Artificer said:
MacRob46 said:
Artificer said:
Though it is debated who said it or if had actually been made as a threat, the Overmountain Men firmly believed it by most accounts.
Gus
There really is no debate. Ferguson sent the message to Isaac Shelby by one of his relatives, a man named Samuel Phillips who had been captured and paroled. While it was delivered orally rather than in writing, given the gravity of the situation in which the Over the Mountain Men found themselves it can be readily assumed that it was delivered verbatim: "If they do not desist from their opposition to the British arms, he would march over the mountains, hang their leaders, and lay their country waste with fire and sword."
Wow, glad to see that proved and laid to rest. Thank you.
Gus
Well, it was too late to add a P.S., so I will add another post.
I may be wrong, but I believe most people today have no idea what the age old threat of "laying their country waste with fire and sword" actually meant and how that was the most terrible threat that could be made. In effect, it meant stealing or killing all livestock and possessions, burning down every building, stealing or destroying every bit of crops and property, raping women and children and then murdering everyone to the last person - leaving no one or nothing behind in their wake than ashes.
The Overmountain Men MAY not have taken that literally or seriously in other cases or times, but for the American Propaganda after the Battle of the Waxhaws/Buford's Massacre a few months earlier on 29 May. That was the battle/skirmish where Banastre Tarleton got his nickname "Bloody Banastre" and where his supposed slaughter of surrendered and wounded American Soldiers was the origin of the term "Tarleton's Quarter."
(Historians are STILL arguing over whether or not there indeed was such a general slaughter and not just a few Americans killed when Tarleton's troops thought he had been killed, but it seems evidence today shows it was not a general massacre.)
Whether or not there was a massacre at the Battle of the Waxhaws, the Overmountain Men BELIEVED there had been such a massacre where no quarter had been shown to those who surrendered. So when they got word of the threat of "Laying waste of their country by Fire and Sword," they believed the threat was real and would be carried out to the fullest extent of the age old threat against their family and friends.
This at first caused hot rage that turned into what some describe as "cold rage" where the rage is kept down just enough to still allow one to act decisively with purpose, but with the simmering rage underneath that keeps the soldier going in battle harder and longer than usual. I am certain the Overmountain Men were not going to stop at anything to get their hands on Ferguson and destroy that force. So as the battle went back and forth, there was nothing that would stop them and falling back to regroup or retreat was out of the question. They were after blood vengeance. I am actually a little bit surprised they did not slaughter some of the British prisoners, but perhaps the body of Ferguson cooled their rage enough.
I wonder if Ferguson realized before he died just how foolish his threat turned out to be and how it caused his downfall.
Gus