1740–1781
1
recorded events
Connected towns:
Camden, SCBiography
James Webster was a professional British Army officer who had risen through the ranks of the 33rd Regiment of Foot, the regiment that Cornwallis had formerly commanded and that followed him throughout the American war. Webster was known as one of the most aggressive and dependable infantry commanders in the British southern army, and Cornwallis relied on him to execute the most demanding assignments in battle. His combination of personal courage and professional competence made him one of the most effective regimental officers the British deployed in America.
At the Battle of Camden on August 16, 1780, Webster commanded the British right wing — the regulars whose assault struck the American left, which was held by the Virginia militia. When the battle opened, Webster advanced his men against the militia before Gates's line was fully formed and moving, exploiting the disorder caused by the early British attack. The militia, already shaken and poorly positioned, broke almost immediately under Webster's assault and fled the field. This collapse exposed the flanks of the Continental regulars fighting on the American right, and the combination of pressure from the front and the envelopment of their position by troops freed from the militia pursuit proved ultimately fatal to de Kalb's command. Webster's aggressive handling of his wing at Camden was a significant factor in the speed and completeness of the British victory. He was widely regarded after the battle as one of the most capable officers in the southern army.
Webster received a mortal wound at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse on March 15, 1781, just seven months after Camden. He was struck in the leg during the fighting and died of the wound shortly thereafter. His death was a significant personal loss for Cornwallis, who spoke of Webster with genuine grief and considered him one of the finest officers he had ever commanded. The brevity of Webster's career in the South — a few months of intense action ending in death — left him a relatively obscure figure in later historiography, but contemporary accounts consistently identified him as among the best regimental commanders in the British Army in America.
Events
Aug
1780
# The Battle of Camden By the summer of 1780, the American cause in the Southern states had reached a point of profound crisis. The previous May, the British had achieved one of their greatest victories of the entire war when they captured Charleston, South Carolina, along with nearly the entire Southern Continental Army — roughly 5,000 troops and four ships. It was the worst American defeat of the Revolution, and it left the Southern theater virtually defenseless. British commander General Charles Cornwallis, now operating from a position of strength, sought to consolidate control over South Carolina and extend British authority across the region. Into this desperate situation marched a hastily assembled American force under Major General Horatio Gates, who had been appointed to command the newly reconstituted Southern army largely on the strength of his reputation from the American victory at Saratoga three years earlier. Gates moved his army south toward the British outpost at Camden, South Carolina, hoping to strike a blow that would reverse the tide. It was a decision that would end in catastrophe. Gates's force was a patchwork army composed of seasoned Continental regulars and untested militia. The Continental regiments — principally Maryland and Delaware troops — were experienced and disciplined soldiers, among the best the American army had to offer. But they were significantly outnumbered in Gates's column by Virginia and North Carolina militia, many of whom had never faced regular troops in open battle. Gates compounded his problems through a series of questionable decisions, including a night march that left his men exhausted and hungry, and a battle plan that placed the unreliable militia on the American left flank, directly opposite some of the finest soldiers in the British army. At dawn on August 16, 1780, the two forces collided on a narrow field flanked by swamps north of Camden. Lieutenant Colonel James Webster, commanding the infantry on the British right, led his regulars forward against the Virginia militia before they had even fully formed their battle line. The militia managed a single ragged volley before their nerve broke entirely. They threw down their weapons and fled into the woods and swamps behind them, and the collapse spread like a contagion through the American left and center. Gates himself was swept up in the rout and carried miles from the field, a humiliation that would effectively end his military career. On the American right, the Continental regiments under Major General Baron Johann de Kalb — a German-born officer of deep experience who had come to America to serve the revolutionary cause — did not immediately realize the extent of the disaster unfolding on the opposite side of the field. The Marylanders and Delawareans fought with ferocious discipline, holding and even advancing against the British troops in front of them. But as the left wing disintegrated, British and Loyalist forces wheeled around and began pressing into their flank and rear. The Continentals found themselves in a steadily shrinking perimeter, surrounded and taking fire from multiple directions. De Kalb refused to yield. He rallied his men personally, leading counterattacks on foot even as the situation became hopeless. He was wounded repeatedly — accounts suggest he suffered as many as eleven wounds — before finally collapsing on the field. He died three days later. His sacrifice became one of the most celebrated acts of personal courage in the entire war. The scale of the American defeat was staggering. More than a thousand soldiers were killed or captured, and hundreds more simply melted away into the countryside, never returning to military service. British losses, by contrast, were approximately 325 — a ratio that underscored just how completely the American position had collapsed. Camden, combined with the earlier fall of Charleston, left the British in apparent control of the South and plunged American morale to one of its lowest points in the war. Yet the defeat at Camden, devastating as it was, did not prove fatal to the American cause. It led directly to Gates's replacement by Major General Nathanael Greene, one of Washington's most capable subordinates, who would adopt a far shrewder strategy of maneuver and attrition against Cornwallis. The sacrifice of de Kalb and the Continental regulars at Camden also demonstrated that American soldiers, when properly trained and led, could stand against British regulars even under the worst conditions. The road from Camden to the eventual American victory at Yorktown just over a year later was long and painful, but the lessons learned in that South Carolina dawn helped shape the campaign that would win the war.