HEROIC INCIDENTS IN THE LIFE 
 
 OF GENERAL FRANCIS MARION 
 
 Heriot Clarkson 
 
 ana V times 
 
THE LIBRARY OF THE 
 UNIVERSITY OF 
 NORTH CAROLINA 
 AT CHAPEL HILL 
 
 THE COLLECTION OF 
 NORTH CAROLINIANA 
 PRESENTED BY 
 
 Edwards & Broughton 
 
 Cp970.33 
 C61h 
 
HEROIC INCIDENTS 
 
 IN THE 
 
 ih Ee 
 
 OF 
 
 GENERAL FRANCIS MARION 
 
 ADDRESS DELIVERED AT THE BANQUET OF THE SOCIETY OF THE 
 CINCINNATI IN THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA AT 
 CHARLOTTE, APRIL 19, 1907 
 
 BY 
 HERIOT CLARKSON 
 
 “» e 
 
 PUBLISHED BY THE SOCIETY 
 Raleigh 
 
 Commercial Printing Company, Printers and Binders 
 
 1907 
 
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ite HEROIC INCIDENTS 
 
 IN THE 
 
 LIFE OF GENERAL FRANCIS MARION 
 
 — 
 
 Mr. Toastmaster: It has been truthfully said: that two- 
 thirds of the battles of the Revolution were fought on South- 
 ern soil and two-thirds of those were fought. in the Carolinas. 
 Next to George Washington, a celebrated writer gives it as 
 his opinion, that Francis Marion was the greatest General 
 of the Revolution. 
 
 He was of Huguenot descent. Unwilling to bend his knee, 
 but firm in the Protestant faith, his ancestor was forced, 
 under threat of death, to leave home and native land, Sunny 
 France, and for conscience’s sake he sought his fortunes far 
 across the great Atlantic in the wilderness of South Carolina. 
 The scion of a resolute race, General Marion’s moral firmness, 
 strategy and courage, together with his secrecy and success in 
 the conduct of his campaigns, have cast around his name and 
 fame a halo of romance and glory that few leaders have ever 
 attained. Even to this day the deeds of “Marion’s Brigade” 
 
 ‘are famous in poetry and prose. President Roosevelt only a 
 
 few years ago appealed to the patriotism of the South and 
 bid for its loyalty to him by referring to the fact that one 
 of his ancestors was one of ‘‘Marion’s men.” Marion’s hfe 
 
 _ was full of dangers and exploits. At the age of sixteen he 
 
 peiea 
 
 was ship-wrecked, and he and his companions for six days 
 were without food, except that of a dog that had followed 
 them to the boat from the sinking ship. 
 
 Marion’s first military service was in the war with the 
 Cherokees and during the war in 1761. Even then his con- 
 duct and that of his men almost equaled the heroism of 
 Leonidas and his brave band of Spartans at the Pass of 
 
4 
 
 Thermopyle. When near the Indian village of Etchoe, In- 
 dians were observed upon the heights. Under these heights 
 lay the line of march, which it was necessary for the army 
 to pursue in their advance and the men would thus be ex- 
 posed to a murderous fire from the Indians concealed by the 
 rocks and trees on each side, all of which rendered this pass 
 of Etchoe the most difficult and dangerous defile in the 
 Indian country. It was necessary to dislodge them. The 
 man of the hour was Marion with a band of thirty. He and 
 his men advanced up the hill and entered the defile. The 
 Indians fired upon the attacking party and twenty-one were 
 killed. Marion was unhurt, he and some of the others being 
 saved by the rapid advance of the next detachment. 
 
 The Indians were vanquished and their town of Etchoe 
 was reduced to ashes. We see this heroic spirit looking at 
 the ruins and soliloquizing. “I saw,’ he says, “everywhere 
 around the footsteps of the little Indian children,-where they 
 had lately played under the shade of this rustling corn. No 
 doubt they had often looked up with joy to their swelling 
 shocks, and gladdened when they thought of their abundant 
 cakes for the coming winter. When we are gone, thought I, 
 they will return, and peeping through the weeds with tearful 
 eyes, will mark the ghastly ruin poured over their homes and 
 happy fields where they had so often played. ‘Who did this” 
 they will ask their mothers. rane white people did it,’ the 
 mothers reply, ‘the Christians.’ 
 
