General Henry Clinton leads two thousand men…
June 1776 CE
General Henry Clinton leads two thousand men and a naval squadron in an attempt to seize Charleston on June 28, 1776, hoping for a simultaneous Loyalist uprising in South Carolina.
The fleet fires cannonballs but the explosives fail to penetrate Fort Sullivan's unfinished, yet thick palmetto log walls.
Additionally, no local Loyalists attack the town from behind as the British had hoped.
Colonel Moultries' men are able to return fire and inflict heavy damage on several of the British ships.
The British are forced to withdraw their forces, and the fort is renamed Fort Moultrie in honor of its commander.
This battle keeps Charleston safe from conquest for four years, and therefore is perceived as so symbolic of the Revolution that it spawns a number of key icons of South Carolina and the revolution.
During the battle, the flag Moultrie had flown in the battle (which he'd designed, himself) was shot down.
It was then hoisted into the air again by Sargent William Jasper and kept aloft, rallying the troops, until it could be remounted.
This Liberty Flag—appropriately indigo in its field color—is seen as so important that it becomes the Flag of South Carolina, with the addition of the very palmetto tree that was used to make the fort so impenetrable.
The day of the battle is now a holiday in the state, known as Carolina Day.