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This Month in History: The Battle of Cowpens
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The Battle of Cowpens

Nine months before the victory at Yorktown successfully ended what we now call the Revolutionary War, a critical turning point in the southern campaign occurred at the Battle of Cowpens in South Carolina. On January 17, 1781, General Daniel Morgan and his Continental forces met the British forces of Lt. Col. Banastre Tarleton. Strategic advantages were incorrectly assessed by Tarleton, orders were misunderstood among his troops, and the firepower of Morgan's militia, coupled with a rewarding attack by Colonel William Washington's cavalry, brought the Continental troops to victory. Within an hour of the battle's start, chaos had ensued and Tarleton retreated.

As Tarleton fled, he was chased by Colonel Washington, a second cousin of George Washington. Once Washington and his men caught up to Tarleton, hand-to-hand combat ensued. Washington's bugler, an African American who remains unidentified, fired a pistol, essentially saving Washington's life. At that point, Tarleton and his men fled to notify Cornwall of the defeat.

In the Papers of the Continental Congress, there is a letter written by General Morgan telling of his battle trophyâ??the captured standard of one of the defeated regiments. Morgan recounts that General Green asked him "to lay at the feet of congress the standard of the 7th British Reg't. which fell into my hands in the action of the 17th Jany."

According to The Battle of Cowpens website, maintained by the National Park Service, the term cowpens is "endemic to South Carolina, referring to open-range stock grazing operations of the colonial period." It was such a pasture where General Morgan encamped his troops on January 16, with forage for their horses. This field, known locally as "The Cowpens" was the site of the next day's conflict and thus, a historic battle was named.

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Civil War Collection 150th Anniversary

150th Anniversary
This Month in the Civil War

In the Civil War, Kentucky was a neutral border state of great importance. With Indiana and Ohio to the north, and Tennessee and the strategically important Cumberland Gap to the south, any battles fought in Kentucky were critical to either side. Abraham Lincoln is attributed to saying, "I hope to have God on my side, but I must have Kentucky."

Battle of Mill Springs Battle Map

The Battle of Mill Springs, January 19, 1862, was small and casualties comparatively few, yet it was the first Union win to give the North a strategic advantage in Kentucky. The weather was miserable and mistakes were many. The location, at the gateway to the south, was a major incursion in the Confederate line, and gave Union forces easy entry into Tennessee and the rest of the South.

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