- Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge
The Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge was fought near
Wilmington, North Carolina , onFebruary 27 ,1776 , betweenNorth Carolina patriots and Scottish Loyalists.The American victory helped spur sentiment for the revolution and increased recruitment of additional soldiers into their forces.
Background
A group of Loyalist troops under the command of
Lieutenant Colonel Donald McLeod, an 80-year-old experienced British officer, assembled onFebruary 15 in response to the Patriot movements in the region.McLeod led a force of about 700 Scots Highland emigrants and 800 Loyalist
militia towards theAtlantic coast, with plans to join a group of British regulars at Moore's Creek Bridge, located about 20 miles (30 km) north of Wilmington. Among the force was Captain Alan MacDonald, husband of the famous Jacobite heroine Flora MacDonald.A group of around 1,000 Patriot volunteers and
minutemen decided to contest the Loyalist march to the coast.Battle
At dawn on
February 27 ,1776 , the Highland Scots, under the command of Lt. Colonel McLeod and Captain John Campbell, arrived at the bridge to find it blocked by Americans, commanded by ColonelsAlexander Lillington andRichard Caswell .The Loyalists rushed at the bridge, only to be met by heavy Patriot fire at point-blank range. With the whole attacking party cut down in just 3 minutes, the Americans rushed across the bridge in a
counter-attack , forcing the remaining Highlanders and Loyalists to flee.The Patriots were victorious, having lost only one man killed and another wounded, while inflicting about 70 casualties, including the deaths of both McLeod and Campbell, upon their enemy and preventing the planned rendezvous with the British regulars. Private John Grady of Duplin County was the first North Carolinian killed in battle during the American Revolution. Over 850 Loyalists were captured over the next few days.
Aftermath
Although not realizing it at the time, the Patriot victory helped to check the Loyalist sentiment in the colony, but it fanned the fires of the revolutionary fervor to bring most of the North and South Carolina colonies into the fight against the
British army .Historical site
The Federal government took over the battle site as a
National Park operated by the War Department in 1926; theNational Park Service began managing the battlefield in 1933.For over a century, the
Moores Creek National Battlefield has evolved as a historical site preserving and interpreting the 1776 battle.References
External links
* [http://statelibrary.dcr.state.nc.us/nc/ncsites/moores.htm State of North Carolina website for the Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge]
* [http://www.nps.gov/mocr/ National Park Service website for Moore's Creek Bridge]
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