Book details

  • Genre:fiction
  • Sub-genre:Historical / Colonial America & Revolution
  • Language:English
  • Pages:120
  • eBook ISBN:9798317838195

The Battle for South Carolina

By Ray G. Scarborough

Overview


Blending carefully researched history with fictional narrative, the book follows the battles in South Carolina that turned the tide in the American Revolution—not in grand cities or formal battle lines, but in the forests, rivers, and farms of the backcountry.
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Description


When the British turned their full attention to the South in 1780, South Carolina became the crucible of the American Revolution… Dive into historical fiction that brings the Southern Campaign of the Revolution to life through the experiences of the backcountry men and families who bore its heaviest cost. After the catastrophic defeat at Camden and the destruction of Patriot forces at Fishing Creek, British commanders believed resistance in the Carolinas was finished. What followed instead was a quiet, relentless war fought in woods and fields by patriot militia who refused to surrender their homes. At the center of the story is Silas, a farmer along Little River whose life is steadily overtaken by events beyond his choosing. As British cavalry raids intensify and Loyalist pressure mounts, neutrality becomes impossible. Silas and his neighbors are drawn into a fight that reshapes their land and their lives—from Musgrove's Mill, Blackstock's Farm, Hammond's Store, and the crushing victories at Kings Mountain and Cowpens. Grounded in extensive historical research, the book weaves real figures—including Daniel Morgan, Nathanael Greene, The Fighting Gamecock Thomas Sumter, The Swamp Fox Francis Marion, Andrew Pickens, James Williams, Joseph Hayes, Banastre Tarleton, and Charles Cornwallis—into a vivid fictional narrative that captures the human cost of war. The result is a deeply immersive portrait of a revolution fought not by armies alone, but by communities forced to choose between submission and resistance. Rich in atmosphere and historical detail, "The Battle for South Carolina" is a story of courage without romance, leadership without illusion, and a hard-won freedom forged far from the halls of power.
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About The Author


Ray G. Scarborough lives in Laurens County, South Carolina, home of the historic Little River Regiment. A lifelong student of American history, Ray has a particular interest in the Southern Campaign in the South Carolina backcountry, where Patriots turned the tide in the American Revolution. Ray's connection to the American Revolution runs deep. Nineteen of his Scarborough ancestors served in the North Carolina militia including James Scarborough—who fought at Kings Mountain and Cowpens and witnessed the British surrender at Yorktown. That legacy informs Ray's approach to history, not as a distant abstraction, but as a lived experience passed down through land, memory, and story. For Ray, history is not distant. It is lived, remembered, and carried forward. His work blends documented history with lived perspective, emphasizing how ordinary people navigated extraordinary times. Ray's other works include the historical fiction novel, "The Trading Post: Pioneer Adventures Along the Ocmulgee River," that explores the early settlement of Georgia through the experiences of two young pioneers.
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