The Battle of Savannah - Savannah, GA
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Lat34North
N 32° 04.560 W 081° 06.043
17S E 490494 N 3548864
The 1779 Battle of Savannah was one of the deadliest of the entire American Revolution. Located at 655 Louisville Road, Savannah, GA.
Waymark Code: WMKDF2
Location: Georgia, United States
Date Posted: 03/25/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member ChapterhouseInc
Views: 3



The Battle of Savannah


The 1779 Battle of Savannah was one of the deadliest of the entire American Revolution. The overwhelming defeat of French and American forces resulted in an allied withdrawal and in approximately 800 wounded or killed, with British losses totaling 55 wounded or dead.

The British victory in Savannah rekindled England's spirit for the war, in part because the victory defeated troops of the regular army of France as well as American rebels. The battle marked the first time French regular army units fought on American soil in the Revolutionary War.

The international conflict that most Americans call the Revolutionary War involved British, French, Hessian, Irish, Polish, Haitian, Spanish, Dutch, Scottish, Native Americans and Americans of European and African heritage, many of whom were represented in Savannah.

Polish nobleman Casimir Pulaski, who held a brigadier general's commission from Congress, had fought unsuccessfully for Polish independence. He commanded the American cavalry and lost his life from a wound he received in the battle.

A young Henry Christophe participated with the allied army in Savannah. He went on to fight for the independence of Haiti from France and later became King Henry I of Haiti. He was one of the first heads of state of African descent in the Western Hemisphere.

The largest unit of black soldiers to fight in the American Revolution, the (now Haiti), fought in Savannah. Many of these free men and volunteers went on to lead Haiti's fight for independence.

British Major General Augustin Prevost was a Swiss professional soldier of French Huguenot descent with a French wife. His loyalty to the British Crown was never questioned.

Arthur Dillon, an Irish nobleman and expatriate, commanded a regiment that included Irish soldiers serving the King of France. He and his regiment were prominent in the Battle of Savannah.

The Swedish Baron Curt von Stedingk was wounded leading a French column in the attack. He was intimate in the court of Gustavus III, Louis XVI and Catherine the Great.

The day before the battle, Pierre Charles L'Enfant, who later designed Washington, D.C., tried to dismantle and set fire to the abatis, a barrier of sharpened tree limbs designed to slow attackers.


Type of Marker: Monument

Marker #: None

Date: None

Sponsor: Not listed

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