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Snow's Island

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United States historic place
Snow's Island
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
U.S. National Historic Landmark
Snow's Island is located in South CarolinaSnow's IslandShow map of South CarolinaSnow's Island is located in the United StatesSnow's IslandShow map of the United States
LocationAlong the Pee Dee River, east of Johnsonville, South Carolina
Coordinates33°49′39″N 79°20′38″W / 33.82750°N 79.34389°W / 33.82750; -79.34389
Built1781
NRHP reference No.73001708 (original)
13000464 (increase)
Significant dates
Added to NRHPMarch 14, 1973
Boundary increaseJuly 3, 2013
Designated NHLDecember 2, 1974

Snow's Island is an area of swampy lowlands along the Pee Dee River in Florence County, South Carolina. The area is historically significant as the headquarters during the American Revolutionary War for forces led by Francis Marion (1732-1795), a South Carolina militia officer who is celebrated as the "Swamp Fox." Employing guerrilla war tactics, Marion significantly contributed to the American war effort by conducting numerous raids on British outposts." The site was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1974.

Description

Snow's Island is located in a remote and swampy area of Florence County, on private land south of the main channel of the Pee Dee River east of Johnsonville.

The property is not open to the public, but may be visible from the end of Dunham Bluff Road, off U.S. Route 378 on the north side of the river. The contours of the land have been altered over time due to logging activities that have changed the course of the river, and there are no definitively identified remains associated with the American Revolutionary War period.

The site was in 1780 a plantation, whose exact boundaries have not been identified, and the area has been logged several times and used as a private hunting preserve.

Marion's stronghold

The area's historical significance lies in its four-month occupation by the militia forces of General Francis Marion, who orchestrated guerilla-style attacks on British targets from this base between December 1780 and March 1781. At that time, British forces dedicated to locating Marion found the camp and destroyed it; Marion and most of his band of several hundred men were not there at the time. The only known potential artifact associated with the Marion occupation is an earthen formation that may be a military defensive works.

At the time of the American Revolution, this so-called “island,” named after an early owner of the property, comprised about five square miles (metric area) of the largely undeveloped swamp bounded by the Lynches and Pee Dee rivers and Clark’s Creek.

The canopy of cypress and pines, and the dense understory of “cane breaks, briars, and vines” offered an ideal sanctuary for Marion’s rebel militia who were pursued by British and Loyalist forces seeking to eradicate them. The abundant fish and game was sufficient to sustain his soldiers numbering at their peak, perhaps 250 men. Snow’s Island, as occupied by Marion, formed a complex of multiple camps that afforded mobility to his troops in defending the stronghold, surrounded by farms of both patriot and loyalist families.

Marion’s moniker as the “Swamp Fox” is largely associated with his sojourn on Snow’s Island, eliciting comparisons to the mythology of Robin Hood and the Sherwood Forest, including legends of his largesse to patriot families from plunder taken from British and Loyalist resources. Little evidence exists that Marion was addressed as “The Swamp Fox” in his lifetime.

In early 1781, shortly after the Battle of Guilford Courthouse in March of 1781, Marion’s forces dealt a blow to British forces under John Watson Tadwell Watson at the Sampit River outside Georgetown, and just 30 miles from Snow’s Island.

While operating 30-miles south of his base at Snow Island, Marion was informed that a Loyalist force under Lieutenant John Doyle had penetrated his island refuge and overwhelmed the small patriot force left to defend it, seven who were killed. When Marion returned to assess the damage he found its supplies despoiled and structures burned. As such, he decided to abandon the former stronghold.

The only known struction associated with the Marion occupation is an earthen formation that may be a military defensive works.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ "Snow's Island". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Retrieved March 12, 2008.
  3. ^ Scheire, James (July 31, 1972). "Snow's Island" (pdf). National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory. National Park Service. Retrieved June 4, 2012.
  4. Crawford, 2024 p. 224: “Snow’s Island was never, strictly speaking, an island at all… a high ground in the middle of a swamp.”
  5. Crawford, 2024 p. 224: “Snow’s Island’s dimensions were never stable, and it has long since disappeared.”
  6. Crawford, 2024 p. 224
  7. Crawford, 2024 pp. 224: “An ideal hideout…Marion and his men ate well.” And: p. 226: Maximum force “maybe 250 men”
  8. Crawford, 2024 p. 225: See here for comments on Swamp Fox moniker history.
  9. Crawford p. 226: Marion’s irregulars “dealt a bloody defeat to a British force” at Sampit River “about 30 miles south of Snow’s Island.”
  10. Crawford, 2024 p. 227: After surveying the damage to the island Marion “realized that the camp was no longer any use” and moved his forces south to Indiantown, South Carolina.

Sources

External links

U.S. National Register of Historic Places in South Carolina
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