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Sunday, March 15, 2026

Stoic Patriot

A key historical figure in my upcoming novel, The South Spy, was ironically a northerner who made his career in the South. A New Englander entrusted with his nation's destiny, he was appointed to oppose the new British Southern Strategy. And it was in the South that the new nation and Benjamin Lincoln would encounter tragedy and triumph.


Benjamin Lincoln

Yankee Farmer: Prominence and Work

Born on January 24, 1733, in Hingham—a lively Puritan town southeast of Boston—Benjamin was the son of a successful farmer and militia colonel. The family name was well-respected—his ancestors had crossed the Atlantic during the Great Migration, establishing roots in New England's tough soil. Young Benjamin spent his early years working in the fields and shaping tools in his father's blacksmith shop, but his ambitions went beyond the farm. 

New England Farm

By his twenties, Cupid had called. Young Benjamin married Mary Cushing, fathered eleven children, and started public service as Hingham's town constable and clerk. Politics came naturally.  He served in the provincial assembly, advocating for colonial rights amid rising tensions with the Crown.

Citizen Soldier: The Militia Man

As the storm of revolution gathered, Lincoln's military career began, following the New England tradition where most young men served in the militia. He joined the Suffolk County militia under his father's command, rising to major by 1755 during the French and Indian War—although he saw no frontline combat. 


Militia Life


By 1772, he was a lieutenant colonel, drilling men on Hingham's green. When Lexington's shots rang out in 1775, Lincoln mobilized his regiment and marched to Cambridge to support the siege of Boston. His administrative skills were notable: organizing supplies, strengthening defenses, and calming chaos among inexperienced recruits. Promoted to brigadier general in the Massachusetts militia, he oversaw coastal defenses and recruitment efforts. 


Major Promotion: Major Battles

In February 1777, Congress promoted him to Continental Major General, placing him in George Washington's circle. Lincoln's first major achievement came at Saratoga that fall. Tasked with disrupting British General John Burgoyne's supply lines, he led bold raids across the Hudson River, sabotaging communications and bolstering American forces with militia reinforcements. During the critical second battle at Bemis Heights on October 7, Lincoln commanded the right wing, attacking Burgoyne's flanks. Although a musket ball shattered his ankle—leaving him lame for life—his efforts helped secure the British surrender ten days later. Saratoga's victory, which gained a French alliance, built Lincoln's reputation as a dependable leader. However, Washington, focusing on the vulnerable South, had bigger plans for the injured general. 


Bemis Heights Action


Command of the Southern Theater: A Descent into the Crucible

By late 1778, the war had moved southward, where British strategists saw Loyalist support and economic benefits in the tobacco-rich Carolinas and Georgia. In September, Congress appointed Lincoln to command the Southern Department, a large force stretching from Virginia to Florida, troubled by partisan clashes, Indian alliances, and tropical illnesses. When he arrived in Charleston in December, Lincoln found a ragtag group of 3,500 Continentals and militia, poorly armed and demoralized after the British took Savannah. His task was to retake Georgia and bolster the Carolinas against invasion. However, resources were limited—Congress delayed supplies, local governors argued, and slaves fled to the British, enticed by promises of freedom. Lincoln quickly began reorganizing. He drilled the troops in the hot lowcountry, formed alliances with local planters, and examined British positions.


Charleston 1780


Marching to Georgia: Savannah

 In the spring of 1779, he launched expeditions to Augusta and Beaufort, securing small victories that boosted morale. However, the main challenge was retaking Savannah. Supported by a French fleet commanded by Admiral d'Estaing, which arrived in September, Lincoln led 2,000 Americans to join 3,500 French troops outside the fortified port. The allies laid siege to the city for weeks, bombarding redoubts held by 3,200 British troops under General Augustine Prevost. 

Desperate Gambit: The Assault

On October 9, in a desperate attack, Lincoln led units through fog-covered marshes toward Spring Hill redoubt. Cannon fire ripped through the air; French and American charges faltered under grapeshot and musket volleys. Heroes like Count Casimir Pulaski (see my blog post, The Legend and the Legion) were fatally wounded, and Lincoln's men suffered over 800 casualties in the war's bloodiest retreat. Forced to withdraw, the allies quietly pulled back, leaving Savannah in British hands—a bitter defeat that showed the fragility of Franco-American coordination.


Assault on Savannah


From Offense to Defense: Charleston

Undeterred, Lincoln retreated to Charleston, strengthening the city with earthworks, abatis, and a canal across the neck. He called for reinforcements, boosting his garrison to over 5,000 by early 1780. However, British General Henry Clinton, sailing from New York with 8,500 redcoats and a naval fleet, landed south of the city in February. Systematically, Clinton surrounded Charleston, crossing rivers and digging parallels in a textbook siege. Lincoln's defenders stayed strong initially, repelling probes and launching sorties. Yet supplies ran low; smallpox devastated the troops, and civilian panic grew as British batteries battered homes and wharves. By April, Clinton's trap tightened—trenches moved close to American lines, and fire ships threatened the harbor.


Siege of Charleston 1781


Forlorn Hope: Tragic Surrender

Lincoln faced a tough choice: evacuate and leave the South's largest port, or fight on and risk being wiped out. He chose to stand his ground, but his options disappeared. On May 12, after 42 days of shelling, with ammo gone and mutiny brewing, Lincoln surrendered—the biggest American surrender of the Revolution. Over 5,000 troops, including his entire Continental force, marched out to lay down arms; large quantities of powder and cannon fell into enemy hands. Paroled and exchanged later that year, Lincoln took some blame in certain areas, although his persistent defense had tied down Clinton's army for months, buying time for the patriot cause elsewhere.


American Troops Surrendered


Redemption and Legacy in the Twilight

Exchanged in November 1780, Lincoln rejoined Washington, his limp a badge of endurance. At Yorktown in 1781, he commanded a division during the siege and, in poetic justice, accepted Cornwallis's sword on October 19—avenging Charleston. Postwar, he served as Secretary of War, streamlining the army's demobilization. Back in Massachusetts, he crushed Shays' Rebellion in 1787, safeguarding the fragile republic. Retiring to Hingham, Lincoln dabbled in diplomacy and land speculation until his death on May 9, 1810. Not a dashing spy or a fiery orator, Lincoln embodied the Revolution's quiet heroes: farmers-turned-generals whose unyielding spirit forged a nation from the ashes of defeat. 

Shays' Rebellion




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