Georgia: Wilkes County: Biography of Elijah Clarke ==================================================================== USGENWEB NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, data may be used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or for presentation by other persons or organizations. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material for purposes other than stated above must obtain the written consent of the file contributor. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store this file permanently for free access. This file was contributed by: Barbara Walker Winge Barbarawinge@yahoo.com ==================================================================== ELIJAH CLARKE Elijah Clarke was one of the heroes of the Revolution. He was born in North Carolina probably in 1733, and when about forty years of age came with his family to Georgia and settled in Wilkes County. Several other families came at the same time, bringing their cattle and horses with them, and such household furniture as they could easily transport in wagon and carts. The pioneers' homes were on the wild frontier, with the villages of the Indians not far away, from which the restless savages, already stirred up by British and Tories, threatened at any time to descend upon the settlements of the whites. Clarke and his neighbors in Wilkes County had to be on their guard constantly to defend their lives and protect their property. Clarke was a leader in the neighbor. His spirit was bold and fearless, his mind was alert, and he had no love for the British and Tories. There were few schools in those days, and the frontiersmen knew little of books. They knew much of the forest, and were learned in the craft of the pioneer. Clarke, like many another, had to battle with the wilderness and had to meet the stern duties of life on the frontier. He became a bold fighter, and relentless pursuer of the enemies of his country. It was said that the women always asked, "Is Clarke going to lead the fight?" If the answer was Yes, they felt safe. When in battle, he became so earnest and so reckless, and fought so fearlessly in hand-to-hand conflict, that his own soldiers would stop to watch him fight. He was so self-willed and confident that he found it hard to be obedient to authority. A story is told of him that he once prosecuted a man for stealing a horse. The jury decided the man was not guilty, but Clarke was convinced otherwise, and said, "If the jury will not hang him, I will." He was about to take the man and hang him to a tree himself, but others interfered and persuaded Clarke to let the man go. When Clarke heard that a little army was gathering at Savannah to oppose the British, he offered his services and was appointed captain of a company to guard some wagons loaded with prisoners. On the way to Savannah, and while crossing a small stream, they were attacked by Indians, but after a severe conflict the savages were driven away. Clarke and his troops went with General Howe on the expedition against St. Augustine. In a battle with the British he was badly wounded, and for a long time was unable to be with his command. He went to his home in Wilkes County, where he recovered from his wounds, and was soon in the field gathering men to fight Colonel Boyd, a noted Tories, at Kettle Creek. For a time, Georgia was completely in the hands of the British. Mounted soldiers secured the country above Augusta and out towards Wilkes County. Whenever the few inhabitants that were left refused to take the oath of allegiance, their homes, barns, and grain were burned. The torch was likewise applied to the homes of those who were absent in the army or had fled to Carolina for safety. The band of patriots that had been assembled under John Dooly, Andrew Pickens, and Elijah Clarke, watched the movements of the enemy as best they could. The Tory Colonel Boyd, led a band of eight hundred marauders from the Carolinas into upper Georgia. He was bent on destroying property, stealing horses, and terrifying the people. His march was a path of destruction by fire and sword. When he entered Georgia, the patriots followed and overtook him in Wilkes County. Boyd seemed unconscious of the approach of the Americans, and in the early morning of February 14, 1779, had halted at a farm on Kettle Creek and turned his horse out to forage on the grass and weeds along the edge of a swamp. His men had been on short rations for three days, and were killing some cattle and parching corn. The Americans advanced to the attack. Boyd hastily gathered his men into line of battle, and posted them behind some fallen timber and a fence. Boyd fought with much bravery, but was overpowered and driven back. While retreating, he fell, mortally wounded, pierced by three balls. The Americans rushed upon the British, driving them into the swamp and capturing their horses, baggage, and arms. The defeat was complete. The Tories scattered in every direction after the death of their leader, some going into Florida, some fleeing to the Indians, and others finding their way to Augusta While Clarke was in the field fighting the wandering hands of British and Tories, his own home was left unprotected. One day a party of these marauders came to his house and finding out to whom it belonged, burned it to the ground, with all the furniture it contained, leaving his wife and children to find what shelter they could. Upon another occasion his wife, who was riding a horse in search of her husband near the North Carolina line, was stopped by a party of British, and made to dismount and pursue her journey on foot, while they made off with the horse. This made Clarke still more determined to rid his country of its enemies. With a little band of patriots, sometimes several hundred and then again a mere handful, he kept up a guerrilla warfare against the British and Tories in the upper part of Georgia. He was nearly always in the saddle, going quickly from place to place, seldom sleeping in a house, hiding in swamps and deep forests, suffering hunger and thirst, and enduring all kinds of hardships. His name became a terror to the enemy. He would strike them whenever he could, and would show them no mercy. Augusta was in the hands of the British, and Clarke declared he would never rest until they were driven out. From the day the Tory Colonel Brown took possession of it and hoisted the British flag, Clark began gathering recruits to attack him. Brown had been living in Augusta when the people first rebelled against the king, and had given such offense to the citizens that he was tarred and feathered and carried through the streets in cart by an angry mob. He had vowed vengeance against all patriots. Clarke gathered his forces and camped before the town, and resolved never to leave until the British flag came down, and upper Georgia was freed of the presence of its enemies. Colonel Elijah Clarke succeeded in raising three hundred and fifty men to move against Augusta. To these were added eighty men from South Carolina. The army assembled at Soap Creek, forty miles above Augusta, and quietly marched upon that city. On the 14th of September, 1780, the army appeared before Augusta, to the surprise of Brown Clarke attacked an Indian camp at Hawk's Gully, on the west of town, and drove the Indians away. He captured about seventy prisoners and a large lot of Indian presents. The Indians and the British, under Brown, retired to a trading post called the "White House," which they prepared to defend. Under cover of the night Brown threw up earthworks around the house and filled in the spaces between the weather boarding and the plastering with sand and clay to make the house proof against bullets. Clarke laid siege to the house, and the firing was constant. The water supply of the British was cut off, and the suffering of the wounded men became intense. Brown himself, wounded in the body, was in great agony, but his courage never forsook him. He had already sent messengers into South Carolina asking for relief. At the end of four days Clarke heard that a force of British had appeared on the opposite side of the Savannah River. Clarke realized that he could not longer maintain the siege, and at once withdrew, leaving some badly wounded soldiers. He had no means of moving them and was obliged to abandon them to the mercy of the British. What this mercy was, is shown by the fact that Brown had thirteen of them hanged to the staircase in the "White House" in full view of his bed, where he lay wounded, in order that he might see their expiring agonies. Their bodies were given to the Indians, who, after scalping and mutilating them, threw them into the river. The other prisoners were given to the Indians, who tortured them to death. Ref: Evans, Lawton B., A. M., FIRST LESSONS IN GEORGIA HISTORY, 1913, American Book Company, New York.