The 71st Regiment of Foot - The Fraser Highlanders - Cheraw, SC, USA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member NCDaywalker
N 34° 41.757 W 079° 52.781
17S E 602609 N 3839896
This cemetery is the site of a Revolutionary War Hospital for both sides. The Fraser Highlanders. had several of their numbers buried in the church cemetery.
Waymark Code: WMT3EH
Location: South Carolina, United States
Date Posted: 09/18/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member monkeys4ever
Views: 4

The 71st Regt. of Foot
"The Fraser Highlanders"
Encamped at Cheraw Hills in the summer of 1780 during the American Revolutionary War
The Fraser Highlanders were recruited in Scotland in 1775 by their Clan Chief Simon Fraser, master of Lovat, to serve in the army of King George III. They fought with honor in more Battles and Skirmishes, in both the Northern and Southern Campaigns of the American Revolutionary War, than any other British regiment.
Following the Fall of Charleston to the British in May 1780, their Commander in the South, Lord Charles Cornwallis, ordered detachment from the two battalions of the 71st Fraser Highlanders to set uo an outpost at Cheraw Hills to further strenghten the British strategic line of defense.
Major Archibald McArthur, accompanied by their regimental Surgeon Robert Jackson, led a detachment from the first battalion from Camden on 7th June marching at fast pace of more than twenty miles per day, they arrived in Cheraw on the 9th June 1780.
The soldiers "encamped on open ground within five hundred paces of the west bank of the River Pee Deee", not far from Old St. David'sChurch (est. 1768) and Kershaw's (now Laney's) Landing. They set up canvas tents and "wooden huts" made of a framework of fresh cut boughs and striplings, to avoid the sun and rain.
Local Loyalist advised McArthur against camping neat the river, because of its potential malaise, suggesting that their encampment should be within the woods. Concerned there would begreater risk of sudden attack there from local Patriots, however, McArthur, McArthur chose the open ground. Soldiers from the second battalion arrived in early July, camping. even closer to the river bank; with the officers' nearest of all.
During their time in Cheraw, the prime role was to maintain law and order and to encourage loyality to the King; to gain intelligence on the activity of rebel troops from Loyalist, passing this on to Commanders in Camden and other British detachments at Hanging Rock, Rocky Mount, and Waxhaw. Major McArthurwas only too aware of the need to hold the northern line and to defend his soldiers against any approaching Patriot troops in the vicinity, who were pushing south and westwards.
Small units accompanied Major McArthur to the Court Houses at Long Bluff (Society Hill) and in Anson County (Wadeboro), where he administered the Oath of Allegience, to any citizens who continued to swear loyality to the King. As food supplies began to dwindle severely and in need of horses for their few accompanying dragoons, there was an increasing need to live off the land, even commandeering supplies from local people.
At best estimate, some 300 men from Regiment were camped here, with Surgeon Jackson reporting that two hundred men suffere from a malignant fever, brought on, he believed, by the noxious vapors off the river. It spread so rapidly, particularily amongst those camping closest to the river, that before late July. when the post was abandoned, "few were left who had not felt its influence". Major McArthur wrote of suffering from the fever himself, for most of their six weeks spent in Cheraw,
Some of the men worst affected by the fever were taken into St David's Church nearby, it is said, to gain shelter from the reported excessive heat and heavy rain of that summer. Local diarist and other historians record that several men of the Highlanders died in Cheraw and are buried in this cemetery. Neither their Commanding Officer McArthur, nor the Surgeon who treated the men, made reference to this in their records, probably due, however to the severe demands on them at the time.
At all burials. it was customary for an Officer to say a short prayer. Officers were usually buried buried in single graves, with Other Ranks often being buried together in one grave. The men were wrapped in simple shrouds, sometimes with a keepsake from home, perhaps a favorite pipe; having been stripped of their clothing and shoes, by their comrades who had a greater need of them. Major McArthur's letter written on the 29th July 1780 confirms that all his men had been in want of such essential "necessaries" since October 1778.
The official Muster Rolls for this Regiment are some of the most incomplete of all the Public Records of the British Military in the 18th Century. There are no Rolls in existence which specifically record the place, as well as the date of death during the summer of 1780, for the soldiers of the 71st Frasers. Some records for 1780 were only completed from distant memories, after the British surrendered at Yorktown.
When the two detachments were ordered back to Camden, Surgeon Jackson wrotr that "about forty" of the men were still too weak to march. Major McArthur committed these to the command of their Lieut. John Nairne, to be escorted under the protection of Lt Colonel William Mills and local his local Loyalist Militia. On 24th July 1780, they embarked on flatboats at Kershaw's Landing, to be taken to Georgetown. The boats were ambushedat Hunts Bluff down river from Cheraw on 25th July by Patriot forces led by Captain Tristram Thomas. These sick solders of the 71st Fraser Highlanders were taken as captives into North Carolina and exchanged later for local Patriots, being held as prisoners by British forces.
The othe soldiers had already left Cheraw on 23rf July. marching back to Camden, with Surgein Jackson recording that many of the men recovered through the exercise and fresh air on the march. Though some still too sick were held in reserve, the remainder of the 71st Fraser Highlanders fought in the Battle fo Camden on 15th August 1780.
In memory of those unnamed soldiers of the 71st Fraser Highlanders who died here in Cheraw, a Memorial Headstone, has been dedicated this day, Sunday 13th November 2011, to honor them all and is placed at the grave of one Officer buried on the north side of the church. A similar Marker indicated a second Officer's grave near the eastern Vestry door. A second small Marker shows the place where several Other Ranks are said to be buried together, in a "sink" or depression, close to the door on the south side of the church.
"When duty calls me, I must go, to stand and face another for,
But part of me will always stay o'er the hills and far away........
If I should fail to rise no more, as many comrades di
d before,
Ask the pipes and drums to play, o'er the hills and far away."
From a Traditional Melody
SJB 2011
Group that erected the marker: SBJ 2011

Address of where the marker is located. Approximate if necessary:
420 Market St
Cheraw, SC USA
29520


URL of a web site with more information about the history mentioned on the sign: Not listed

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NCDaywalker visited The 71st Regiment of Foot - The Fraser Highlanders - Cheraw, SC, USA 09/20/2016 NCDaywalker visited it