1739–1817
Brigadier General Andrew Pickens
1
Events in Cowpens
Biography
Andrew Pickens was born in 1739 in Pennsylvania and moved as a young man to the South Carolina backcountry, where he became a farmer, elder in the Presbyterian church, and respected leader of the frontier community. He served against Cherokee raiders in the 1760s and developed the skills of irregular warfare that would define his Revolutionary service. When the Revolution began, his deep convictions about political liberty drew him firmly into the Patriot cause, and he organized militia forces in the western part of the colony.
Pickens's most celebrated contribution to the war came at Cowpens on January 17, 1781, where Brigadier General Daniel Morgan assigned him command of the militia skirmish line. Morgan's plan required the militia — always prone to flight under pressure — to execute a disciplined tactical withdrawal rather than simply to hold their ground or run. Pickens drilled his men in the specific orders they would follow: fire two well-aimed volleys at close range, then fall back in good order through gaps in the Continental line and re-form on the left flank. On the morning of the battle, Pickens and his men performed exactly as planned. Their initial volleys killed and wounded many of Tarleton's advancing infantry and inflicted particularly heavy casualties on the British officers, disrupting the command structure of the assault. When his militia retired as ordered, Tarleton's troops surged forward believing the Americans were routing — only to be met by the Continental regulars. Pickens then led his re-formed militia around the flank to complete the encirclement. He continued active operations in the South Carolina backcountry throughout the remainder of the southern campaign.
After the war, Pickens served in the South Carolina legislature and as a United States congressman, and he remained one of the most respected figures in the backcountry for decades. He conducted further negotiations with Cherokee and Creek nations on behalf of both state and federal governments, drawing on the frontier knowledge he had accumulated over a lifetime. He died in 1817, regarded as one of the most effective militia commanders the Revolution produced. Military historians have frequently cited his performance at Cowpens as proof that militia, when properly led and given realistic tactical assignments, could play a decisive role in conventional battle.
In Cowpens
Mar
1781
Congress Awards Gold Medals for CowpensRole: South Carolina Militia General
# Congress Awards Gold Medals for Cowpens In the early months of 1781, the American cause in the Southern states hung by a thread. The British had captured Charleston the previous year, destroyed an entire American army at Camden under General Horatio Gates, and seemed poised to sweep through the Carolinas and Virginia with little organized resistance. Into this dire situation stepped Brigadier General Daniel Morgan, a tough, experienced Continental Army officer who had already proven his worth at the Battle of Saratoga. When the American commander in the South, Major General Nathanael Greene, made the bold decision to divide his smaller army in the face of a superior British force, he entrusted Morgan with leading a detached force into the western backcountry of South Carolina. It was a gamble that would produce one of the most celebrated American victories of the entire war. On January 17, 1781, at a place called the Cowpens — a well-known cattle grazing area in upstate South Carolina — Morgan turned to face a pursuing British force led by the aggressive Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton. What followed was a masterpiece of battlefield tactics. Morgan, understanding the strengths and limitations of his mixed force of Continental regulars and militia, devised an ingenious plan that used the terrain and the expected behavior of his troops to devastating effect. He arranged his men in successive lines, asking his militia to fire just two volleys before falling back, a realistic demand that played to their capabilities rather than asking them to stand toe-to-toe with British regulars in a prolonged firefight. Behind the militia stood the disciplined Continental infantry under Lieutenant Colonel John Eager Howard, and behind them, held in reserve, was the cavalry commanded by Colonel William Washington, a distant cousin of the commander-in-chief. Brigadier General Andrew Pickens led the South Carolina militia with steady composure, ensuring they delivered their volleys with precision before withdrawing in good order. The British, believing the retreating militia signaled a rout, charged forward eagerly — only to slam into Howard's firm Continental line. At the critical moment, a tactical withdrawal by Howard's men was mistaken by the British as another retreat, drawing them further into disorder. Howard then wheeled his troops around for a devastating volley and bayonet charge, while Washington's cavalry swept in from the flank. The result was a rare double envelopment that shattered Tarleton's force. The British suffered catastrophic losses: over one hundred killed, more than two hundred wounded, and roughly five hundred captured. American casualties were remarkably light by comparison. The Continental Congress recognized the magnitude of this achievement by voting to award gold medals to the key figures responsible. Morgan received a Congressional gold medal, one of only eight such medals bestowed during the entire Revolutionary War, a distinction that underscored the extraordinary nature of the victory. Howard and Washington also received gold medals, while Pickens was similarly honored for his essential role in commanding the militia. These awards were not merely ceremonial gestures; they reflected Congress's understanding that Cowpens represented something rare and significant in the American war effort. The importance of the Battle of Cowpens extended far beyond the battlefield itself. The destruction of Tarleton's force stripped the British commander Lord Cornwallis of his most mobile and aggressive troops, fundamentally altering the balance of power in the Southern campaign. Cornwallis, desperate to recover his losses and catch Greene's army, launched a grueling pursuit through North Carolina that exhausted his own forces. This chain of events eventually drove Cornwallis to Yorktown, Virginia, where his surrender in October 1781 effectively ended the war. The Congressional gold medals awarded for Cowpens thus honored not only tactical brilliance on a single January morning but also a turning point that helped set in motion the final act of American independence.