The British force dispatched by General Henry…
March 1779 CE
The British force dispatched by General Henry Clinton had gained control of the hinterland by early 1779.
This campaign in Georgia had presumed strong silent Loyalist support that would appear as soon as the British were present in strength.
The notion that the South is more likely to be friendly to British forces has been entertained by the Secretary of State for America, George Germain, for much of the war to date, a notion fed by Loyalist exiles in London.
The South on the whole is less receptive to the concept of independence from Britain, who provides the market for most of their plantation goods, but the expected wave of public support for the arrival of the British troops never materializes, leaving Clinton and his subordinates isolated.
British commanders for much of the rest of the war in the South will attempt to mobilize Loyalist support, but the results are never to be as helpful as they had hoped.