SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  20
American
Revolution
GEORGIA
Loyalists (TORIES)
   American Loyalists, or "Tories" as their opponents called
    them, opposed the Revolution, and many took up arms
    against the rebels.
   What motivated the Loyalists? Most educated Americans,
    whether Loyalist or Revolutionary, accepted John Locke's
    theory of natural rights and limited government. Thus, the
    Loyalists criticized such British actions as the Stamp Act and
    the Coercive Acts.
   Loyalists wanted to pursue peaceful forms of protest
    because they believed that violence would give rise to
    mob rule or tyranny. They also believed that independence
    would mean the loss of economic benefits derived from
    membership in the British mercantile system.
Patriots
   Patriots (also known as American Whigs,
    Revolutionaries, Congress-Men or Rebels) was
    the name the colonists of the British Thirteen
    United Colonies, who rebelled against British
    control during the American Revolution,
    called themselves.
   Americans rejected taxes not imposed by
    their own legislatures. "No taxation without
    representation!" was their slogan—referring to
    the lack of representation in the British
    parliament.
Elijah Clarke

Among the few heroes of the
Revolutionary War from Georgia, Elijah
Clarke was the leader at the Battle of
Kettle Creek.

Clarke's name appears on a petition in
support of the king's government in
1774. However, he subsequently joined
the rebels and, as a militia captain
Elijah Clarke
 All of Georgia and most of South Carolina
  fell to the British in 1780. Elijah Clarke and
  thirty men passed through the Native
  American lands to continue the fight in
  the Carolinas. As a partisan, Clarke led
  frontier guerrillas in inflicting a heavy toll
  against the British and American Loyalists
Elijah Clarke
   After the war Clarke served in the state
    assembly from 1781 to 1790, on the
    commission of confiscated estates, and in the
    state constitutional convention of 1789.
   However, Clarke grew impatient with the
    failures of the national and state government
    to bring peace to the frontier and took
    matters into his own hands. He tried to form
    an independent republic, known today as the
    Trans-Oconee Republic, by seizing Creek
    lands on the Oconee frontier.
Austin Dabney
 Austin Dabney was a slave who became
 a private in the Georgia militia and fought
 against the British during the Revolutionary
 War (1775-83). He was the only African
 American to be granted land by the state
 of Georgia in recognition of his bravery
 and service during the Revolution and
 one of the few to receive a federal
 military pension.
Austin Dabney
   Born in Wake County, North Carolina, in the 1760s,
    Austin Dabney moved with his master, Richard
    Aycock, to Wilkes County, Georgia, in the late 1770s.
    In order to avoid military service himself, Aycock sent
    Dabney to join the Georgia militia as a substitute.
    Serving as an artilleryman under Elijah Clarke,
    Dabney is believed to have been the only black
    soldier to participate in the Battle of Kettle Creek
   He was severely wounded in the thigh during the
    fighting, and Giles Harris, a white soldier, took
    Dabney to his home to care for the wound. Dabney
    remembered Harris's kindness and worked for the
    Harris family for the rest of his life.
Nancy Hart



Georgia's most acclaimed female participant during the
Revolutionary War (1775-83) was Nancy Hart. A devout
patriot, Hart gained notoriety during the revolution for her
determined efforts to rid the area of Tories, English soldiers,
and British sympathizers. Her single-handed efforts against
Tories and Indians in the Broad River frontier, as well as her
covert activities as a patriot spy, have become the stuff of
myth, legend, and local folklore.
Georgia’s signers of the
Declaration of Independence
Button Gwinnett

       Button Gwinnett was one of three Georgia
       signers of the Declaration of Independence. He
       served in Georgia's colonial legislature, in the
       Second Continental Congress, and as president
       of Georgia's Revolutionary Council of Safety.

