we were relieved by the militia of the country, and
permitted to return home, which those of us who had not fallen in battle
or died of wounds, effected some time in November.
During the whole of this expedition, except
a few days at the outset, I neither tasted bread nor salt, and this was
the case with nearly every man; when we could get meat, which was but
seldom, we had to roast and eat it without either: sometimes we got a
few potatoes, but our standing and principal rations were ears of corn,
scorched in the fire or eaten raw. Such was the price paid by the men of
the Revolution for our Independence.
Here I might conclude, but I cannot forbear
offering a small tribute to the memory of our commanding officers. Col.
Williams, fell; Cleveland, I have already spoken of; Sevier, I did not
see in the battle, but his bravery was well attested; three times my eye
fell upon our gallant commander, [Campbell] calm and collected,
encouraging the men, and assuring them of victory. At the close of the
action, when the British were loudly calling for quarters, but uncertain
whether they would be granted, I saw the intrepid Shelby rush his horse
within fifteen paces of their lines, and commanded them to lay down
their arms, and they should have quarters. Some would call this an
imprudent act, but is showed the daring bravery of the man. I am led to
believe that three braver men, and purer patriots, never trod the soil
of freedom, than Campbell, Shelby and Sevier.

Other links related to Kings Mountain...
THE BATTLE OF KINGS MOUNTAIN AND THE BATTLE OF THE COWPENS
http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/books/revwar/KM-Cpns/AWC-KM-fm.htm
View of Kings Mountain
http://members.aol.com/GWOTC/Kingsmtn.html
Kings Mountain National Military Park -NPSsite
http://www.nps.gov/kimo/home.htm
Special Events for Kings Mountain National Military Park
http://www.nps.gov/kimo/events.htm
Kings Mountain National Military Park
http://www.nps.gov/kimo/
Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail
http://www.nps.gov/ovvi/index.htm
Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail - Main Index
http://www.nps.gov/ovvi/home.htm
Battle of Kings Mountain
http://www.co.cleveland.nc.us/battle_of_kings_mountain.htm
The Patriot Resource: Battle of King's Mountain
http://www.patriotresource.com/battles/kingsmtn.html
Battle of Kings Mountain by General Jospeh Graham
http://www.tcarden.com/tree/ensor/KingsMtII.htm
Historical States Concerning The Battle of Kings Mountain
http://www.ls.net/~newriver/misc/kingsmt2.htm
THE BATTLE AT KINGS MOUNTAIN
http://www.jrshelby.com/kimocowp/km.htm
ISAAC SHELBY
http://www2.dgsys.com/%7Eshelbys/Isaac.htm
Sevier, John--NSH Statue
http://www.aoc.gov/cc/art/nsh/sevier.htm
General John Sevier Chapter of the Tennessee Society Sons of the Revolution
http://johnsevierchapter.tripod.com/
(has list of Rev War Sevier Co. dead, incl. Kings Mtn vets)
Loyalist Institute Home Page
http://www.royalprovincial.com/index.htm
(everything loyalist - incl. units at Kings Mtn)