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Franklin County NcArchives Military Records.....County, Franklin 
Revwar Various sources
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Sam West sam.west.1@gmail.com March 3, 2013, 11:23 am

THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR, PART I.

Revolutionary War Sites in Franklin Counties

Franklin County, North Carolina was conceived and created amidst the years of 
the Revolutionary War.   Before, and after it’s creation, there appears to 
have been much military activity going on within the present day bounds of 
Franklin County.  This activity was mainly focused on the raising of troops, 
who for the most part were being sent to other parts of the country. Some 
followed their commanders into Virginia, and as far north as New York, while 
others were dispersed south throughout North Carolina, as well as in South 
Carolina and on to Georgia. Many took part in the major battles of the 
Revolutionary War in all of these states.  

The Franklin Court House in the town of Louisburg appears to have been the 
center of the enlistment for Franklin County.  Troops were mustered there, and 
the Franklin Court House was apparently considered as the center of report.   
The Army stationed at Louisburg must have been of a considerable size, for we 
find that troops from other counties drove herds of hogs to Louisburg for the 
use of the Army stationed here.

Other than Louisburg, another place of Revolutionary importance in Franklin 
County was what was then known as Hill’s Cross Roads.  This cross roads was 
located some five miles east of the town of Louisburg.  Records verify that 
the Army had apparently established their Military Stores at that cross 
roads.  We learn that later there were Troops stationed at the cross roads to 
guard these Military Stores throughout the war.

THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR, PART II.

Wars and rumors of wars!

During the first part of the year 1781 residents of Franklin, and surrounding 
counties sat quietly awaiting news of the whereabouts of the famous British 
commander, Lord Charles Cornwallis, and his British Forces.  In early 1781 
news and rumors spread throughout North Carolina that Cornwallis, who had 
entered the colony from South Carolina and was marching his mighty army 
northeast in pursuit of Gen. Nathanael Greene’s Army.   As his army marched 
northeast, they went to Guilford Court House, and then he marched his army up 
to the Dan River on Virginia State line.  Greene had purposely marched his 
troops beyond the Dan into Virginia to give then needed rest and to recruit 
additional troops.    Apparently, having thought that he driven Gen. Greene 
completely out of North Carolina, Lord Cornwallis, then turned southeast and 
marched his army to the town of Hillsborough in Orange County.   After a three 
weeks rest and recruitment period, Gen. Greene then marched his men back to 
Guilford Court House, where they took a strategic position and awaited.  
Evidently receiving intelligence of Lord Cornwallis whereabouts of Greene’s 
army, he turned his army to the west, and began the forty-mile march from 
Hillsborough to the Guilford Court House.  On March 15th, 1781 he led his 
troops in battle against the Patriots in what is now known as the Battle of 
Guilford Court House.  Guilford Court House was in present-day northwestern 
Greensboro, and is only some 90 miles due west of Louisburg.  This battle was 
also made personal to Franklin County, as many of her young men were found to 
have been participants of the battle.   The battle was severe with Greene’s 
losses being 1,255, and Cornwallis’ being 93 killed, 413 wounded, and 26 
missing.  This was a tactical defeat, as Lord Cornwallis remained in the 
control of the battlefield.  After tending to their wounded and dead, on March 
18th Lord Cornwallis gave order for his army to began marching to the east.  
Once, news began to spread of Cornwallis’ victory at Guilford, and then of his 
march to the east, all of the officials and inhabitants of counties in this 
direction apparently began to brace themselves against coming foe.  As a 
result, the commanding officers of the area formed a company called the "The 
County Rangers".  The responsibility of the County Rangers were to watch the 
movements of the British forces under Lord Cornwallis.  The main theatre of 
the County Rangers was in Franklin, Wake, Halifax and adjacent counties here 
in North Carolina.  As it so happened, after marching east from Guilford Court 
House, and upon his arrival at the Haw River, Lord Cornwallis then directed 
his troops then followed the river southeast to the seaport city of 
Wilmington.  Thus Franklin and surrounding areas avoided a direct assault from 
Cornwallis’ army.  After arriving in Wilmington, Cornwallis redirected his 
army north to Virginia where he suffered his final defeat at Yorktown.  This 
march took his army by the Roanoke River on the eastern boarder of Halifax 
County, thus missing Franklin County of North Carolina altogether.

THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR, PART III.

No Tories in Bute, well what about in Franklin?

