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"Where you
stand depends on
where you sit."
--AFK Organski
"Trust,
but verify."
--President Reagan
Occam's
Razor states that the simplest solution is usually
THE solution.
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The Life of General Francis Marion
long
with other Patriots, Francis Marion practiced guerrilla warfare in South
Carolina. He would surprise the British, strike quick, and go hide just as fast.
Because of this and the fact that he knew the terrain well, Marion was called
"the Swamp Fox".


- Francis Marion, the SWAMP FOX of the
Revolution. The greatest guerrilla fighter in the American Revolution was
Francis Marion. Incredibly daring, he terrorized the entire British Army in
South Carolina, striking with fantastic swiftness, then vanishing ghost-like
into the swamps. To chase him was a futile nightmare, for the Swamp Fox was
too clever and too fearless.
- Born in 1732 near Georgetown, South Carolina,
Marion was for years a peaceful farmer. As a descendant of French Huguenots
who settled on the Santee River, he received a country school education.
Marion established himself as a planter in St. John's Parish after coming into
a small inheritance.
- When the Cherokees began their massacres he
began his fighting career, learning the Indian techniques of surprise attack
and sudden disappearance, how to use swamps and forests as cover. Thus when
England sent a vast fleet to capture Charleston, Marion was already a
brilliant strategist.
- From a tiny, unfinished island fort he defied
fifty warships of the greatest navy in the world. He and his men crippled the
entire British fleet and saved the city, though they lacked adequate
ammunition, achieving the first important victory of the American Revolution.
Marion was quiet and moody, yet humane and forgiving. He rose from private to
brigadier general because of his intuitive grasp of strategy and tactics.
Daring and elusive, he usually struck at night and then vanished into the
swamps and morasses of the South.
- When Charleston fell to the enemy, Marion
escaped and formed Marion's Brigade, one hundred fifty tattered, penniless
patriots. None received pay, food or even ammunition from the Continental
Army. The only reward they sought was freedom from tyranny, freedom for
America.
- In August 1780, Marion commanded guerrilla
warfare against the Loyalists along the Peedee and Santee rivers. Marion
chased away three Loyalist groups. Turning upon the British, Marion cut their
supply lines, outran Sir Banister Tarleton's dragoons, raided Georgetown,
retired to Snow's Island, and then again raided Georgetown.
After the Continentals returned to South Carolina, Marion served as brigadier
general of the militia under Gen. Nathaniel Greene. Aided by Continental
troops, Marion finally seized Georgetown. At the battle of Eutaw Springs on
September 8, 1781, he commanded the militias of North and South Carolina and
drove the British back to Charleston.
- Although Marion received a Congressional
citation for wisdom and bravery he was never accorded the honor his country
owed him, and when the British evacuated Charleston he was not asked to
participate in the celebration because he and his men were too ragged. But
that ragged brigade who followed Francis Marion on the long, hard road to
American independence earned its rightful plate in history.
- Marion was from South Carolina, and
fought 99% of the war in South Carolina. He became a captain in the 2nd SC
Regiment, Continental Line, in 1775, and in 1776 fought at the Battle of
Sullivan's Island, an important American victory against a British invasion
force at Charleston, SC. He was Colonel of the 2nd SC until 1780, when the
unit was surrendered with 5000 other American troops at the fall of
Charleston. Marion raised a band of partisan militia and for the next year
staged a series of hit and run raids in the face of overwhelming odds. His
activity, along with those of other American partisans, kept the war alive in
South Carolina until the return of a standing American army under General
Nathaniel Greene could come head to head with the main British army under
Cornwallis. ---Anonymous
Francis Marion was an American revolutionary war
hero, nicknamed the "Swamp Fox" by the British because of his elusive tactics.
Marion was probably born in St. John's Parish, Berkeley County, near Georgetown,
South Carolina, about 1732.
Marion served in two campaigns against the Indians. In 1761 he distinguished
himself as a lieutenant of militia by defeating some ambushed Cherokees. Marion
returned to St. John's and entered politics, championing the American colonies
in their quarrel with England. In 1775, Marion was elected to the South Carolina
Provincial Congress as a representative. This Congress authorized the formation
of two regiments, Marion was captain of the Second Regiment. In 1780 as a
lieutenant colonel in the Continental service, Marion led an attack on Savannah.
In May of 1780 Gen. Benjamin Lincoln surrendered Charleston to the British.
Marion received thanks from South Carolina for leading the partisans. He
represented his parish in the state senate and the Constitutional Convention. He
voted for federal union. After marrying Mary Esther Videau in 1786, he lived at
Pond Bluff, which he owned. He later died there on February 26, 1795. |