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Wilmington, NC

People

8 historical figures connected to Wilmington during the Revolutionary War.

Patriots & Founders

Other Figures

General Lord Charles Cornwallis

1738–1805

British Commander, Southern ArmyGuilford Courthouse Campaign Commander

British general who retreated to Wilmington NC after the costly victory at Guilford Courthouse in March 1781, then made the fateful decision to march into Virginia rather than south to reinforce South Carolina. His Yorktown surrender in October 1781 effectively ended the war.

Major General Nathanael Greene

1742–1786

Continental Army GeneralCommander of Southern Department

Rhode Island general who took command of the shattered Southern Army in December 1780. At Guilford Courthouse he traded his army's retreat for a quarter of Cornwallis's force, then turned south when Cornwallis retreated to Wilmington — dismantling the British position in the Carolinas while Cornwallis marched to his destruction in Virginia.

Major General Robert Howe

1732–1786

Continental Army GeneralNorth Carolina Patriot Officer

North Carolina Continental general from the Cape Fear region who commanded the unsuccessful defense of Savannah in December 1778. Despite the defeat, he continued to serve and later suppressed the Pennsylvania Line mutiny in 1781. The Cape Fear gentry network that supported him was based in Wilmington.

Colonel Alexander Lillington

1725–1786

North Carolina Militia OfficerMoore's Creek Bridge Commander

Cape Fear region militia colonel who commanded Patriot forces at the north end of Moore's Creek Bridge on February 27, 1776. His preparation of the defensive position — removing the bridge planks and positioning artillery — was decisive. A veteran of the Stamp Act resistance and one of the Cape Fear's most effective Patriot military leaders.

Major James Henry Craig

1748–1812

British Army OfficerWilmington NC Occupation Commander

British officer who landed at Wilmington in January 1781 with a garrison of 450 men and occupied the town for the remainder of the war. Craig organized systematic raids on the surrounding countryside, supplied Loyalist partisan David Fanning, and maintained Wilmington as Britain's last toehold in North Carolina until evacuation in November 1781.

Colonel David Fanning

1755–1825

Loyalist Partisan CommanderNorth Carolina Tory Militia Leader

North Carolina Loyalist militia officer who conducted some of the war's most effective and brutal partisan operations from a base supplied by Craig's Wilmington garrison. His raids in 1781, including the capture of Governor Thomas Burke, demonstrated the savagery of North Carolina's civil war dimension.