Continental Army commander General George Washington had…
January 1781 CE
Greene's task is not an easy one.
In 1780 the Carolinas had been the scene of a long string of disasters for the Continental Army, the worst being the capture of one American army under Gen. Benjamin Lincoln in May 1780, at the Siege of Charleston.
The British had taken control of this city, the largest in the South and the capital of South Carolina, and occupied it
Later in the year another Patriot army, commanded by General Horatio Gates, had been destroyed at the Battle of Camden.
A victory of Patriot militia over their Loyalist counterparts at the Battle of Kings Mountain on the northwest frontier in October had bought time, but most of South Carolina is still occupied by the British.
When Greene took command, the southern army numbered twenty-three hundred and seven men (on paper, fourteen hundred and eighty-two present), of whom only nine hundred and forty-nine were Continental regulars, mostly the famous highly trained "Maryland Line" regiment.