While there was much hustle and bustle in Franklin County in raising troops, 
there was not but one known conflict with the Tories that took place here 
during the years of the Revolutionary War.  According to the Historical 
Sketches of North Carolina, by Wheeler, he quoted “There were no Tories in 
Bute,”  However, we learn through military records that in the late summer of 
1781 that a band of Tories under the command of Captain Ricks, alias “Beard”, 
were ravishing the countryside and committing depredations against the Whig 
citizens who were living along the Big Fishing Creek in northeastern Franklin 
County, and over in northwestern Nash County.   As a result of these 
depredations Col. Thomas Sherrard of Franklin County put out a 
proclamation “that all persons [eligible men]. …volunteer on an expedition to 
suppress the ravages of the band of Tories”…   A company of Light Horse of the 
county was raised specifically with orders to suppress and subdue these 
Tories.  Following their orders, these Light Horse men then went after these 
Tories, with an end result of capturing their commander, Captain Ricks.   The 
Company hunted the Tories throughout the upper regions of the county, and 
after finding their trail, they pursued them in and around the Big Fishing 
Creek.  This pursuit led them down the creek just across the line into Nash 
County, where they met up with the Tories at the Drake Plantation.  At that 
place they had a brief skirmish, and then apprehended the Tories.    The Tory 
Captain was then brought back to the Patriot camps in Franklin County to the 
two colonels, Colonel Thomas Sherrard and Colonel Benjamin Seawell.  After an 
apparent military trial and deliberation, they sentenced him to be hung.  The 
execution was immediate, and the Tory Captain was hung from a limb of a tree 
on the “low grounds” of the Tar River.   The hanging of the Tory Captain in 
1781, thus virtually ending the resistance of the Tories in Franklin County, 
North Carolina.

THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR, PART IV.

REVOLUTIONARY WAR SOLDIERS OF FRANKLIN COUNTY 

Due to the lack of surviving records, it is virtually impossible to have 
a “complete list” of all of the Franklin County men who were actual 
participants in the Revolutionary War.   The compiler of this sketch has 
successfully identified and documented three hundred Revolutionary War 
Soldiers who were either “born, resided, drafted, enlisted, volunteered, or 
served” in Franklin County, North Carolina.  Although there have been previous 
list made of Revolutionary War Soldiers who were thought to have been from 
Franklin County in prior publications, this is the first which actually 
document(s): the soldier’s names, and their connection to Franklin County, 
North Carolina.  This list was compiled from various sources, including, but 
not limited to:  Federal, State, and County Affidavits, Census Records, 
Declarations, Final Accounts, Letters, Militia Returns, Newspapers, Pensions, 
Petitions as well as other records concerning the Revolutionary War Soldiers 
of North Carolina.  

The names of these soldier’s are as follows [the ranks of those serving as 
Captains, Colonels, Lieutenants, Ensigns are listed; all others were 
apparently Privates]:

