1747–1783
1
recorded events
Connected towns:
Wilmington, NCBiography
Thomas Burke was an Irish-born lawyer who settled in North Carolina before the Revolution and rose quickly through the colony's legal and political circles. Trained in medicine in Ireland before turning to law, he established himself in Hillsborough and Orange County as a fierce advocate for individual liberty and local self-governance. His suspicion of centralized authority made him an outspoken critic not only of British policy but also of what he considered excessive power claimed by the Continental Congress itself.
Burke represented North Carolina in the Continental Congress from 1776 to 1781, where he became one of the most persistent defenders of state sovereignty during debates over the Articles of Confederation. He insisted on language that explicitly reserved unenumerated powers to the states, and his arguments shaped the final form of the Articles in ways that limited congressional authority. Elected governor of North Carolina in 1781, he faced the severe challenge of governing a state whose interior had been devastated by civil war between Patriots and Loyalists. In September 1781, Loyalist partisan David Fanning led a raid directly into Hillsborough, scattering the governor's guard and capturing Burke along with dozens of other officials. Transported first to Wilmington, Burke was then transferred to a British prison hulk in Charleston harbor, where he endured wretched conditions before eventually escaping and making his way back to North Carolina.
Burke's capture and the near-collapse of North Carolina's government in 1781 illustrated both the ferocity of the Loyalist partisan war in the Carolina backcountry and the fragility of Patriot institutional control in states far from the main Continental armies. He completed his gubernatorial term after his escape but retired from public life in poor health and died in 1783, one of the Revolution's less celebrated yet intellectually significant figures. His early championing of state sovereignty presaged the political arguments that would dominate American constitutional debate for generations after the war.
Events
Sep
1781
**The Capture of Governor Burke at Hillsborough, 1781** By the late summer of 1781, the Revolutionary War in the American South had devolved into a brutal and deeply personal conflict. While the great armies of Washington and Cornwallis maneuvered toward their fateful meeting at Yorktown, the interior of North Carolina was consumed by a vicious partisan struggle between Patriot and Loyalist neighbors. It was in this volatile climate that one of the most audacious raids of the entire war took place — a strike that temporarily decapitated the government of North Carolina and demonstrated just how fragile the Patriot hold on the Southern backcountry truly was. The architect of the broader strategy was Major James Henry Craig, a capable and aggressive British Army officer who commanded the garrison at Wilmington, North Carolina. Craig had occupied Wilmington in early 1781, transforming the port town into a vital British base of operations. From this coastal stronghold, he could receive supplies and reinforcements by sea while projecting British influence deep into the North Carolina interior. Rather than relying solely on conventional military expeditions, Craig pursued a shrewd strategy of supporting Loyalist partisan bands who knew the countryside intimately. By funneling arms, ammunition, and intelligence through Wilmington, Craig cultivated a network of irregular fighters who could strike Patriot targets far beyond the reach of his own garrison. The most formidable of these partisan leaders was Colonel David Fanning. Fanning was a complex and controversial figure — a committed Loyalist who had suffered at the hands of Patriot forces and channeled his grievances into a relentless guerrilla campaign. Operating primarily in the piedmont region of North Carolina, Fanning proved to be an exceptionally effective partisan commander, gathering Loyalist militiamen for rapid strikes before dispersing them back into the civilian population. His connection to Craig's Wilmington base gave him access to a supply line that sustained his operations and lent them a strategic coherence that went beyond mere raiding. On September 12, 1781, Fanning executed his most spectacular operation. Leading a force of Loyalist partisans, he descended on the town of Hillsborough, which was serving as the seat of North Carolina's state government. The raid was swift and devastating. Fanning's men swept through the town and captured Governor Thomas Burke, along with several other Patriot officials and Continental Army officers. Burke, who had only recently assumed the governorship and was working to rally North Carolina's war effort, found himself a prisoner of the very Loyalist insurgency his government had been struggling to suppress. Fanning and his men then conducted a fighting retreat across the North Carolina countryside, carrying their high-value captives toward the coast. Governor Burke was eventually delivered to Wilmington, where Craig's garrison received him. From there, Burke was transported to Charleston, South Carolina, and confined aboard a British prison hulk in the harbor — a grim fate that underscored the personal dangers faced by Patriot leaders in the Southern theater. The capture of Governor Burke sent shockwaves through North Carolina's Patriot community. The loss of the sitting governor was not merely a symbolic blow; it disrupted the state's already strained ability to organize militia forces, collect taxes, and coordinate with the Continental Army at a critical moment in the war. The raid vividly illustrated the effectiveness of Craig's strategy of using Wilmington as a base from which to destabilize North Carolina's government and embolden Loyalist resistance throughout the region. In the broader context of the Revolutionary War, the Hillsborough raid is a striking reminder that the conflict in the South was not simply a contest between uniformed armies. It was a civil war within a revolution, fought by neighbors and partisans whose loyalties divided communities and families. Though the British surrender at Yorktown in October 1781 would soon alter the trajectory of the entire war, the capture of Governor Burke demonstrated that, even in the war's final months, the outcome in the Carolinas remained bitterly contested. Fanning's raid stands as one of the most dramatic episodes of the Southern campaign, a testament to the power of partisan warfare and the precariousness of revolutionary governance in a land torn apart by divided allegiances.