Low Country/Backcountry: The Volatile Geopolitics of Revolutionary South Carolina
November 1775–December 1775
This chapter deals with the rise of the radical Whig faction and how they, under the leadership of William Henry Drayton, antagonized the governor by trying to blockade the port, thus precipitating the opening shots of the war in South Carolina. Moreover, this chapter demonstrates how tenuous the position of the Whigs was and how they simultaneously attempted to pacify insurgent white settlers and hostile Cherokee Indians in the backcountry. As the chapter title suggests, it deals with the volatile geopolitics of Revolutionary South Carolina, as well as the regional and class divisions that plagued the province during the fall and winter of 1775.
Keywords: gunpowder, Tories, backcountry, Low Country, Cherokee Indians, Richard Pearis, William Henry Drayton, Battle of Hog Island Creek, Blockade
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