       In Philadelphia, Gwinnett served on a number of
       committees and supported separation from
       England. He voted for independence in July,
       signed the Declaration of Independence in
       August (along with other Georgians George
       Walton and Lyman Hall), and soon afterward
       returned to Georgia, where he became
       embroiled in political controversy.
Button Gwinnett
   Gwinnett proposed a military foray into British East Florida, a
    defensive measure that he argued would secure Georgia's
    southern border. McIntosh and his brother George (who
    had opposed Gwinnett's election as president and
    subsequently had been arrested for treason) condemned
    the scheme as politically motivated.
   McIntosh was furious. He publicly denounced Gwinnett in
    the harshest terms, and Gwinnett challenged him to a duel.
    Though each man shot the other, only Gwinnett's wound
    proved fatal. He died on May 19, 1777, and was buried in
    Savannah's Colonial Park Cemetery, though the exact
    location of his grave is unknown. Gwinnett County was
    named for him when it was established in 1818.
Lyman Hall
             Lyman Hall was one of three Georgians
             to sign the Declaration of
             Independence. He served as a
             representative to the Continental
             Congress and as governor of Georgia
             (1783-84).
             An active and early leader in the
             Revolutionary movement, he was
             elected to represent St. John's Parish in
             the Second Continental Congress in
             1775. He participated in debates in
             Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, that year
             but did not vote, as he did not
             represent the entire colony. A year
             later, as an official representative of
             Georgia, Hall signed the Declaration
Lyman Hall
 InJanuary 1783 he was elected governor.
  During his administration he had to deal
  with a number of difficult issues, including
  confiscated estates, frontier problems with
  Loyalists and Indians, and a bankrupt and
  depleted treasury. One highlight,
  however, was the role he played in
  helping to establish the University of
  Georgia in 1785.
George Walton
         George Walton was one of three
         Georgians to sign the Declaration of
         Independence. He served in numerous
         capacities for the state of Georgia
         after the American Revolution.
         By the eve of the American Revolution
         he was one of the most successful
         lawyers in Georgia. Active in Georgia's
         Revolutionary government, he was
         elected to the Provincial Congress and
         then became president of the Council
         of Safety in 1775. In 1776 he served as a
         delegate to the Second Continental
         Congress in Philadelphia, where on July
         4 he signed the Declaration
George Walton
 Returning  to Savannah, Walton was
 captured during the 1778 British assault on
 the city, led by Archibald Campbell. After
 his exchange he returned to Georgia and
 was elected governor in 1779, having
 switched allegiances from the
 conservative to the radical faction. He
 served for two controversial months
 before reelection to Congress.
Battle Of Kettle Creek




Kettle Creek flows into the Little River near the Tyrone
community in Wilkes County. It likely takes its name
from a local fish trap, called a kittle.
The most important event to occur at Kettle Creek,
however, took place on Sunday, February 14, 1779. On
that morning 600 American supporters of the British
cause, popularly known as Loyalists or Tories,
encamped atop a hill in a bend of the creek.
Battle of Kettle Creek
   The Battle of Kettle Creek provided the rebel
    cause with a victory, however small, in the
    midst of a string of much larger defeats. The
    British had expected thousands of loyal
    southerners to rally to their flag and restore
    the whole South to the king.
   After Kettle Creek, British leaders should have
    realized that practical Loyalist military support
    in the South, if it ever existed, had
    disappeared.
Siege of Savannah
   Governor Sir James Wright returned to
    Georgia on July 14, 1779, and announced the
    restoration of Georgia to the crown, with the
    privilege of exemption from taxation. Thus
    Georgia became the first, and ultimately the
    only one, of the thirteen states in rebellion to
    be restored to royal allegiance. Governor
    Wright had hardly settled to his duties when
    on September 3, 1779, a French fleet of
    twenty-five ships appeared unexpectedly off
    the Georgia coast.
Siege of Savannah
 Count Charles Henri d'Estaing intended to
 oblige George Washington by stopping
 off on his way back to France to
 recapture Savannah. He disembarked his
 army of 4,000-5,000 men at Beaulieu on
 the Vernon River and proceeded to
 besiege Savannah.

Contenu connexe

Tendances

Immigration and dollar diplomacy an overview
Immigration and  dollar diplomacy   an overviewImmigration and  dollar diplomacy   an overview
Immigration and dollar diplomacy an overviewdaltonj
 
APUSH Period 4 textbook
APUSH Period 4 textbookAPUSH Period 4 textbook
APUSH Period 4 textbookmgdean
 
Period 5 textbook
Period 5 textbookPeriod 5 textbook
Period 5 textbookmgdean
 
American revolution power point
American revolution power pointAmerican revolution power point
American revolution power pointmatsu1sn
 
