Mountain Sharpshooters Award
___________________________________________
(Draft versions 2//2008)
"The Green River
Rifles"
Mountain Sharpshooter's
Award
(The Battle of Cowpens)
Commemorating the Battle of Cowpens, January 17,
1781:
Introductory background:
In his memoirs,
Tarleton [the most feared
officer under Lord Cornwallis’s command in the Carolinas]
explained why he had pitched directly into
the battle [of Cowpens] at dawn, after
marching his men most of the night through swamps and thickets. Tarleton
noted that he had reports that a company of ‘the Green River Rifles’
were on their way to join Morgan’s forces (American Militia). They were among the mountain
sharpshooters who had picked off Ferguson and his officers from a distance
at Kings Mountain. Tarleton hoped to engage Morgan before they arrived.
What Tarleton didn’t know in that cold dawn
was that the
Green River Rifles had already joined the
North Carolina militia and were lying in the grass or hiding behind trees
in the front line waiting for [the British army].
In the first few minutes of the battle they emptied as many as 15 cavalry
saddles, and began a chain of events that would unnerve and defeat the
unbeaten Tarleton. ... (excerpts from Robert
Morgan -Two Shots and You are Free.)
Read more about the
American Revolution, and the American Militia (i.e.,
farmboys, drovers, carpenters, laborers, and
school teachers, etc...). Or, as stated in the words of George
Mason, in Debates in Virginia Convention on Ratification of the
Constitution: "I ask, sir, what is the
militia? It is the whole people, except for a few public officials."
Celebrate your
American heritage, the American Bill of Rights, and your individual right
to keep and bear arms. Be among the select few, the proud, to earn
The Green River Rifles Mountain Sharpshooter's
Award. Celebrate your American history - live it today!
Below you will find a
discussion as to: Eligibility, Courses of Fire, Requirements, and Awards
(Certificates, Medal etc...) and Savings Bond Awards.
Eligibility:
1. Current member in good standing of a
Venturing Crew (BSA) within the Northern Rivers District.
2. Adult
leaders in good standing of a Venturing Crew (BSA) within the Northern Rivers
District.
All candidates for the Award must have
successfully completed an NRA Rifle First Steps or NRA Basic Rifle
Course prior to undertaking any courses of fire for the Award.
All requirements must be witnessed by either of
the following: NRA Certified Rifle Instructor; and/or NRA Certified
Range Safety Officer (CRI / RSO)
The event involves three courses of fire.
Setup:
15 Targets - 6" X 6" (targets are to be 2 feet from ground
level, measured from the bottom of the targets to ground level).
Target distances:
- 5 targets at 50 yards
(the 5 targets are spaced (in a straight line) 1 foot apart, measured from
target edges)
-5 targets at 75 yards
(the 5 targets are spaced (in a straight line) 1 foot apart, measured from
target edges)
-5 targets at 100 yards
(the 5 targets are spaced (in a straight line) 1 foot apart, measured from
target edges)
1 shot per target (hit or miss); 22.LR (Rifle
scope or iron sites)
Course of Fire and Preparation:
Preparation for course of fire: Perform
25 jumping jacks (alternatively 25 sit ups, or 25 push ups) immediately before starting course of fire. Timer
starts immediately upon completion of last jumping jack (sit up, or push
up, as the case may be).
Course of Fire (15 shots) (immediately following above
exercise):
1. From a free standing position (no support or sling) shoot the 5
targets at 50 yards; next,
2. move to new location 5 feet away from
prior position and from a kneeling position, (no support or sling),
shoot the 5 targets at 75 yards; and next,
3. move to new location 5 feet away from
prior position and from the prone position, (no support or sling), shoot the 5 targets at 100
yards. Timer stops immediately after last shot fired.
4. Above course of fire must be completed within
the following time limits:
- 2 minutes, or less (i.e., all 15 shots) for the base Award;
- 1 minute 45 seconds, or less (i.e., all 15 shots) for the bronze Oak
Leaf Award);
- 1 minute 30 seconds, or less (i.e., all 15 shots) for the Silver Oak
Leaf Award).
