Browse Items (36 total)

  • Collection: Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail

Yellow Mountain Gap

Yellow Mountain Road<br />
<br />
Photo by Randell Jones
The Overmountain Men marched over the mountain barrier following a narrow path known as "Bright's Trace." It followed a route used by Indians and created over centuries by migrations of deer, elk, and buffalo to cross the mountains. That path offered…

Gillespie Gap
(Museum of North Carolina Minerals, National Park Service)

Museum of North Carolina Minerals, National Park Service<br />
<br />
Photo by Randell Jones
After camping along the North Toe River at Grassy Creek, the Overmountain patriots marched up Grassy Creek on September 29 to reach the crest of the Blue Ridge. From Gillespie Gap, they could look far into the Catawba River valley. They faced there a…

Biggerstaff's Old Fields

Biggerstaff Hanging Tree historic marker<br />
<br />
Photo by Randell Jones
On Friday, October 13, 1780, the patriot force and its loyalist prisoners marched six miles to descend upon the plantation of loyalist Captain Aaron Biggerstaff. He had been mortally wounded during the battle and left for dead. On the 14th, the…

Brittain Church Graveyard

Brittain Church<br />
<br />
Photo by Randell Jones
The patriot militiamen passed through Gilbert Town on October 11, 1780, during their withdrawal from the battlefield, They had not only 800 prisoners to tend to, but their own wounded as well. The Presbyterian community around Brittain Church along…

Grave of Colonel James Williams

Grave of Colonel James Williams<br />
<br />
Photos by Randell Jones
Colonel James Williams was the highest ranking officer killed at the Battle of Kings Mountain. He was wounded in the last minutes of the battle on October 7, and tended by his son, Daniel. His men carried him carefully on their withdrawal on October…

Kings Mountain National Military Park

Kings Mountain National Military Park<br />
<br />
Photo by Randell Jones
After crossing the Broad River at Cherokee Ford, the mounted patriot militiamen gathered information from locals about where Major Ferguson and his loyalist army might me. A young woman shared that she had just that morning taken eggs to the major's…

Cherokee Ford

Broad River at the Cherokee Ford<br />
<br />
Photo by Randell Jones
During the morning of October 7, 1780, the 900 mounted patriot militiamen who had left The Cowpens late at night, arrived at the Broad River. Believing that Ferguson might well have set an ambush for them across the river, they rode downstream to the…

The Cowpens

Historic Green River Road <br />
<br />
Photo by Randell Jones
On October 6, 1780, the mounted backcountry patriot militia rode hard from the ford at Green River for 22 miles, arriving at The Cowpens, a place for fattening cattle before taking them to market. It was owned by one Saunders, a loyalist. There, the…

Ford at Green River (Alexander's Ford)

Green River<br />
<br />
Photo by Randell Jones
On the evening of October 5, 1780, the patriot militiamen reached the Green River but had lost the trail for Patrick Ferguson's retreating army. Nevertheless, good fortune intervened. A large band of South Carolina militia had withdrawn into North…

Gilbert Town

Gilbert Town marker<br />
<br />
Photo by Randell Jones
Gilbert Town was a small frontier settlement occupied at different times by patriot and British forces. British Lt. Anthony Allaire wrote in his diary: "This town contains one dwelling house, one barn, a blacksmith's shop, and some out-houses…