The World of Thomas Jeremiah: Charles Town on the Eve of the American Revolution
William R. Ryan
Published:
2010
Online ISBN:
9780199775774
Print ISBN:
9780195387285
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The World of Thomas Jeremiah: Charles Town on the Eve of the American Revolution
William R. Ryan
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William R. Ryan
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69–84
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Published:
April 2010
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Ryan, William R., '4 Charles Town Harbor: September 1775–October 1775', The World of Thomas Jeremiah: Charles Town on the Eve of the American Revolution (
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Abstract
This chapter illustrates what Charles Town was like in the wake of Jeremiah's execution. Lord Campbell, fearing for his life, was forced to abandon his post and abscond to a dilapidated sloop in the harbor. This was a crucial moment, marking the official end of royal government in South Carolina. In that instant, Campbell had officially joined the ranks of other royal governors who had abandoned their capitals earlier that summer, including Lord Dunmore of Virginia, who had taken refuge aboard the HMS Fowey on Thursday, June 8, and North Carolina's Josiah Martin, who had escaped to the HMS Cruizer on Saturday, July 15. Patriots, quick to interpret Campbell's move, likened the governor's actions to those of King James II, who had fled in 1689 with the Great Seal of England. James II had long symbolized weak and unfit rule and was regarded as a traitor in the eyes of Whigs—who took delight in the fact that he pusillanimously “abdicated” the British throne to William of Orange. Campbell was now in a precarious position. His decaying vessel, along with the Cherokee and the Swallow packet, represented the last vestiges of the king's authority in the province.
Keywords: maritime history, Lord William Campbell, Charleston Harbor, Blockade, HMS Cherokee
Subject
Civil War and Reconstruction US History Southern US History US Colonial and Revolutionary History African American History
Collection: Oxford Scholarship Online
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