Progressive Presidential Leadership
Progressive Presidential Leadership Progressive Presidential Leadership
Progressive Presidential Leadership history_teacher25
 
American Revolution.ppt
American Revolution.pptAmerican Revolution.ppt
American Revolution.pptbbrutto
 
Abc book Social Studies
Abc book  Social StudiesAbc book  Social Studies
Abc book Social Studies0millsaz
 
Part 2 California and the Civil War
Part 2 California and the Civil WarPart 2 California and the Civil War
Part 2 California and the Civil WarTricia Fonseca
 
AmeriComic- American Revolution Vocab
AmeriComic- American Revolution VocabAmeriComic- American Revolution Vocab
AmeriComic- American Revolution VocabHector Santiago
 
American Revolution
American RevolutionAmerican Revolution
American Revolutiondonna46
 
The Nicaraguan Revolution
The Nicaraguan RevolutionThe Nicaraguan Revolution
The Nicaraguan Revolutionnoblitt
 
History Civil War Terms
History Civil War TermsHistory Civil War Terms
History Civil War Termsalahol
 
Looking Westward
Looking WestwardLooking Westward
Looking Westwardkbeacom
 
America becomesanimperialpower
America becomesanimperialpowerAmerica becomesanimperialpower
America becomesanimperialpowerSandra Waters
 

Tendances (20)

Immigration and dollar diplomacy an overview
Immigration and  dollar diplomacy   an overviewImmigration and  dollar diplomacy   an overview
Immigration and dollar diplomacy an overview
 
APUSH Period 4 textbook
APUSH Period 4 textbookAPUSH Period 4 textbook
APUSH Period 4 textbook
 
American revolution ppt
American revolution pptAmerican revolution ppt
American revolution ppt
 
Period 5 textbook
Period 5 textbookPeriod 5 textbook
Period 5 textbook
 
American revolution power point
American revolution power pointAmerican revolution power point
American revolution power point
 
Progressive Presidential Leadership
Progressive Presidential Leadership Progressive Presidential Leadership
Progressive Presidential Leadership
 
American Revolution.ppt
American Revolution.pptAmerican Revolution.ppt
American Revolution.ppt
 
Abc book Social Studies
Abc book  Social StudiesAbc book  Social Studies
Abc book Social Studies
 
Nicaragua: Contras
Nicaragua: ContrasNicaragua: Contras
Nicaragua: Contras
 
The Presidents Of The United States R
The Presidents Of The United States RThe Presidents Of The United States R
The Presidents Of The United States R
 
Part 2 California and the Civil War
Part 2 California and the Civil WarPart 2 California and the Civil War
Part 2 California and the Civil War
 
AmeriComic- American Revolution Vocab
AmeriComic- American Revolution VocabAmeriComic- American Revolution Vocab
AmeriComic- American Revolution Vocab
 
American Revolution
American RevolutionAmerican Revolution
American Revolution
 
The Nicaraguan Revolution
The Nicaraguan RevolutionThe Nicaraguan Revolution
The Nicaraguan Revolution
 
Georgia final
Georgia finalGeorgia final
Georgia final
 
The American Revolution
The American RevolutionThe American Revolution
The American Revolution
 
Dollars & Presidents
Dollars & PresidentsDollars & Presidents
Dollars & Presidents
 
History Civil War Terms
History Civil War TermsHistory Civil War Terms
History Civil War Terms
 
Looking Westward
Looking WestwardLooking Westward
Looking Westward
 
America becomesanimperialpower
America becomesanimperialpowerAmerica becomesanimperialpower
America becomesanimperialpower
 

En vedette

Literature during the American Revolution
Literature during the American RevolutionLiterature during the American Revolution
Literature during the American RevolutionVictoria Arthur
 
Overview of Early American Literature (English 244)
Overview of Early American Literature (English 244)Overview of Early American Literature (English 244)
Overview of Early American Literature (English 244)Ariadne Rooney
 
Literature during the american period
Literature during the american periodLiterature during the american period
Literature during the american periodschool
 
History of American Literature
History of American LiteratureHistory of American Literature
History of American LiteratureKhim Dela Cruz
 

En vedette (6)

Literature during the American Revolution
Literature during the American RevolutionLiterature during the American Revolution
Literature during the American Revolution
 
