John Gunby (March 10, 1745 –
May 17, 1807) was an American
planter and
soldier from Somerset County, Maryland
whom is considered by many to be "one of the most
gallant officers of the Maryland Line
under Gen. Smallwood". He
entered service volunteering as a
minuteman in 1775 and fought for the American
cause until the end earning praise as probably the most brilliant
soldier whom Maryland contributed to the War of Independence. Gunby
was also the grandfather of
Senator Ephraim King Wilson II.
Early life
The Gunby
family arrived in Maryland
around 1660,
coming from Yorkshire
, England
and settling
in Queen Anne's
County
. Around 1710, his grandfather moved the family
to Somerset
County
to a farm at Gunby's Creek, an inlet of Pocomoke
Bay, near present day Crisfield
where John Gunby was born on March 10, 1745.
During his youth, Gunby had many opportunities to deal with persons
from different social classes as the Gunby home was considered a
rendezvous for the people of the neighboring country and the family
exercised substantial influence due to their large land holdings
and sea vessels with which they engaged in coastal trade.
In the spring of 1775, at the age of 30, John Gunby volunteered as
a
minuteman for which his father, a
staunch loyalist, warned him that he was running the risk of being
hanged as a traitor. John Gunby is said to have replied:
Early War
When the Revolution broke-out, John Gunby joined the American
forces and formed an independent military company at his own
expense. The equipping and maintaining of this company, which was
among the first to be organized, cost Gunby most of his wealth. The
company, including officers, numbered a hundred and three men. On
January 2, 1776 he was elected Captain of the
2ND
Independent Maryland Company - Somerset County.
In the early part of the War, Gunby's company spent much of their
time patrolling southern Maryland and breaking up Tory camps which
were to be found on the lower part of the peninsula as Somerset
County was a leading Tory stronghold.
On August 16, 1776,
the 2ND Independent Maryland Company was ordered north to join
General George Washington's army
as part of Maryland
's quota of
troops towards the Continental
Army.
Although specific information is lacking, it is known that the 2ND
Independent Maryland Company under Gunby's command participated in
the following battles/campaigns:
In all of these battles, John Gunby commanded the 2ND Independent
Maryland Company first as a Captain until December 10, 1776 when he
was commissioned as Lieutenant Colonel and then as a full Colonel
when he was promoted on April 17, 1777
Southern Campaign
After the
unsuccessful attempt to capture
Savannah,
Georgia
, under the command of General Benjamin Lincoln, the Southern Department
of the Continental Army retreated to Charleston,
South Carolina
. General Sir Henry Clinton
moved his forces, surrounded the city where Lincoln's army had
taken refuge and cut off any chance of relief for the Continental
Army. Prior to his surrender, Lincoln had been able to get messages
to
General Washington and the
Continental Congress
requesting aid. At the end of April 1780, Washington dispatched
General deKalb with 1,400 Maryland
and Delaware troops. The Maryland Line made up a large portion of
this force.
General deKalb's forces took almost a month to descend the
Chesapeake Bay and did not arrive in
Petersburg, VA until the middle of June, almost a month after
Lincoln had surrendered his army. The Continental Congress
appointed
Horatio Gates to command the
Southern Department.
He assumed command on July 25, 1780 and
immediately marched into South Carolina
with the intent of engaging the British Army, now
under the command of Charles
Cornwallis.
Battle of Camden
After brief aggressive maneuvering which threatened the British
position in the Carolinas, Cornwallis moved his forces to engage
the American forces.
The two armies engaged one another in the
Battle of
Camden
on August 16, 1780, six miles north of Camden, South
Carolina
. Due to several tactical errors on the part
of
Horatio Gates, the British were
able to achieve a decisive victory. The Maryland Troops, Gunby's
company among them, deserted by their commander fought until they
were pressed on all sides and forced to retreat. Two-fifths of the
Marylanders were killed or wounded and
General deKalb was mortally wounded. Prior to
his death three days later, deKalb paid a glowing tribute to the
Maryland Troop under his command.
Battle of Cowpens
Nathanael Greene was appointed
commander of the Southern Department on October 5, 1780 and assumed
command on December 2, 1780. In early January 1781, Greene detached
four companies of the
1st Maryland
Regiment, to reinforce
Daniel
Morgan's forces. On January 17, 1781, Morgan's newly reinforced
army engaged a significantly larger British force under the command
of
Banastre Tarleton and won a
decisive victory.
John Gunby was in command of his company as they charged the
British 71st
Regiment. The British force was completely routed and
Lieutenant Colonel Howard is said to have
collected seven swords surrendered to him by British
officers.
Battle of Guilford Court House
After the
successful retreat across the Dan River, General Greene chose to offer battle to General
Cornwallis's
forces on March 15, 1781 on ground of his own choosing at Guliford
Court House, inside the city limits of present day Greensboro,
North Carolina
.
