1739–1791
Lieutenant Colonel Archibald Campbell
1
Events in Savannah
Biography
Archibald Campbell was a Scottish officer who had already experienced the war from the American side before he fought for Britain at Savannah. Captured by American forces in 1776 while commanding troops being transported to reinforce the British army, he was held as a prisoner and subjected to treatment he regarded as harsh and dishonorable, an experience that deepened his determination when he was eventually exchanged and given a field command. By late 1778, British strategy had pivoted toward the southern colonies, where the government believed Loyalist sentiment was stronger and where a series of successful operations might restore royal authority in one region even as the war in the north remained stalemated.
Campbell commanded the expedition that landed below Savannah on December 28, 1778, and moved against the American defensive position the following day. The American forces under General Robert Howe had taken a position that seemed defensible on its front but was vulnerable on the flanks. A local enslaved man, Quamino Dolly, provided Campbell with knowledge of a hidden path through the swamp on the American right that allowed a flanking column to emerge behind the defenders while the main British force engaged frontally. The maneuver worked with devastating efficiency: the American position collapsed, hundreds of soldiers were killed or captured in the rout, and the city of Savannah fell before the defenders could organize an effective resistance. The entire operation, from landing to capture of the city, was completed with remarkable speed and relatively light British casualties.
Campbell's capture of Savannah opened the southern theater and initiated a British campaign of reconquest that would eventually overrun Georgia and most of South Carolina before American and French forces began to reverse the tide in 1781. He was promoted and knighted for his achievement and went on to serve as governor of Jamaica and later Madras, a career trajectory that reflected the high regard in which his Savannah operation was held by British military and political authorities. The campaign he launched in December 1778 set in motion some of the most brutal fighting of the entire war, and his use of local intelligence — supplied by an enslaved man whose own motives and circumstances history has recorded only partially — became a model studied by subsequent British commanders in the south.
In Savannah
Dec
1778
Fall of Savannah — British CaptureRole: British Army Officer
# The Fall of Savannah: Britain's Southern Gambit By the closing months of 1778, the American Revolutionary War had reached something of a strategic impasse in the northern colonies. The British defeat at Saratoga the previous year and the subsequent entry of France into the war on the American side had forced British commanders to reconsider their approach entirely. With French naval power now threatening their positions and the northern campaigns yielding frustratingly inconclusive results, British strategists in London devised what became known as the "Southern Strategy." The plan rested on a seemingly reasonable assumption: that the southern colonies, with their large populations of Loyalists, enslaved people, and Native American nations potentially sympathetic to the Crown, would prove far more fertile ground for reasserting British control. Georgia, the youngest and most sparsely settled of the thirteen colonies, was chosen as the proving ground for this new approach. What followed on December 29, 1778, was one of the most decisive and lopsided British victories of the entire war. Lieutenant Colonel Archibald Campbell, a seasoned Scottish officer who had himself been a prisoner of war earlier in the conflict, was tasked with leading the expeditionary force. Sailing south from New York with approximately 3,500 British regulars, Campbell landed his troops at Girardeau's Plantation, roughly two miles below the town of Savannah along the Savannah River. Opposing him was Major General Robert Howe, a North Carolina planter and Continental Army officer who commanded a garrison of only about 850 men — a mix of Continental soldiers and local militia. Howe knew he was badly outnumbered, but he positioned his small force along a defensive line east of the town, anchored by marshy terrain that he believed would protect his flanks from being turned. That calculation proved fatally wrong, and the reason reveals one of the war's more complex and often overlooked human dimensions. Shortly after landing, Campbell received intelligence from an enslaved man named Quamino Dolly, who revealed the existence of a concealed path through the swamp on the American left flank. Dolly's motivations remain a subject of historical discussion, but his knowledge of the local landscape proved militarily invaluable. Campbell, recognizing the opportunity immediately, devised a plan of simultaneous assault. He ordered a diversionary force to engage the American front lines directly, fixing Howe's attention forward, while Colonel James Baird led his light infantry quietly along the hidden swamp path to strike the Continental rear. The attack unfolded with devastating precision. When Baird's troops emerged behind the American lines, Howe's small force found itself caught between two converging columns with no viable route of retreat. The collapse was total and swift. In the span of a single afternoon, the British killed over one hundred American soldiers and captured nearly four hundred and fifty more, along with the city's artillery, supplies, and provisions. General Howe managed to escape northward into South Carolina with a remnant of his force, but the defeat effectively ended organized American resistance in Georgia for the foreseeable future. The consequences rippled outward rapidly. Within weeks, Campbell marched his forces upriver and occupied Augusta, meaning that virtually the entire colony of Georgia had returned to British control for the first time since the Declaration of Independence. A royal government was eventually reestablished, making Georgia the only colony to experience a full, if temporary, restoration of Crown authority during the war. The fall of Savannah validated the Southern Strategy in British eyes and set the stage for a broader southern campaign that would eventually encompass the sieges of Charleston and Camden and the bloody partisan warfare that consumed the Carolina backcountry. Yet the Southern Strategy ultimately contained the seeds of its own failure. The very factors that made the South appealing to British planners — its deep social divisions, its reliance on enslaved labor, its dispersed population — also made lasting pacification nearly impossible. The story of Quamino Dolly, an enslaved man whose local knowledge shaped the outcome of a major battle, underscores how the Revolutionary War was never a simple contest between two armies. It was a conflict that cut through every layer of colonial society, drawing in people whose names rarely appeared in official dispatches but whose choices carried profound consequences. The fall of Savannah opened a new and brutal chapter of the war, one that would stretch for years before culminating in the British surrender at Yorktown in 1781.