Devotion for the Week of January 21, 2018 - GOD PROTECTS THE COLONIAL ARMY TO THE CHAGRIN OF THE BRITISH

GOD PROTECTS THE COLONIAL ARMY TO THE  CHAGRIN OF THE BRITISH

Jeremiah 15:20-21 (KJV), “And I will make thee unto this people a fenced brasen wall: and they shall fight against thee, but they shall not prevail against thee: for I am with thee to save thee and to deliver thee, saith the LORD.  21  And I will deliver thee out of the hand of the wicked, and I will redeem thee out of the hand of the terrible.”

British Colonel Banastre Tarleton was known as “the bloody butcher” for letting his dragoons bayonet and hack hundreds of surrendering American soldiers at Buford’s Massacre, May 29, 1780.

In January of 1781, Colonel Banastre Tarleton led 1,200 of Britain’s best troops, consisting of British dragoons, regulars, highlanders and loyalists, in a hot pursuit of the Americans.

American General Daniel Morgan led them into a trap – the Battle of Cowpens, Jan. 17, 1781.

The Americans took a stand with a river behind them, leaving them no opportunity to retreat.

Seeing this a foolish decision, British Colonel Tarlton gave into the temptation to pursue without doing any reconnaissance.

As depicted in the movie “The Patriot,” American General Daniel Morgan had his line of militia fire twice into the charging British cavalry, then retreat around a hill.

At a full gallop, Tarlton’s dragoons charged straight on, only to be surprised by a wall of 400 battle-hardened American Continental soldiers who had been hiding behind the militia.  The American Continentals stood immovable, firing at point-blank range. The militia then circled around appearing on the other side of the hill and attacked Tarlton’s flank.  In the confusion, 110 British were killed and 830 captured.

The Battle of Cowpens is widely considered the tactical masterpiece and turning point of the Revolutionary War.

When British General Cornwallis was told the news, he was leaning on his sword – and leaned so hard the sword snapped in two. Cornwallis gave chase, even abandoning his slow supply wagons along the way.

General Daniel Morgan hastily retreated north, meeting up with American General Nathaniel Greene, and they raced to get out of South Carolina, across North Carolina and into Virginia.  Cornwallis regrouped and chased the Americans as fast as he could, discarding slow supply wagons and heavy equipment along the way. Cornwallis arrived at the Catawba River just two hours after the Americans had crossed, but a sudden storm made the river impassable, delaying the British pursuit.  The British nearly overtook the Americans at the Yadkin River, but again rains flooded the river slowing the British.

Now it was a mad dash to the Dan River.  General Nathaniel Greene quickly got the Americans across before another flash flood blocked the British.  British Commander Henry Clinton wrote: “Here the royal army was again stopped by a sudden rise of the waters, which had only just fallen (almost miraculously) to let the enemy over, who could not else have eluded Lord Cornwallis’ grasp, so close was he upon their rear.”

Having discarded his supplies in the chase, Cornwallis was ordered by British General Henry Clinton to move his 8,000 troops to a defensive position where the York River entered Chesapeake Bay, and wait for British ships.  Providentially, Ben Franklin and Marquis de Lafayette were finally successful in their efforts to persuade French King Louis XVI to send ships and troops to help the Americans.  French Admiral de Grasse left off fighting the British in the West Indies and sailed 24 ships to the mouth of Chesapeake Bay, where, in the Battle of the Capes, he drove off 19 British ships which were trying to evacuate Cornwallis’ men. 

De Grasse’s 3,000 French troops and General Rochambeau’s 6,000 French troops hurriedly joined General Lafayette’s division as they marched to help Washington trap Cornwallis against the sea at Yorktown.  French troops joined those led by Generals Benjamin Lincoln, Baron von Steuben, Modecai Gist, Henry Knox and John Peter Muhlenberg.  Altogether, 17,000 French and American troops surrounded Cornwallis. On October 19, 1781, he surrendered and the Revolutionary War was effectively over.

Yale President Ezra Stiles wrote, May 8, 1783: “Who but God could have ordained the critical arrival of the Gallic (French) fleet, so as to … assist … in the siege … of Yorktown? … Should we not … ascribe to a Supreme energy … the wise … generalship displayed by General Greene … leaving the … roving Cornwallis to pursue his helter-skelter ill-fated march into Virginia? … It is God who had raised up for us a … powerful ally … a chosen army and a naval force: who sent us a Rochambeau … to fight side by side with a Washington … in the … battle of Yorktown.”

General Washington wrote to William Gordon in March of 1781: “We have … abundant reasons to thank Providence for its many favorable interpositions in our behalf. It has at times been my only dependence, for all other resources seemed to have failed us.”

 

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