Overview of Early American Literature (English 244)
Overview of Early American Literature (English 244)Overview of Early American Literature (English 244)
Overview of Early American Literature (English 244)
 
American literature
American literatureAmerican literature
American literature
 
Literature during the american period
Literature during the american periodLiterature during the american period
Literature during the american period
 
History of American Literature
History of American LiteratureHistory of American Literature
History of American Literature
 
Age of reason
Age of reasonAge of reason
Age of reason
 

Similaire à American revolution important people

Hogan's History- War for Independence
Hogan's History- War for Independence Hogan's History- War for Independence
Hogan's History- War for Independence William Hogan
 
10 george washington
10 george washington10 george washington
10 george washingtonRano Biswas
 
10 Worst American Presidents
10 Worst American Presidents10 Worst American Presidents
10 Worst American PresidentsHistoryExpert006
 
Resisting the Professional MilitaryDuring the American Revol.docx
Resisting the Professional MilitaryDuring the American Revol.docxResisting the Professional MilitaryDuring the American Revol.docx
Resisting the Professional MilitaryDuring the American Revol.docxronak56
 
the american revolution 1775 1781 powerpoint for all lessons!
the american revolution 1775 1781 powerpoint for all lessons!the american revolution 1775 1781 powerpoint for all lessons!
the american revolution 1775 1781 powerpoint for all lessons!christinadoyle89
 
Ap US Unit 5 Study Guide
Ap US Unit 5 Study GuideAp US Unit 5 Study Guide
Ap US Unit 5 Study Guideguest702db95
 
Lincoln, War, and the Slaughter of the American Working Class.docx
Lincoln, War, and the Slaughter of the American Working Class.docxLincoln, War, and the Slaughter of the American Working Class.docx
Lincoln, War, and the Slaughter of the American Working Class.docxsmile790243
 
Chapter 8 power point
Chapter 8 power pointChapter 8 power point
Chapter 8 power pointtcshistory
 
Social studies abc book
Social studies abc bookSocial studies abc book
Social studies abc bookMarcie Stewart
 
The civil war
The civil warThe civil war
The civil warRob
 
Continental army
Continental armyContinental army
Continental armysunshine166
 
Social studies chapter 4 powerpoint
Social studies chapter 4 powerpointSocial studies chapter 4 powerpoint
Social studies chapter 4 powerpointSlugs3511
 
The American revolutionary war (1775 1783) (II)
The American revolutionary war (1775 1783) (II)The American revolutionary war (1775 1783) (II)
The American revolutionary war (1775 1783) (II)cati1garcia
 
The Real Causes of America's Wars, Lecture 1 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
The Real Causes of America's Wars, Lecture 1 with David Gordon - Mises AcademyThe Real Causes of America's Wars, Lecture 1 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
The Real Causes of America's Wars, Lecture 1 with David Gordon - Mises AcademyThe Ludwig von Mises Institute
 
How the america's changed
How the america's changedHow the america's changed
How the america's changeddr_techmac
 

Similaire à American revolution important people (19)

Hogan's History- War for Independence
Hogan's History- War for Independence Hogan's History- War for Independence
Hogan's History- War for Independence
 
10 george washington
10 george washington10 george washington
10 george washington
 
10 Worst American Presidents
10 Worst American Presidents10 Worst American Presidents
10 Worst American Presidents
 
Resisting the Professional MilitaryDuring the American Revol.docx
Resisting the Professional MilitaryDuring the American Revol.docxResisting the Professional MilitaryDuring the American Revol.docx
Resisting the Professional MilitaryDuring the American Revol.docx
 
Missouri compromise
Missouri compromiseMissouri compromise
Missouri compromise
 
the american revolution 1775 1781 powerpoint for all lessons!
the american revolution 1775 1781 powerpoint for all lessons!the american revolution 1775 1781 powerpoint for all lessons!
the american revolution 1775 1781 powerpoint for all lessons!
 
