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1739–1800

John Rutledge

President of South CarolinaGovernorPatriot Leader

Connected towns:

Fort Moultrie, SC

Biography

John Rutledge was born in Charleston in 1739 into one of South Carolina's most distinguished legal and planting families. He trained as a lawyer in London at the Middle Temple, returning to South Carolina to build one of the most successful legal practices in the colony. He entered politics early, serving in the colonial assembly and developing a reputation as one of the ablest legal and political minds in the South. He represented South Carolina at the Stamp Act Congress and at the First and Second Continental Congresses, where he worked to protect colonial rights while initially seeking reconciliation rather than independence.

As President of South Carolina in 1776 — the title used before statehood was formalized — Rutledge played a decisive role in the defense of Fort Sullivan. When Continental generals including Charles Lee insisted that the half-finished fort on Sullivan's Island was indefensible and should be abandoned, Rutledge supported Colonel William Moultrie's determination to hold it and used his political authority to override the Continental commanders' objections. The successful defense of the fort on June 28, 1776 — which repulsed the British fleet and preserved Charleston from capture — was a testament to the courage of Moultrie's garrison, but also to Rutledge's willingness to back military judgment against expert opinion when his instincts told him the position could be held. Rutledge continued to serve as governor and as an itinerant leader of South Carolina's resistance after the fall of Charleston in 1780, keeping the Patriot cause alive in the state when its governmental structure had largely collapsed.

After independence, Rutledge served as a delegate to the Constitutional Convention of 1787, where he was one of the most influential voices in shaping the final document. He served as the second Chief Justice of the United States for a brief period, though his Senate confirmation was rejected. He died in 1800, remembered as one of the most formidable legal and political intellects among the American founders, and his role in securing the defense of Fort Sullivan stands as one of the most consequential political decisions made in the early years of the war.

Events

  1. Jun

    1776

    Sergeant Jasper Recovers the Flag
    Fort MoultriePresident of South Carolina

    **Sergeant Jasper Recovers the Flag at Fort Moultrie, 1776** In the early summer of 1776, the American colonies stood at a crossroads. The Declaration of Independence had not yet been signed, and the question of whether a loose collection of militias and Continental soldiers could stand against the most powerful military force in the world remained very much unanswered. The British, seeking to gain a strategic foothold in the southern colonies, turned their attention to Charleston, South Carolina — one of the most important port cities in North America. A British fleet under the command of Sir Peter Parker, carrying thousands of troops under General Henry Clinton, sailed toward Charleston Harbor with the intention of seizing the city and using it as a base from which to rally Loyalist support across the South. Standing in their way was an unfinished fort on Sullivan's Island, a low sandy barrier island at the mouth of the harbor. That fort, commanded by Colonel William Moultrie, was constructed of palmetto logs and sand — materials that many military observers dismissed as hopelessly inadequate against the firepower of a Royal Navy squadron. On June 28, 1776, the British fleet opened a devastating bombardment. Nine warships, mounting nearly three hundred guns, unleashed a sustained barrage against the fort and its roughly four hundred defenders. What the British did not anticipate was that the soft, spongy palmetto wood would absorb their cannonballs rather than splintering into deadly shards the way harder timber would. The defenders, though outgunned, returned fire with remarkable accuracy, inflicting severe damage on the British ships. The battle raged for hours under a brutal Carolina sun, and amid the smoke and thunder of cannon fire, one moment emerged that would become legend. During the bombardment, a British cannonball struck the fort's flagstaff, sending the regimental flag — a blue banner with a white crescent, the symbol of the South Carolina troops — tumbling down into the sand and smoke outside the walls. For the defenders, a fallen flag could signal surrender or collapse of morale, and the British might well have interpreted its disappearance as a sign that the fort was ready to capitulate. In that critical instant, Sergeant William Jasper of the Second South Carolina Regiment acted without hesitation. He climbed over the fort's ramparts, fully exposing himself to the relentless British naval fire, leaped down into the chaos outside the walls, recovered the fallen flag, and attached it to a cannon sponge staff — a long-handled tool used to clean cannons between firings. He then climbed back up and replanted the flag on the rampart in full view of both the defenders and the enemy fleet. The sight of the banner rising again electrified the garrison and became an enduring symbol of defiant courage. The battle ended in a decisive American victory. The British fleet, badly mauled, withdrew from Charleston Harbor, and the southern colonies would remain largely free of major British military operations for the next two years. John Rutledge, then serving as President of South Carolina under the state's new constitution, personally visited the fort after the battle. So moved was Rutledge by Jasper's bravery that he offered the sergeant a commission as an officer — a significant honor and social elevation. Jasper, however, declined the offer with characteristic humility, reportedly saying that he lacked the education to serve as an officer and that he was not fit for such a role. Rutledge instead presented Jasper with his own sword as a token of gratitude. Jasper's act of courage resonated far beyond the walls of the fort that would soon be renamed Fort Moultrie in honor of its commander. At a moment when the American cause desperately needed heroes, Jasper provided one of the war's most vivid images of individual bravery — a common soldier risking his life not for personal glory or advancement but for a symbol that held his comrades together under fire. His story was retold in newspapers, pamphlets, and public gatherings throughout the colonies, helping to galvanize popular support for the Revolution during its most uncertain early months. Jasper continued to serve with distinction and was killed in 1779 during the Siege of Savannah, once again attempting to recover a fallen flag. His legacy endures in the names of counties, towns, and monuments across the American South, a testament to the power of one soldier's courage to inspire a nation in its founding struggle.