After the British forces had broken Greene's first line made up of
North Caroline Militia and the second line made up of Virginia
Militia they threatened the third line made up by the
1st Maryland Regiment, under the
command of Gunby, and the
2nd
Maryland Regiment. The
Brigade of
Guards, under the command of a Colonel Stewart, broke through
the
2nd Maryland Regiment,
captured two field pieces and threatened the rear of Gunby's forces
whom were already engaged with sizable force under the command of a
Colonel Webster.
Gunby, his command threatened on two fronts, ordered a fierce
charge and swept Webster's forces from the field. He then wheeled
his troops to face the oncoming guards unit. After a brief exchange
of musket fire, in which Gunby's horse was shot from under him, the
1st Maryland Regiment charged
the
Guards unit who were quickly
routed.
Greene, not able to see this part of the battle from his vantage
point, had already ordered a retreat. Thus, unsupported, the
Maryland troops were soon forced to withdraw.
The Battle of Hobkirk's Hill
After
Guilford Court
House,
Cornwallis's
force was spent and in great need of supply.
He therefore moved
his army towards Wilmington, North Carolina
where he had previously ordered supplies to be
sent. Greene
pursued the British force for a short time before deciding to take
his forces into South
Carolina
.
Greene hoped that by threatening the British garrisons in the state
he could force Cornwallis to pursue him and then engage the British
on ground favorable to his army.
When Cornwallis did not pursue the
Continental Army, Greene chose to
reduce the British garrisons scattered throughout South
Carolina
in order to
force the British back into Charleston
.
To this
end, General Greene moved his main force—made up of two Virginia
and two Maryland regiments of Continentals as well as a force of Cavalry
under William Washington--with
all possible speed towards Camden, South Carolina
where Lord Francis
Rawdon was stationed with 900 troops . Rawdon learned of
Greene's approach and readied his forces to repel an attack.
Upon
arriving at Camden
, and finding his planned assault impractical,
Greene retired his forces to a low heavily wooded ridge locally
called Hobkirk's Hill.
Having received intelligence from a deserter on
April 24 that the Continental Artillery and Militia
had been detached from Greene's main force, Rawdon decided to
attack.. However, on the morning of April 25, 1781 Lieutenant
Colonel
Carrington had brought the
artillery back to Hobkirk's Hill along with a supply of provisions
which were distributed to the Continental troops. At around 11 am ,
while many of the Continentals were occupied with cooking and
washing clothes, the advanced
pickets detected the British forces whom
had gained the American left by marching a circuit of great
distance and keeping close to a swamp that was next to the ridge
occupied by the Continental Army.
The advanced pickets, under Captain
Robert Kirkwood, were able to delay the
British advance giving Greene time to give orders and address his
forces distribution. Greene placed the a Virginia Regiment under
Lieutenant Colonel
Campbell on the extreme right
with the another Virginia Regiment under Lieutenant Colonel
Samuel Hawes to their left. On the
extreme left, Greene placed the 5th Maryland under Lieutenant
Colonel
Benjamin Ford with the 1st
Maryland, under Gunby's command, to their right. The artillery was
placed in the center with North Carolina militia in the rear.
Once having extricated his forces from the woods and forcing the
pickets to retreat, Rawdon arrayed his forces and slowly advanced
up the ridge towards the waiting Continentals. Greene, perceiving
the British forces were presenting a narrow front, ordered an
attack. Greene instructed Campbell on the right to wheel his men to
the left and engage the British on their flank with Ford to take
his men and make a similar movement on the left. Greene ordered the
two remaining regiments in the center to advance with bayonets and
confront the enemy head on while Washington was to take his cavalry
around the British left flank and attack the enemy in the
rear.
During the advance of the 1st Maryland on the British left, Captain
William Beatty jr. who was in command on the right of Gunby's
regiment, was killed causing his company to stop their advance.
Gunby ordered his men to stop their advance and fall back with the
intention of reforming their line. At this time, Benjamin Ford of
the 5th Maryland was mortally wounded throwing his troops into
disorder. Finding their flank in disarray and being threatened by a
company of Irish troops Rawdon had brought up to strengthen his
flank, the Maryland troops rallied briefly to fire a few rounds and
then left the field in disorder. Seeing this, Rawdon quickly
rallied his flagging troops and advanced, taking the field.
Court of Inquiry
The day after the
Battle of
Hobkirk's Hill, General
Greene
addressed his troops and presented a pointed comment that Gunby
apparently felt this was directed at him and he immediately applied
for a court of inquiry to review his actions on the field. His
request was granted by General Greene who named General
Huger, Colonel Harrison
of the artillery and Lieutenant Colonel
Washington of the cavalry to conduct the
review.
