OF THE
TIMES
After the battle, the wounded were treated at nearby churches by the congregants, one of whom was a young Andrew Jackson.[18][citation needed] Tarleton reported that after the battle ended, the wounded of both sides were treated "with equal humanity" and that the British provided "every possible convenience".[11] Due to the large number of wounded, people from all over the countryside came to assist in their care. When they learned what had happened from the wounded they were treating, albeit one-sidedly, a belief in an apparent violation of quarter on Tarleton's part spread rapidly through the region.[19]Monument and mass grave at the battle siteThe battle, at least temporarily, consolidated British control over South Carolina, and Patriot sentiment was at a low ebb. General Clinton, among other acts before he left Charleston for New York, revoked the parole of surrendered Patriots. This affront, and reports of this battle, decisively changed the direction of the war in the South. Many who might have stayed neutral flocked to the Patriots, and "Tarleton's Quarter!" and "Remember Buford" became rallying cries for the Whigs. News of the massacre directly inspired the creation of volunteer militia forces among the over-mountain men (from the Wataugan settlements at, and near Sycamore Shoals). These militia participated in actions against Loyalist forces at both the Battle of Musgrove Mill on August 18, 1780, (near present-day Clinton, South Carolina) and in the decisive defeat of a Loyalist army led by Major Patrick Ferguson on October 7, 1780 at Kings Mountain (near present-day Blacksburg, South Carolina).Oh my how things are connected - but remember what Morgan said - he said at the Battle of Cowpens - I'm going to give "Benny" a whipping of the devil or if you prefer: "A devil of a whipping"
A bought and sold traitor.