Repeat the above course of Fire 3 times. The
3 courses of fire don’t have to be fired on the same day.
Requirements for award:
Base Award:
1. "The Green River Rifles" award: For
each course of fire (above) you must have total hits of 12 or more (total hits
36/45) and
2. Recite from memory the Lassen Sharpshooter’s
Pledge. (For those who
are not members of Lassen
Sharpshooters, the words in the Pledge
"Lassen
Sharpshooter" will be replaced with the
words "an American Citizen".
3. Watch the film "Innocents Betrayed" with parent or guardian,
if under 18. Explain
what you learned
from this film to the
CRI / RSO.
-Bronze Oak Leaf (after earning the base award):
1. For each course of
fire you must have hits of 14 or more (total hits 42/45).
2. Watch the film "In
Search of the Second Amendment" (with parent or guardian, if
under 18)) which is a 111-minute film by
attorney David T. Hardy compiles hundreds of years of knowledge on the
Second Amendment. David Hardy is considered the ''expert's expert''
when it comes to Second Amendment. Explain what you learned from this
film to the CRI / RSO.
-Silver Oak Leaf (after earning
Bronze):
1. For each course of fire you must have hits of
15 (total hits
45/45).
2. Watch the film "Bill of Rights
or Bust" (with parent or guardian, if under 18). Explain what you learned from this film to the CRI /
RSO.
Award (Medals, and Savings Bonds**):
Medals / Certificates:
Medal for Base Award and Certificate suitable for framing;
Bronze Oak Leaf (next level) and Certificate suitable for framing;
Silver Oak Leaf (highest) and Certificate suitable for framing.
PLUS -- Savings Bonds **:
Savings Bond (amount to be determined)* for Base
Award
Savings Bond (amount to be determined)* and Bronze
Oak Leaf
Savings Bond (amount to be determined)* and Silver
Oak Leaf
** Only the youth members will receive the Savings Bond Awards.
Draft 11/28/2007
(Background Information)
Battle of Cowpens
Source of the following article is:
http://www.robert-morgan.com/default.aspx?c=11
Robert
Morgan Official Author Website
Two Shots and You are Free
from Hemisphere
Historians and theorists, both professional and
amateur, like to speculate on the true causes for the outcome of a battle.
In the case of a great victory, such as the Battle of Cowpens, January 17,
1781, where about 800 Americans under the command of Gen. Daniel Morgan,
defeated over 1200 of the best of the British army in about 45 minutes,
the outcome may seem inevitable once the smoke has cleared away, the
bodies are buried, and the reports written up. But the more events leading
up to that crucial morning in the American Revolution are studied, the
clearer it is that the tide might have easily gone the other way. To many
students of the battle it appears that the decisive victory was the result
of three or four quick decisions Daniel Morgan made as he prepared to
fight the night before and as he rode among his men as the fight began to
daybreak.
The victory may have hinged on one sentence
Morgan shouted to his men the night before as they huddled around
campfires, preparing to meet Lt. Col. Banastre Tarleton and his feared
Green Dragoons and infantry at dawn. Morgan, a former teamster from the
Virginia frontier and commander of the Virginia Rifles at the two battles
of Saratoga, said "Boys, give me two shots and you are free to fall
back."
With those words he relieved the militiamen’s
worst fears: standing up to a cavalry charge where they would be chopped
up with sabers and trampled by horses, or confronting the dreaded rows of
British bayonets. With little military training or equipment, the
militiamen were only confident of their marksmanship, and hoped to fire at
the enemy from a distance, out of range of British Brown Bess muskets. In
almost every engagement where a militia had confronted regular British
troops, the militia had broken ranks and run for the thickets and swamps.
Lt. Col. Banastre Tarleton was the most feared
officer under Lord Cornwallis’s command in the Carolinas. Though only 26
years old, he had never lost a battle. His specialty was charging with his
dragoons directly into American forces and scattering them, then riding
down the fleeing patriots and running them through with razor-sharp
sabers. At the Waxhaws the previous May, and at other battles, he had
refused to take prisoners and killed surrendering men. "Tarleton’s
Quarter," meaning no quarter, had become an outcry in the Carolinas.
