It is too easy to forget that the
American Revolution was much less about a few well-known names such as George
Washington and King George of Great Britain, as it was about literally
thousands upon thousands of common men and women who answered the call to arms
and sacrifice.
My quadruple Great Grandparents Thomas
and Susanna (Harrington) Hightower were living on the Tygar River near
Spartanburg, South Carolina in 1780. Having heard the plea for additional manpower,
Thomas joined Colonel Benjamin Roebuck’s Colonial Regiment. While he was away
on military duty, a militia group referred to as Tories, those American
colonists loyal to the King of England, stormed the Hightower homestead and
burst into my ancient grandmother’s house.
Following is an account I have written
based on the events of that evening:
Susanna had been helping her son, John,
with a particularly long word from his reader, and content that he had mastered
one page and moved on to the next, she sat down in her rocking chair by the
fire.
Suddenly the front wooden door flew
open. Even in the midst of this terrible war, custom won out and she had
forgotten to lock the door. Standing before her were eight heavily armed men,
wearing an all-too familiar, but hated uniform. Susanna screamed for the
children to run to the cellar. She realized that this rude intrusion was
certainly no courtesy call.
Grandmother Hightower immediately
recognized the leader of this band of traitors to the cause of independence. Bill
Cunningham was an unusually handsome man, but known far and wide for his
viciousness and unyielding retribution. It was not for no reason he had been
nicknamed “Bloody Bill,” a name he apparently relished.
When the major addressed her by name,
Susanna felt a shiver creep slowly up her spine, and she felt faint.
“Mrs. Hightower. You
needn’t be afraid. We’re not here to hurt you. Answer a question, and we’ll be
on our way, and leave you and your children alone.”
Somehow Susanna doubted the sincerity
of his words.
“I know your husband has
joined that vagabond band of misfits who are determined to put an end to
everything we hold dear in these colonies. Well, Ma’am, we’re not going to let
that happen.”
My grandmother started to speak,
“Sir, I protest…”
Bloody Bill cut her off.
“You’re not in the
position to protest anything. Sit back down… NOW!”
My brave, but equally wise grandmother
dropped into the rocking chair, suddenly feeling as weak as water.
“There now. That’s good.
May I call you, Susanna?”
And without waiting for a reply, he
continued.
“Susanna, I need you to
answer me one question. Where’s your husband?”
And contrary to his earlier promise, he
asked another question.
“Cat got your tongue?
Where’s your husband, and who is his commanding officer?”
Susanna cleared her throat and fear
registered in her voice.
“Sir,
I know who you are. And I know you’re up to no good. I have no intention
whatsoever, in telling you where my husband is.”
Bloody Bill’s contemptuous smile now
turned downwards in a frown, and then a scowl. He would not be manipulated by
the likes of a frail, little woman.
“One more chance, ma
dear… if you want to live.”
Susanna realized the stakes of this not
so pleasant game, and she steeled herself for the inevitable.
In a voice just above a whisper, and
with tears stinging her eyes now, she sealed her fate.
“I cannot… I cannot bring
myself to tell you. I have been true to my husband these twenty years. I am not
about to betray him now. Do what you want, but you’ll get no answer from me.”
Well, my friends. I would like to tell
you that Bloody Bill Cunningham marched right out of there, and took his band
of “n’er do wells” with him… He didn’t. Turning to his chief lieutenant, he
screamed,
“I’ll have none of this.
No Sir, I will not. Lieutenant Morrison, kill her! Do it now!”
A look of utter amazement possessed the
officer. He reached for his sword, but his hand seemed frozen in mid-air.
Bloody Bill was not used to having his orders delayed, and he jerked Morrison’s
sword out of the scabbard, and raised it high above his head.
My ancient grandmother had only enough
time to utter the few last words she would ever speak on this side of eternity.
With arms wrapped tightly about herself, she closed her eyes, and bowed her
head.
“God forgive you, Bloody
Bill. Dear Lord receive my spirit.”
…And the deed was done.
And I hasten to remind you that this is
but one story among multiplied thousands of similar stories, which include the
ancestors of those assembled here today, and which have followed us throughout
all our nation’s wars.
My dear brothers and sisters. As one holiday gives way to another, and the
events we celebrate are separated from us by an increasing span of years, and
ultimately, no one remains who knew any of these things first hand… it all
becomes too casual, we are too prone to take our hard-fought freedoms for
granted, we are too close to disregarding the sacrifice of those who went
before us through the blood and suffering of the Revolution.
Let
us commit ourselves to remember our dear patriot fathers and mothers anew this
day, and to cherish them, and the nation which they have bequeathed to us, and
that which they have won so dearly for us.
By William McDonald, PhD. Copyright 2010
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