1744–1780
Major Patrick Ferguson
1
Events in Ninety Six
Biography
Patrick Ferguson was born in Scotland in 1744 and entered the British Army at an early age, serving in various European theaters and developing a reputation as an innovative, intellectually curious officer. His most remarkable technical achievement came in 1776, when he demonstrated a breech-loading rifle of his own design to the Board of Ordnance — a weapon capable of firing six rounds per minute with accuracy far superior to the standard Brown Bess musket. Though the Army equipped a small corps with the weapon, institutional conservatism prevented its widespread adoption. Ferguson brought the same inventive energy to tactical thinking, advocating for flexible, light-infantry approaches that set him apart from many of his peers.
Deployed to the southern colonies as part of Cornwallis's campaign to pacify the Carolinas in 1780, Ferguson was placed in command of Loyalist militia forces and tasked with securing the backcountry. He achieved considerable success pacifying pockets of Patriot resistance, but his September 1780 ultimatum to the Overmountain settlers of present-day Tennessee and Virginia — threatening to hang their leaders and lay waste to their country if they did not submit — proved a catastrophic miscalculation. Rather than intimidating the frontier communities, his message galvanized them. Thousands of backwoodsmen crossed the mountains under colonels such as William Campbell, Isaac Shelby, and John Sevier, converging on Ferguson's force of roughly 1,100 Loyalists atop Kings Mountain on October 7, 1780. Surrounded on a ridge he had believed impregnable, Ferguson was shot from his horse and killed as his command disintegrated.
Ferguson's death at Kings Mountain marked a pivotal turning point in the southern campaign, halting Cornwallis's momentum and emboldening Patriot resistance across the Carolinas. He was the only British regular officer on the field that day, and his loss deprived the Crown of one of its most talented and forward-thinking officers. His breech-loading rifle was eventually rediscovered and recognized as a genuine technological achievement, and his career has since been reassessed as that of a gifted soldier who was undone by his own contempt for the determination of frontier Americans.
In Ninety Six
Oct
1780
Battle of Kings MountainRole: British Army Officer
**The Battle of Kings Mountain, 1780** By the summer of 1780, the British war effort in the American South appeared to be succeeding beyond expectation. Charleston had fallen in May, and the Continental Army under General Horatio Gates had been routed at the Battle of Camden in August. Lieutenant General Charles Cornwallis, commanding British forces in the southern theater, believed the moment had come to carry the war northward into North Carolina, confident that Loyalist support in the Carolina backcountry would secure his supply lines and rear. Central to this strategy was the network of British interior posts, including the fortified position at Ninety Six in western South Carolina, which served as an anchor for Loyalist organization across the upcountry. The man tasked with rallying and organizing these Loyalist militias was Major Patrick Ferguson, a talented and aggressive British Army officer who had earned a reputation as one of the most capable field commanders in the southern campaign. Ferguson took his mission seriously, recruiting and training Loyalist militia companies throughout the Carolina piedmont and mountain foothills. By early autumn of 1780, he commanded a force of roughly one thousand Loyalist militiamen and had pushed westward toward the Blue Ridge Mountains, seeking to suppress Patriot resistance and extend British control into the frontier settlements. In a fateful act of overconfidence, Ferguson sent a message across the mountains threatening the settlers of the Watauga, Nolichucky, and Holston River communities — people who would come to be known as the Overmountain Men — warning them that if they did not cease their opposition to the Crown, he would cross the mountains, hang their leaders, and lay waste to their settlements. Rather than intimidating these frontier communities, Ferguson's threat galvanized them into action. Militia leaders including Colonel Isaac Shelby of Sullivan County and Colonel John Sevier of Washington County in what is now northeastern Tennessee, along with Colonel William Campbell of Virginia, began organizing a combined force to confront Ferguson before he could make good on his promise. They were joined by Colonel Benjamin Cleveland and Colonel Joseph McDowell of North Carolina, as well as militia forces from South Carolina. These men gathered at Sycamore Shoals on the Watauga River in late September 1780 and set out on a grueling march across the Appalachian Mountains in pursuit of Ferguson's army. Ferguson, learning that the Overmountain Men were coming, withdrew eastward and took up a defensive position atop Kings Mountain, a rocky, wooded ridge near the border between North and South Carolina. He reportedly declared that he was "on King's Mountain" and that "God Almighty and all the rebels out of hell" could not drive him from it. On the afternoon of October 7, 1780, roughly nine hundred Patriot militia surrounded the ridge and began advancing uphill through the trees, using frontier marksmanship and woodland fighting tactics that neutralized Ferguson's advantage of elevation. The Loyalist defenders attempted repeated bayonet charges down the slopes, but each time the Patriot riflemen fell back, regrouped, and resumed their deadly fire. The battle lasted approximately an hour. Major Patrick Ferguson was killed during the fighting, shot from his horse while attempting to rally his men and break through the encirclement. With his death, the Loyalist force collapsed. Nearly the entire command was killed, wounded, or captured. The consequences of Kings Mountain were profound and far-reaching. The destruction of Ferguson's force shattered the Loyalist militia infrastructure that Cornwallis had relied upon to secure the South Carolina interior, leaving posts like Ninety Six increasingly isolated and vulnerable. Cornwallis, who had already begun his advance into North Carolina, was forced to halt and retreat back into South Carolina for the winter, abandoning his invasion plans. The battle reinvigorated Patriot resistance throughout the South and demonstrated that the British could not count on Loyalist dominance of the backcountry. Historians have often cited Kings Mountain as a critical turning point in the southern campaign, one that shifted momentum toward the American cause and set the stage for subsequent Patriot victories at Cowpens and Guilford Courthouse, ultimately leading to Cornwallis's fateful march to Yorktown and the end of the war.