While Cornwallis moved his huge army up the east side of the Broad River
toward North Carolina and Virginia, Tarleton swept across the back country
of South Carolina, burning and raping, looting and hanging. His campaign
of terror to end the rebellion helped convince the South Carolineans such
as Andrew Pickens that they must fight Tarleton or be killed.
With that one sentence spoken around the
campfires in the hours before dawn on January 17, Daniel Morgan began to
inspire his army of farmboys and drovers, carpenters and laborers and
school teachers, that they could defeat the feared Tarleton. Morgan was so
confident and knowing that he made them believe, as they shivered in the
January cold, that not only could they win, but that they were going to
wind. They had to win.
Morgan was a thick powerful figure of a man. A
bullet in the mouth had left his cheek scarred, but he spoke the language
of the frontier. In his youth he had been a champion wrestler in taverns
and on village greens. He had always won his matches, and in those hours
before the battle he kept repeating the slogan, "Old Morgan was never
beaten." As a young teamster during the French and Indian War he had
slapped a British officer and been sentenced to 500 lashes, a death
sentence. But Morgan was so robust he survived the whipping and liked to
brag that the British had miscounted and given him only 499 lashes. By the
campfires that night of January 16-17, as he spirited up his men, he would
jerk up his shirt and show them the scars on his back. "Look what
these sons of bitches did to me," he said.
Morgan outlined to his soldiers around the
campfires his scheme of battle. He had not planned to fight Tarleton’s
larger force, but had no choice because the Broad River was in flood and
he couldn’t move his army across. Quickly he improvised a plan. He would
form his forces into three lines, with North Carolina and Georgia militias
in the front skirmish line ready to fire two shots and fall back quickly
to the second line held by Col. Pickens and the South Carolina militia.
From there they would all fire two more shots and then move back to the
third line on the higher ground, held by 290 Delaware and Marylander
Regulars under Lt. Col. John Howard and a complement of the seasoned
Virginia militia. The Continental Regulars had uniforms and bayonets much
like the British infantry. They would be ready for the final bayonet
charge, and all the militiamen would be firing from the third line in
their support.
On the British side Tarleton had the excellent
7th Infantry, the Royal Fusiliers, a battalion of Fraser’s 71st
Highlanders, undefeated in North America, a company of foot soldiers known
as Tarleton’s Legion, and the deadly Green Dragoons with their
reputation for brutality and victory.
The second inspired sentence Morgan uttered by
the campfires that night was "Aim only at the epaulettes and stripes;
don’t waste your ammunition on private soldiers." Morgan knew that
British soldiers were much better trained and disciplined than American
forces. If the chain of command was picked off, the officers and sergeants
killed, as had been done by mountain sharpshooters at King Mountain near
Charlotte the October before, the British soldiers were apt to be confused
and lose their confidence.
"Two shots and you are free," he
shouted again. "And hit only epaulettes and stripes, officers and
sergeants." It would later appear that the battle was essentially won
with those two sentences.
But Daniel Morgan had other factors working in
his favor in those hours before dawn. Unknown to Tarleton, Morgan had with
him the South Carolina cavalry under the command of Lt. Col. William
Washington. Washington’s dragoons had proven themselves only weeks
before in a battle at Hammond’s Store, killing more than a dozen of
Tarleton’s Green Dragoons. Washington also had about 40 mounted
militiamen riding with him. They were known to be excellent horsemen. To
keep the cavalry hidden from Tarleton until the most effective moment,
Morgan placed them behind a pine grove at the left rear of the wooded
pasture known as Hannah’s Cowpens.
The unexpected attack of Washington’s cavalry
at a crucial moment in the battle was almost certainly the second most
important surprise delivered to Tarleton that day. Since the British had
forces superior in number, training, and equipment, the element of
surprise must be an essential factor in explaining the overwhelming
American victory.