Ap US Unit 5 Study Guide
Ap US Unit 5 Study GuideAp US Unit 5 Study Guide
Ap US Unit 5 Study Guide
 
Lincoln, War, and the Slaughter of the American Working Class.docx
Lincoln, War, and the Slaughter of the American Working Class.docxLincoln, War, and the Slaughter of the American Working Class.docx
Lincoln, War, and the Slaughter of the American Working Class.docx
 
Chapter 8 power point
Chapter 8 power pointChapter 8 power point
Chapter 8 power point
 
Chapter 8
Chapter 8Chapter 8
Chapter 8
 
Social studies abc book
Social studies abc bookSocial studies abc book
Social studies abc book
 
The civil war
The civil warThe civil war
The civil war
 
Continental army
Continental armyContinental army
Continental army
 
Social studies chapter 4 powerpoint
Social studies chapter 4 powerpointSocial studies chapter 4 powerpoint
Social studies chapter 4 powerpoint
 
Research paper
Research paperResearch paper
Research paper
 
The American revolutionary war (1775 1783) (II)
The American revolutionary war (1775 1783) (II)The American revolutionary war (1775 1783) (II)
The American revolutionary war (1775 1783) (II)
 
The Real Causes of America's Wars, Lecture 1 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
The Real Causes of America's Wars, Lecture 1 with David Gordon - Mises AcademyThe Real Causes of America's Wars, Lecture 1 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
The Real Causes of America's Wars, Lecture 1 with David Gordon - Mises Academy
 
War of Independence
War of IndependenceWar of Independence
War of Independence
 
How the america's changed
How the america's changedHow the america's changed
How the america's changed
 

Plus de dstnrainey

Word problems with integers
Word problems with integersWord problems with integers
Word problems with integersdstnrainey
 
Unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
Unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cardsUnit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
Unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cardsdstnrainey
 
Ac 7 unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
Ac 7 unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cardsAc 7 unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
Ac 7 unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cardsdstnrainey
 
Unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
Unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cardsUnit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
Unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cardsdstnrainey
 
Modern civil rights 2013
Modern civil rights   2013Modern civil rights   2013
Modern civil rights 2013dstnrainey
 
Post wwii development
Post wwii developmentPost wwii development
Post wwii developmentdstnrainey
 
Post reconstruction the new south (3)
Post reconstruction   the new south (3)Post reconstruction   the new south (3)
Post reconstruction the new south (3)dstnrainey
 
Ww1 depression
Ww1 depressionWw1 depression
Ww1 depressiondstnrainey
 
Civil war 2013
Civil war   2013Civil war   2013
Civil war 2013dstnrainey
 
Civil war national and ga - 2013
Civil war national and ga - 2013Civil war national and ga - 2013
Civil war national and ga - 2013dstnrainey
 
Civil war 2013
Civil war   2013Civil war   2013
Civil war 2013dstnrainey
 
Causes of the civil war 2013 (3)
Causes of the civil war   2013 (3)Causes of the civil war   2013 (3)
Causes of the civil war 2013 (3)dstnrainey
 
Ga development (3)
Ga development (3)Ga development (3)
Ga development (3)dstnrainey
 
Articles of confederation
Articles of confederationArticles of confederation
Articles of confederationdstnrainey
 
Georgia studies review 2
Georgia studies review 2Georgia studies review 2
Georgia studies review 2dstnrainey
 
Causes of american revolution
Causes of american revolutionCauses of american revolution
Causes of american revolutiondstnrainey
 
Colonial powerpoint (3)
Colonial powerpoint (3)Colonial powerpoint (3)
Colonial powerpoint (3)dstnrainey
 
Age of exploration modified
Age of exploration modifiedAge of exploration modified
Age of exploration modifieddstnrainey
 
Unit 7 exploration and colonization ppt (3)
Unit 7 exploration and colonization ppt (3)Unit 7 exploration and colonization ppt (3)
Unit 7 exploration and colonization ppt (3)dstnrainey
 

Plus de dstnrainey (20)

Word problems with integers
Word problems with integersWord problems with integers
Word problems with integers
 
Unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
Unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cardsUnit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
Unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
 
Ac 7 unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
Ac 7 unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cardsAc 7 unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
Ac 7 unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
 
Unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
Unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cardsUnit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
Unit 1 illustrated vocabulary cards
 
Modern civil rights 2013
Modern civil rights   2013Modern civil rights   2013
Modern civil rights 2013
 
Post wwii development
Post wwii developmentPost wwii development
Post wwii development
 
Post reconstruction the new south (3)
Post reconstruction   the new south (3)Post reconstruction   the new south (3)
Post reconstruction the new south (3)
 
