Browse Items (36 total)

Grave of Colonel James Williams

Grave of Colonel James Williams<br />
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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…

Biggerstaff's Old Fields

Biggerstaff Hanging Tree historic marker<br />
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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…

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

Museum of North Carolina Minerals, National Park Service<br />
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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…

Yellow Mountain Gap

Yellow Mountain Road<br />
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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…

Shelving Rock

Shelving Rock overhang<br />
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Photo by Randell Jones
On the evening of September 26, after completing their first day's march, the Overmountain Men arrived at the foot of the Appalachian Mountains. They camped along the Doe River at a meadow known as "the Resting Place" and stored their gunpowder…

Sycamore Shoals at Fort Watauga

Sycamore Shoals State Historic Area entrance<br />
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Photo by Randell Jones
Responding to the call for a muster, the militiamen from North Carolina's overmountain region and those from southwest Virginia gathered on September 25, 1780 in the flats adjacent to Sycamore Shoals and next to Fort Watauga.

During the muster,…

Grave of Mary Patton

Grave of Mary Patton<br />
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Photo by Randell Jones
Mary McKeehan Patton learned how to make gunpowder from her father and then operated a powder mill in Pennsylvania with her husband. They sold it and moved south when the prospect of a British invasion made living there dangerous. They built a new…

Pemberton Oak

Remnant trunk of the Pemberton Oak<br />
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Photo by Randell Jones
The Virginia militiamen, mustered under Colonel William Campbell, marched south from the Muster Grounds on Wolf Creek just west of Black's Fort toward the general muster at Sycamore Shoals. They followed their second in command, Major William…

Shelby's Fort

Shelby's Fort marker<br />
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Photo by Randell Jones
Isaac Shelby lived at his home Sapling Grove in today's Bristol, Tennessee. He was there when he received the message from, Sam Phillips, the released prisoner, about the British advance into North Carolina and the specific threat to come into the…

The Muster Grounds

Blair Keller stands along Wolf Creek at the Muster Grounds<br />
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Photo by Randell Jones
The Muster Grounds and the W. Blair Keller, Jr. Interpretive Center are located at 702 Colonial Road in Abingdon, Virginia. This site is the northernmost trailhead of the Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail.

This beautiful tract of land…