The third major surprise to the British occurred
near the end of the battle. Things had gone at first exactly as Morgan had
planned. The front line fired their two shots at the beginning and killed
several cavalry officers and sergeants, then ran back to join the South
Carolineans in the second line. Again they all fired two shots as the
British infantry began marching toward them. But as they began pulling
back toward the third line a panic seized the young militiamen. Perhaps
they were surprised by a thunderous volley of musket fire, or by blasts
from the two British field guns. In any case they began fleeing toward the
rear, and Tarleton and his Green Dragoons charged after them. Only
Washington and his cavalry, springing out from behind the pine grove,
saved them
After Lt. Hughes of the South Carolina militia
persuaded the panicked men to return to fight on the third line, all
assembled there, facing the advancing fusiliers. But when the 71st
Highlanders entered the battle on the Americans’ right flank, an order
was given to refuse (i.e. face) the flank. The militiamen misunderstood
the order, and thought they had been told to retreat. The whole American
line began withdrawing. Gen. Morgan rode up in a fury and asked Lt. Col.
Howard if he was beaten. Howard pointed out they were not defeated but
retreating in good order.
"Then reload and when I give the order turn
and fire," Morgan shouted. The British assumed they had won, seeing
the whole American army in retreat. They rushed forward through the smoke
with bayonets raised for the final kill. But when Morgan gave the order
the patriots spun around and fired point blank into the faces of the
British soldiers. Scores were killed and many of the British began to flee
or surrender. They threw down weapons and raised their arms. Washington’s
cavalry hemmed them in from behind in a double envelopment. All the
artillerymen refused to surrender and were killed, and soon the 71st
Highlanders surrendered.
As it turned out, Tarleton himself and several of
his men got away and made it back to Cornwallis’s camp on the other side
of the Broad River. But all the rest of the British forces were either
killed or captured. It is hard to think of a more decisive victory in the
Revolution, where relatively untrained soldiers defeated so completely a
larger, better equipped force. The road to Yorktown had been opened, the
route to victory.
In the aftermath of the Battle of Cowpens Morgan
had to retire from command because of illness. His superior officer,
Nathanael Greene, tried to repeat Morgan’s battle plan and victory at
Guilford Courthouse in March of 1781, and was
only partly successful. But Cornwallis’s once daunting army was crippled
and never recovered as it reeled toward Wilmington and then up into
Virginia. With his one inspired sentence Daniel Morgan had set into motion
a sequence of events that would end the Revolution and pave the way for
the Republic.
I first heard about the Battle of Cowpens from my
dad, Clyde Morgan, who was a wonderful storyteller and self-taught
historian. He described Morgan’s victory and later took me to visit the
hallowed ground of the battlefield just east of Spartanburg. He showed me
the statue of Gen. Morgan on the square in Spartanburg, and conceded that
we were not related to the hero, though at least one of my ancestors,
William Capps, had fought at Cowpens as a private in the Virginia militia.
Later I read several histories of the
Revolutionary campaign in South Carolina, and returned to visit the
battlefield park at Cowpens. It was while reading Tarleton’s memoirs of
his service in the South that I decided to write a novel set at the Battle
of Cowpens. Explaining why he pitched directly into battle at dawn, after
marching his men most of the night through swamps and thickets, Tarleton
noted that he had reports that a company of ‘the Green River Rifles’
were on their way to join Morgan’s forces. They were among the mountain
sharpshooters who had picked off Ferguson and his officers from a distance
at Kings Mountain. Tarleton hoped to engage Morgan before they arrived.
I had grown up on the Green River in Western
North Carolina. What Tarleton didn’t know in that cold dawn was that the
Green River Rifles had already joined the North Carolina militia and were
lying in the grass or hiding behind trees in the front line waiting for
him. In the first few minutes of the battle they emptied as many as 15
cavalry saddles, and began a chain of events that would unnerve and defeat
the unbeaten Tarleton. Among those marksmen was one of my ancestors,
William Capps, drawing a bead on a bright green and red uniform as the sun
rose over Thicketty Mountain.
End of Article.
* * *
Bronze
U.S. Mint restrike of gold medal awarded to General Daniel Morgan.
Historic
Trail Patch Information - Battle of Cowpens (BSA)
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