Ww1 depression
Ww1 depressionWw1 depression
Ww1 depression
 
WWII
WWIIWWII
WWII
 
Civil war 2013
Civil war   2013Civil war   2013
Civil war 2013
 
Civil war national and ga - 2013
Civil war national and ga - 2013Civil war national and ga - 2013
Civil war national and ga - 2013
 
Civil war 2013
Civil war   2013Civil war   2013
Civil war 2013
 
Causes of the civil war 2013 (3)
Causes of the civil war   2013 (3)Causes of the civil war   2013 (3)
Causes of the civil war 2013 (3)
 
Ga development (3)
Ga development (3)Ga development (3)
Ga development (3)
 
Articles of confederation
Articles of confederationArticles of confederation
Articles of confederation
 
Georgia studies review 2
Georgia studies review 2Georgia studies review 2
Georgia studies review 2
 
Causes of american revolution
Causes of american revolutionCauses of american revolution
Causes of american revolution
 
Colonial powerpoint (3)
Colonial powerpoint (3)Colonial powerpoint (3)
Colonial powerpoint (3)
 
Age of exploration modified
Age of exploration modifiedAge of exploration modified
Age of exploration modified
 
Unit 7 exploration and colonization ppt (3)
Unit 7 exploration and colonization ppt (3)Unit 7 exploration and colonization ppt (3)
Unit 7 exploration and colonization ppt (3)
 

