The free population of the Province of…
November 1775 CE
The free population of the Province of South Carolina had been divided in its reaction when the American Revolutionary War began in Massachusetts in April.
Many English coastal residents are either neutral or favor the rebellion, while significant numbers of backcountry residents, many of whom are German and Scottish immigrants, are opposed.
Loyalist opposition in the backcountry is dominated by Thomas Fletchall, a vocal and active opponent of attempts to resist King and Parliament.
Tensions between Patriot and Loyalist in the province had escalated by August 1775 to the point where both sides have raised sizable militia forces.
Events are largely nonviolent for some time, although there are isolated instances of tarring and feathering, but tensions are high as the sides struggle for control of munitions.
The Council of Safety in early August sends William Henry Drayton and Reverend William Tennent to the town of Ninety Six to rally Patriot support and suppress growing Loyalist support in the backcountry.
Drayton is able to negotiate a tenuous truce with Fletchall in September.
Patriot militia had seized Fort Johnson, the principal fortification overlooking the Charleston harbor, on September 15.
Governor William Campbell had dissolved the provincial assembly, and fearing for his personal safety, had fled to the Royal Navy sloop of war HMS Tamar.
This leaves the Patriot-controlled Council of Safety in control of the provincial capital.
The council has begun improving and expanding Charleston's coastal defenses, eventually resulting in a bloodless exchange of cannonfire between Patriot-controlled positions and Royal Navy ships in the harbor on November 11 and 12.
Matters had also escalated when the Council of Safety began to organize a large-scale response to the seizure by Loyalists in October of a shipment of gunpowder and ammunition intended for the Cherokee.
The Council of Safety had voted on November 8 to send Colonel Richard Richardson, the commander of the Camden militia, to recover the shipment and arrest opposition leaders.
Richardson's South Carolina revolutionaries march through the Ninety Six District in November in what becomes known as the Snow Campaign, effectively ending all major support for the Loyalist cause in the backcountry of South Carolina.