 He in that hour, generations ago, taught. again the lesson to 
 
 mankind that the conquering force of the Christian was not 
 the sword, but love. 
 
 As soon as the General Committee of Safety of South Caro- 
 lina heard of the battle of Lexington, they raised several 
 companies, and Captain Marion was placed in command of 
 one. In the first act of hostilities in the Southern warfare 
 Marion took a leading part—the capture of Fort Johnson 
 near Charleston. He also took a leading part in the memora- 
 ble defense of Fort Sullivan, June 28, 1776—a battle that 
 
5 
 
 gave great confidence to the American colonies. The last 
 shot, which played havoe with the British Commodore’s ship, 
 was fired by Marion. It was at this battle that the brave 
 Jasper picked up the flag shot away and placed it on the 
 rampart under a galling fire. 
 
 We next see Marion at the siege of Savannah under Count 
 
 D’Estaing. Under the pretext of negotiating, Prevost got 
 D’Estaing to give him twenty-four hours in which to deter- 
 mine whether he »would surrender the city. In the meantime 
 he received reinforcements. Marion was furious at the delay. 
 “My God,” he exclaimed, “who ever heard of anything like 
 this before? First allow an enemy to entrench and then 
 fight him! See the destruction brought upon the British at 
 Bunker Hill, and yet our troops there were only militia, raw, 
 half-armed clod-hoppers, and not a mortar, nor carronade, 
 nor even a swivel—but only their ducking guns. What then 
 are we to expect from our regulars—completely armed with 
 a choice train of artillery, and covered by a breast-work ¢ 
 For my own part, when I look upon my brave fellows around 
 - me, it wrings me to the heart to think how near most of them 
 are to their bloody graves.” Marion did his best in the siege, 
 but the Americans failed and the brave Jasper was slain. 
 / We next see him in Charleston. Marion was averse to 
 every species of intemperance. He was invited to a dinner 
 party. The host insisted on his guests drinking. Marion 
 refused and determined not to submit to this. The door was 
 locked, but he jumped from the second-story window of the 
 house and this broke his ankle. He had to go to his planta- 
 tion after the injury, and thus escaped capture when Charles- 
 ton fell. 
 
 Next we see him and a small command _ joining General 
 Gates and his splendid army. The poor appearance of Mar- 
 ion and his men was the subject of ridicule by the regular 
 soldiers. Pride comes before a fall. Gates and his men 
 were defeated disgracefully at Camden, and Marion became 
 the hero of the South. 
 
6 
 
 After the defeat of Gates the Carolinas seemed almost lost 
 to the cause; but in this hour of darkness to the American 
 cause, there was formed the now famous “Marion Brigade.” 
 William Cullen Bryant starts his poem on Marion’s Brigade 
 in these words: « 
 
 “Our band is few, but true and tried, 
 Our leader frank and bold, 
 The British soldier trembles, 
 When Marion’s name is told.’’ 
 
 Marion took charge of this brigade on August 10, 1780, 
 when he was forty-eight years old. He wore a leather cap, 
 part of the uniform of the second regiment, with a silver 
 erescent in front, inscribed with the words, “Liberty or 
 Death.” 
 
 All are acquainted with a familiar incident at Snow Island 
 in the swamps, his rendezvous. He there offered a British 
 captive sweet potatoes and water—his only diet—-and when 
 the British prisoner was exchanged he returned to England 
 and refused to fight against such a patriot. 
 
 The fiery Tarleton, who could not catch him, dubbed him 
 the “Swamp Fox.” On one occasion Marion was almost sur- 
 rounded by British dragoons in an open field, and his only 
 hope of escape was to have his horse leap a high fence and a 
 four-foot ditch on the opposite side. His splendid horse 
 cleared the fence and ditch, and Marion, bidding the British 
 ‘“good-morning,”’ made good his escape. For his gallant 
 conduct at Eutaw Springs, Congress thanked him. 
 
 The bravest soldier is the most generous to his foe. In 
 the Senate after the war, Marion refused to vote for the “Con- 
 fiseation Act”’ 
 pubhe wants. 
 