Bryant Adams, Jesse Adams, Julius Alford, Drewery Alfred, William Allen, 
William Allen, Joseph John Alston, John Amos, Evan Andress, Armstrong, Solomon 
Arnold, Charles Asque, William Askew, Christopher Babb, Charels Baker, Daniel 
Ball, Augustine Balthrop, John Bartholomew, Joseph Batchelor, Robert Bell, 
Solomon Bibbie, Benjamin Bledsoe, George Bledsoe, Lewis Bledsoe, Jesse Boon, 
Raiford Boon, Jesse Bowers, John Brantly, William Brickell, William Brown, R. 
Browning, Isaac Carpenter, Moses Carr, Benjamin Carter, James Carter, William 
Casey, Richard Christmas, William Christmas, Claimont, Richard Clapton, 
Thompson Clemmons, Joshua Coggin, Robert Coggin, John Cokely,  Charles Cole, 
James Collins, William Collins, Ephraim Conyers, Sterling Cooper, Jesse Davis, 
Micajah Davis, Ransom Davis, Philip Dean, Elijah Denby, Baron De Glasbae, 
James Denton, Jenkins Devaney, Hezekiah Douglas, John Driver, James Duke, 
James Dupriest, Arthur Durley, Thomas Eaton, Benjamin Eaves, John Edwards, 
Reuben Edwards, John Ellis, Eli Ely, Josiah Ely, Ensign William Ely, Joel 
Etheridge, William Fawn, Ansell Ferrell, Joel Ferrell, William Ferrell, Howell 
Freeman, James Frowell, Arthur Fuller, Allen Gay, John Gay, Harod Gibbs, 
Richard Glasgow, Garrett Goodloe, Vivion Goodloe, Nicholas Goswick, Arthur 
Green, Richard Greshom, James Hall, John Hancock, Martin Hancock, Samuel 
Hancock, Brittain Harris, Daniel Harris,  Robin Harris, John Harrison, William 
Harrison, William Harrison, Abram Hay, Miles Hicks, Micajah Hicks, Robert 
Hight, Hill, Richard Hill, William Hill, Charles Holt, Natha. Hood, 
Hopkins/Hawkins, Maj. Hogg, John Hubbard, Philip Huckaby, Thomas Huckaby, John 
Hudgins, Isaac Hudson, Edward Jackson, William Jackson, Nathan Jean, Sherod 
Jean, Isaac Johnson, Lewis Johnston, Joshua Jones, Matthew Jones, Samuel 
Jones, William Jones, Moses Joyner, James Kerr, John King,  Abner Lasater, 
William Lasater, William Lawson, Bud Lee, John Lee, William Leonard, James 
Lett, David Lewis, Long, Daniel Mabry, David Mabry, John Mabry, Henry (Harry) 
Macon, John Macon, Harrison Mason, Charles Massey, Thomas May, William 
McKinney, Bradley Medlin, Shadrack Medlin, Robert Melton, Wells Milner, David 
Mims, Nazareth Mitchell, William Mitchell, Joel Moody, Benjamin Morgan, Reuben 
Morgan, William Morris, John Mosley, Samuel Mosely, Abram Moses, Clement 
Mullins, Malone Mullins, James Murphey, James Murphey, Arthur Murphy, Nicholas 
Murphy, James Murray, William New, Francis Newby, Julius Newson, George 
Norwood, John Norwood, Thomas Ownby, Cader Parker, Parrish, Joel Parrish, Wm. 
Pasmore, Thomas Paster, Ensign Tilman Patterson, Jeremiah Perry, John Perry, 
Willis Perry, Thomas Person, Benjamin Phillips, William Pipe, John Pipen, 
Richard Pippen, James Pitt, Harwood Pope, Henry Porch, Peter Porch, Daniel 
Potter, John Potter, William Potter, Elijah Powell, Lewis Powell, Abraham 
Prim, Christopher Prim, James Prim, Baxter Ragsdale, Richard Ransom, Macajah 
Racklift, Francis Ray, Thomas Ray, Richard Reeves, Charles Regan, James 
Richards, James Richards, James Richards, Joshua Richards, Stephen Richards, 
Edward Richardson, James Richardson, William P. Riggan, John Robertson, 
Willobey Robertson, William Robertson, Bailey Robinson, Charles Roe, Matthew 
Roe, Charles Rogers, James Ross, William Ross, Williamson Ross, John Rowan, 
John Rowan, William Rush, John Sanders, Robert Sanders, William Sanders, 
Benjamin Seawell, Joseph Seawell, John Sharp, James Shelton, Thomas Sherrard,  
John Simmonds, Amos Smart, John Smart, Laban Smart, Benjamin Smith, John Gray 
Smith, Richard Smith, Clayton Sowell, Moses Stallings, Robert Sterling, John 
Stone, Jonathan Stone, Sampson Strickland, Burrell Taburn, Tatum, Francis 
Taylor, Silas Teasley, Francis Tetts, Elthdred Thomas, Thomas, Thornton, Swan 
Trouton, Francis Timberlake, Edward Turner, Jacob Turner, Nathan Turner, 
William Turner,  Howell Underwood, Hezekiah Vickry, William Vinson, John 
Waldon, Green Walker, Peter Walker, John Weaver, Jesse Webb, Piner Weldon, 
Daniel Westray, Robert L. Whitaker, William Whitehead, William Wilbanks, 
Benjamin Williams, John Williams, John Williams, Saml. Williams, George 
Winston, Isaac Winston, Nathaniel Winston, Lt. William Woollight/Wilhight, 
Jeptha Wright, Edward Yarborough and Henry Yarborough.

Additional Comments:
Source:  Research by Sam West compiled from various sources, including, but 
not limited to:  Affidavits, Census Records, Declarations, Final Accounts, 
Letters, Militia Returns, Newspapers, Pensions, Petitions, and various other 
records, etc…..  


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