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Article: Francis Marion: The "Swamp Fox" (Book List & Excerpt)

Francis Marion: The "Swamp Fox" (Book List & Excerpt)

Francis Marion: The "Swamp Fox" (Book List & Excerpt)

One of the most noted partisan leaders of the South during the American Revolution was Francis Marion, who was born near Georgetown, South Carolina, in 1732. Although as a child he was extremely delicate, he grew strong after his twelfth year. In his mature years he was short and slight in frame, but strong and hardy in constitution.

When the British began to swarm into South Carolina he raised and drilled a company of his neighbors and friends known as "Marion's Brigade". These men, without uniforms, without tents, and without pay, were among the bravest and best of the Revolutionary soldiers. Old saws beaten at the country forge furnished them with sabers, and pewter mugs and dishes supplied material for bullets. The diet of these men was simple. Marion, their leader, usually ate hominy and potatoes, and drank water flavored with a little vinegar.

The story is told that one day a British officer entered the camp with a flag of truce. After the conference, Marion, with his usual delicate courtesy, invited him to dinner. We may imagine the officer's surprise when, seated at a log used for a table, they were served to a dinner consisting of roasted sweet potatoes handed to them on pieces of bark. The British officer was still more surprised to learn that at times Marion's men were not fortunate enough to have even potatoes.

"Marion's Brigade" of farmers and hunters seldom numbered more than seventy, and often less than twenty. With this very small force, he annoyed the British beyond measure by rescuing prisoners and by capturing supply trains, foraging parties, and outposts. One day a scout brought in the report that a party of 90 British with 200 prisoners were on the march for Charleston. Waiting for the darkness to conceal his movements, Marion with 30 men sallied out, swooped down upon the British camp, captured, the entire force, and rescued all the American prisoners.

It was the custom of Marion's men when hard pressed by a superior force to scatter, each one for himself, and, dashing headlong into the dense, dark swamps, to meet again at the well-known hiding place. Even while the British were in search of them, they sometimes darted out just as suddenly as they had disappeared, and surprised another British party near at hand.

Historical reprint excerpt from the book "American Heroes & Leaders" written by Wilbur Fisk Gordy in 1907.

Painting "Marion Crossing the Peede" by William Tylee Ranney (1851)


Book List


The Swamp Fox: How Francis Marion Saved the American Revolution by John Oller
Read the ReviewDigital Book (Apple Books) | Audiobook (Apple Books)

The Fate of the Day: The War for America, Fort Ticonderoga to Charleston, 1777-1780 by Rick Atkinson
Digital Book (Apple Books) | Audiobook (Apple Books)

The Life of Francis Marion by William Gilmore Simms
Digital Book (Apple Books) | Audiobook (Apple Books)

The Swamp Fox: Francis Marion's Campaign in the Carolinas 1780 by David R. Higgins
Digital Book (Apple Books)

Leading Like the Swamp Fox: The Leadership Lessons of Francis Marion by Kevin Dougherty and Steven D. Smith
Digital Book (Apple Books)

The Swamp Fox: Lessons in Leadership from the Partisan Campaigns of Francis Marion by Scott D. Aiken
Digital Book (Apple Books)

The Swamp Fox Unleashed: General Francis Marion and Marine Corps Warfighting Doctrine by Daniel Hunter Wilson
Audiobook (Apple Books)

The Life of General Francis Marion: A Celebrated Partisan Officer in the Revolutionary War Against the British and Tories in South Carolina and Georgia by Brigadier General P. Horry and Parson M. L. Weems
Digital Book (Apple Books)