On
May 2, the Court published their
conclusions:
Greene was firm in his belief that Gunby was the sole reason for
the
Continental Army's loss at
Hobkirk Hill. On August 6, 1781, in a letter to
Joseph Reed, Greene stated his position
bluntly:
Henry Lee, "Light Horse Harry", gave a
different opinion in his memoirs of the war stating that the
Maryland troops abandoned their position contrary to the efforts
and example of Gunby and the other Continental officers on the
field.
It has been pointed out that the tribunal paid no disrespect to
Colonel Gunby, pointing out his "spirit and activity"; however, it
clearly found him at fault for making an error in military tactics.
Both the tribunal's and Greene's assertion that Gunby's order to
his regiment to retire and reform was the sole cause for the
Continental line breaking does not take into account that the two
companies on Gunby's right had already broken the line and were
falling back in confusion upon the death of Captain Beatty. The
historian Benson John Lossing attributes the entire loss of victory
to the death of Captain Beatty..
Nor did the tribunal or Greene appear to accept that Gunby's order
for the four companies that were still advancing to reform their
line to be a proper military tactic. Henry Lee, however, points out
that this same maneuver had been performed by
Daniel Morgan at Cowpens.
In addition, as mentioned in the tribunal's report, Gunby was
apparently successful in rallying his troops who then fired one or
two rounds at the oncoming British soldiers which would seem to
indicate that the Maryland troops were not panicked as Greene's
comments, the tribunal's report and Henry Lee's account seem to
allude.
Lee offers another reason for the American defeat at Hobkirk's
Hill, suggesting that Greene's order to the Cavalry under Williams
to circle around the British and attack them in the rear was a
plausible explanation for the loss. As explained in his memoirs, if
the Cavalry had been held in reserve, rather than order to attack
the rear of the British force where they were held up by Rowsan's
baggage train, William's troops could have been used to reinforce
the line and reversing the gains made by the British reserve that
had already been committed to the battle.
Regardless that both the tribunal and Greene found fault with Gunby
for his actions at Hobkirk Hill, Gunby was retained as commander of
the 1st Maryland Regiment.
Later War
The
Maryland Line continued to
distinguish itself in the later battles of the
Southern
theater of the American Revolutionary War with John Gunby
continuing to command the 1st Maryland Regiment.
Of the
Maryland Line's actions at the Battle of Eutaw Springs
, General Greene
wrote in his official report of the engagement:
John Gunby continued in the capacity of Commander of the 1st
Maryland Regiment until the regiment was furloughed and all of its
business concluded. Prior to his resigning his commission, he was
given a
Brevet promotion to
Brigadier General
on September 30, 1783
Life After War
After
mustering out of the Continental
Army, John Gunby returned home to Somerset
County, Maryland
. His father, who died in 1788 bequeathed him
a large farm in Worcester County, Maryland
two miles south of Snow Hill
. Unlike many of his contemporaries, Gunby
avoided politics or using his fame from the war for personal gain.
He kept to his farm devoting himself to agriculture. For some years
he supported at least three families of Maryland officers killed
during the Carolina Campaigns. Gunby was also known to help poor
families build houses and awaiting their convenience for payment,
promoting the construction of new roads furnishing horse teams for
those in need and contributing toward the maintenance of places of
worship.
He was an original member of the Maryland
Chapter of the Society of the Cincinnati
.
Footnotes
- Covington
- Gunby pg 13
- Archives of Maryland pg 20
- Scharf pg 192
- Gunby pg 31
- Archives of Maryland pg 363
- Gunby pg 44
- Greene pgs 228-233
- Greene pg 234
- Gunby pg 68
- Marshall Vol II pg 5
- Greene pg 240
- Gunby pg 70
- Green pg 239
- Marshall Vol II pgs 5-6
- Greene pg 241
- Gunby pg 73
- Greene pg 242
- Gunby pg 109
- Lee pg 225
- Gunby pg 111
- Lossing pgs 473-475
- Lee pgs 25-226
- Lee pg 226
- Heitman pg 265
References
- Judge J. Harry Covington, address before the
Eastern Shore Society of Baltimore City Circa 1939
- Gunby, Andrew Augustus Colonel John Gunby of the Maryland
Line The Robert Clarke Company 1902
- Archives of Maryland - Muster Rolls of Service of Maryland
Troops in the American Revolution
- Heitman, Francis B. Historical Register of Officers of the
Continental Army during the War of the Revolution. New,
enlarged, and revised edition. Washington, D.C.: Rare Book
Shop Publishing Company, 1914.
- Greene, Francis Vinton D. General Greene Appleton and
Company 1893
- Marshall, John Life of George
Washington Second Edition J. Crissy 1836
- Lee III, Henry Memoirs of the
War in the Southern Department of the United States P. Force
1827
- Scharf, John Thomas History of Maryland: From the Earliest Period to
the Present Day J. B. Piet 1879
- Lossing, Benson John The American Revolution and the War of
1812 New York Book Concern 1875