 At another time a bill was introduced in the Senate reliey- 
 ing Marion and others from legal responsibility for using 
 private property during the war. Marion had his name ex- 
 cepted and said: “If I have given any occasion for complaint, 
 IT am ready to answer in person or property. If I have 
 wronged any man, I am willing to make restitution.” 
 
 taking the property of the Tories to meet the 
 
T 
 
 Many other heroic incidents could be given if time would 
 permit, but let me close with three beautiful tributes. Keat- 
 ing Simons, who was Marion’s Brigade-Ma)jor, says: 
 
 “In the year 1782, when the British troops were preparing 
 - to evacuate Charleston, they had a covering party on James 
 Island to protect their wood-cutters, and another on Lam- 
 prere’s point to protect their getting water for their shipping. 
 Colonel Kosciusko, a Polander (the distinguished patriot), 
 solicited General Greene to afford him an opportunity of 
 distinguishing himself; and as the covering party to the 
 wood-eutters was the only one which now presented itself, the 
 General gave him a command to attack them, which he did, 
 and was defeated with the loss of a great many men, and 
 among the slain was the gallant Wilmot. About the same 
 time that General Greene gave Kosciusko this command he 
 wrote General Marion that he understood the watering party 
 at Lamprere’s point was so situated as to afford him an oppor- 
 tunity of attacking it with success. General Marion replied 
 that he had not overlooked the situation of the British at that 
 spot, but he viewed the war in Carolina as over; and as the 
 enemy were preparing to go away he had sent a party to pro- 
 tect them from being annoyed by his own men; that he com- 
 manded his fellow-citizens who had already shed blood 
 enough in the cause of freedom, and that he would not spill 
 another drop of it, now when it was unnecessary—no, not 
 for the highest honors that could be conferred upon him.” 
 
 General Greene pays Marion this tribute: 
 
 “When I consider how much you have done and suffered 
 and under what disadvantage you have maintained your 
 ground, I am at loss which to admire most, your courage or 
 fortitude, or your address and management. Certain it is, 
 no man has a better claim to the public thanks than you have. 
 History affords no instance wherein an officer has kept pos- 
 session of a country under so many disadvantages as you have. 
 Surrounded on every side with a superior force, hunted from 
 every quarter with veteran troops, you have found means to 
 
8 
 
 elude their attempts and to keep alive the expiring hopes of 
 an oppressed militia, when all snecor seemed to be cut off. 
 To fight the enemy bravely with the prospect of victory is _ 
 nothing, but to fight with intrepidity under the constant im- — 
 pression of a defeat, and to inspire irregular troops to do it, — 
 is a talent peculiar to yourself. Nothing will give me greater 
 pleasure than to do justice to your merit, and I shall miss no 
 opportunity of declaring to Congress, to the Commander-in- 
 Chief of the American Army, and to the world, the great 
 
 sense I have of your merit and services.” ; 
 
 Colonel Henry Lee (father of the Confederate chieftain), 
 who served with Marion, says of him: 
 
 “Small in stature, hard in visage, healthy, abstemious and _ 
 taciturn, enthusiastically wedded to the cause of liberty, he 
 deeply deplored the condition of his beloved country. The 
 common weal was his sole object; nothing selfish, nothing 
 mercenary soiled his ermine character. Fertile in stratagem, 
 he struck unperceived; and, retiring to those hidden retreats 
 selected by himself in the morasses of the Pee Dee and Black 
 Rivers, he placed his corps not only out of the reach of his 
 foe, but often out of the discovery of his friends. <A rigid 
 disciplinarian, he reduced to practice the justice of his heart; 
 and during the difficult course of warfare through which he 
 passed, calumny, itself never charged him with violating the 
 rights of persons, property or humanity. Never avoiding dan- 
 ger, he never rashly sought it; and acting for all around him 
 as he did for himself, he risked the lives of his troops only 
 when it was necessary. Neither elated with prosperity, nor, 
 depressed by adversity, he preserved an equanimity which 
 won the admiration of friends and exacted the respect of his 
 enemies.” | . 
 
 Can higher tribute be paid to any man? Such was the 
 hero who with McDowell, Morgan, Davidson, Lee, Sumter, 
 Pickens and others did so much to redeem the South. We 
 here take leave of these patriots’ examples and commend 
 them to the youth of all ages. 
 
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