"The second line comprised the two battalions of Foot Guards, the Light Infantry, and the Grenadiers… Tarleton's Light Dragoons formed the final reserve." ("The Battle of Guilford Courthouse 1781.")
Without much of a choice, due to the terrain, Cornwallis was forced to make his attack head-on, straight at the center of the American line. While suffering major casualties, the British, stopped on the flanks, were able to break the center of the Americans' first line and continued to advance toward the second. The Americans of the second line inflicted even greater casualties on the British before they too were forced to retreat in the face of the British onslaught. As they British destroyed the second American line, they then encountered rough terrain on their way to the third American line. It was in this rough terrain that the flanks of the American third line attacked the advancing British; forcing the British right flank to retreat and destroying the left completely. In response, the British brought up their 3 pound canons, and then were in a position to directly attack the center of the American line. The Americans had inflicted a great number of casualties on the British while suffering relatively few of their own and so Nathanael Greene decided the time was right to withdraw from the field. Although this allowed the British to claim victory, Greene's forces would still be "fully capable to engage in immediate action," while the British had suffered tremendous losses. ("The Battle of Guilford Courthouse 1781.")
While the British could claim this battle as a victory, after all they held the field and the Americans withdrew, it was a pyrrhic victory at best. The British suffered more than 550 dead and wounded, while the Americans lost only 250; and the 550 men lost to the British were more than a quarter of...
Morgan's skirmishers kept firing as they withdrew to join the second line of militiamen. Tarleton's main infantry and cannons then attacked Morgan's second line. (Buchanan 321-322). Morgan's second line fired a volley into Tarleton's infantry line, which scattered Tarleton's line. Tarleton's infantry regrouped and charged at the second line, joined by a unit of dragoons. The second line fired a second volley at Tarleton's main line before retreating to the
Battle of Cowpens The British Are Not Coming: How the Read Coats Lost the Battle of Cowpens The Battle of Cowpens is considered by many historians to be a critical battle, which to a large extent shaped the outcome of the American Revolutionary War or War of Independence. This is due to the fact that it was seen as a "…decisive first step by American forces in reclaiming South Carolina from the
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