American revolution important people

  • 2. Loyalists (TORIES)  American Loyalists, or "Tories" as their opponents called them, opposed the Revolution, and many took up arms against the rebels.  What motivated the Loyalists? Most educated Americans, whether Loyalist or Revolutionary, accepted John Locke's theory of natural rights and limited government. Thus, the Loyalists criticized such British actions as the Stamp Act and the Coercive Acts.  Loyalists wanted to pursue peaceful forms of protest because they believed that violence would give rise to mob rule or tyranny. They also believed that independence would mean the loss of economic benefits derived from membership in the British mercantile system.
  • 3. Patriots  Patriots (also known as American Whigs, Revolutionaries, Congress-Men or Rebels) was the name the colonists of the British Thirteen United Colonies, who rebelled against British control during the American Revolution, called themselves.  Americans rejected taxes not imposed by their own legislatures. "No taxation without representation!" was their slogan—referring to the lack of representation in the British parliament.
  • 4. Elijah Clarke Among the few heroes of the Revolutionary War from Georgia, Elijah Clarke was the leader at the Battle of Kettle Creek. Clarke's name appears on a petition in support of the king's government in 1774. However, he subsequently joined the rebels and, as a militia captain
  • 5. Elijah Clarke  All of Georgia and most of South Carolina fell to the British in 1780. Elijah Clarke and thirty men passed through the Native American lands to continue the fight in the Carolinas. As a partisan, Clarke led frontier guerrillas in inflicting a heavy toll against the British and American Loyalists
  • 6. Elijah Clarke  After the war Clarke served in the state assembly from 1781 to 1790, on the commission of confiscated estates, and in the state constitutional convention of 1789.  However, Clarke grew impatient with the failures of the national and state government to bring peace to the frontier and took matters into his own hands. He tried to form an independent republic, known today as the Trans-Oconee Republic, by seizing Creek lands on the Oconee frontier.
  • 7. Austin Dabney  Austin Dabney was a slave who became a private in the Georgia militia and fought against the British during the Revolutionary War (1775-83). He was the only African American to be granted land by the state of Georgia in recognition of his bravery and service during the Revolution and one of the few to receive a federal military pension.
  • 8. Austin Dabney  Born in Wake County, North Carolina, in the 1760s, Austin Dabney moved with his master, Richard Aycock, to Wilkes County, Georgia, in the late 1770s. In order to avoid military service himself, Aycock sent Dabney to join the Georgia militia as a substitute. Serving as an artilleryman under Elijah Clarke, Dabney is believed to have been the only black soldier to participate in the Battle of Kettle Creek  He was severely wounded in the thigh during the fighting, and Giles Harris, a white soldier, took Dabney to his home to care for the wound. Dabney remembered Harris's kindness and worked for the Harris family for the rest of his life.
  • 9. Nancy Hart Georgia's most acclaimed female participant during the Revolutionary War (1775-83) was Nancy Hart. A devout patriot, Hart gained notoriety during the revolution for her determined efforts to rid the area of Tories, English soldiers, and British sympathizers. Her single-handed efforts against Tories and Indians in the Broad River frontier, as well as her covert activities as a patriot spy, have become the stuff of myth, legend, and local folklore.
  • 10. Georgia’s signers of the Declaration of Independence
  • 11. Button Gwinnett Button Gwinnett was one of three Georgia signers of the Declaration of Independence. He served in Georgia's colonial legislature, in the Second Continental Congress, and as president of Georgia's Revolutionary Council of Safety. In Philadelphia, Gwinnett served on a number of committees and supported separation from England. He voted for independence in July, signed the Declaration of Independence in August (along with other Georgians George Walton and Lyman Hall), and soon afterward returned to Georgia, where he became embroiled in political controversy.
  • 12. Button Gwinnett  Gwinnett proposed a military foray into British East Florida, a defensive measure that he argued would secure Georgia's southern border. McIntosh and his brother George (who had opposed Gwinnett's election as president and subsequently had been arrested for treason) condemned the scheme as politically motivated.  McIntosh was furious. He publicly denounced Gwinnett in the harshest terms, and Gwinnett challenged him to a duel. Though each man shot the other, only Gwinnett's wound proved fatal. He died on May 19, 1777, and was buried in Savannah's Colonial Park Cemetery, though the exact location of his grave is unknown. Gwinnett County was named for him when it was established in 1818.
  • 13. Lyman Hall Lyman Hall was one of three Georgians to sign the Declaration of Independence. He served as a representative to the Continental Congress and as governor of Georgia (1783-84). An active and early leader in the Revolutionary movement, he was elected to represent St. John's Parish in the Second Continental Congress in 1775. He participated in debates in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, that year but did not vote, as he did not represent the entire colony. A year later, as an official representative of Georgia, Hall signed the Declaration
  • 14. Lyman Hall  InJanuary 1783 he was elected governor. During his administration he had to deal with a number of difficult issues, including confiscated estates, frontier problems with Loyalists and Indians, and a bankrupt and depleted treasury. One highlight, however, was the role he played in helping to establish the University of Georgia in 1785.
  • 15. George Walton George Walton was one of three Georgians to sign the Declaration of Independence. He served in numerous capacities for the state of Georgia after the American Revolution. By the eve of the American Revolution he was one of the most successful lawyers in Georgia. Active in Georgia's Revolutionary government, he was elected to the Provincial Congress and then became president of the Council of Safety in 1775. In 1776 he served as a delegate to the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia, where on July 4 he signed the Declaration
  • 16. George Walton  Returning to Savannah, Walton was captured during the 1778 British assault on the city, led by Archibald Campbell. After his exchange he returned to Georgia and was elected governor in 1779, having switched allegiances from the conservative to the radical faction. He served for two controversial months before reelection to Congress.
  • 17. Battle Of Kettle Creek Kettle Creek flows into the Little River near the Tyrone community in Wilkes County. It likely takes its name from a local fish trap, called a kittle. The most important event to occur at Kettle Creek, however, took place on Sunday, February 14, 1779. On that morning 600 American supporters of the British cause, popularly known as Loyalists or Tories, encamped atop a hill in a bend of the creek.
  • 18. Battle of Kettle Creek  The Battle of Kettle Creek provided the rebel cause with a victory, however small, in the midst of a string of much larger defeats. The British had expected thousands of loyal southerners to rally to their flag and restore the whole South to the king.  After Kettle Creek, British leaders should have realized that practical Loyalist military support in the South, if it ever existed, had disappeared.
  • 19. Siege of Savannah  Governor Sir James Wright returned to Georgia on July 14, 1779, and announced the restoration of Georgia to the crown, with the privilege of exemption from taxation. Thus Georgia became the first, and ultimately the only one, of the thirteen states in rebellion to be restored to royal allegiance. Governor Wright had hardly settled to his duties when on September 3, 1779, a French fleet of twenty-five ships appeared unexpectedly off the Georgia coast.
  • 20. Siege of Savannah  Count Charles Henri d'Estaing intended to oblige George Washington by stopping off on his way back to France to recapture Savannah. He disembarked his army of 4,000-5,000 men at Beaulieu on the Vernon River and proceeded to besiege Savannah.