In 1774, the Liberty Boys in Savannah began meeting to express their 
  grievances against the British Crown. Early in 1775, they became more active, 
  and during the "Savannah Sugar Party" recaptured sugar and molasses seized by 
  customs officials. Next, they stole the gunpowder stored in the city magazine 
  and raised Georgia's first Liberty Pole. In July, they seized off Tybee a ship 
  carrying gunpowder---the Patriots' first naval capture in Southern waters. 
  
  To enforce a ban on British trade and to wrest civil control from Crown 
  officials, the Council of Safety organized in July 1775. Now, Georgia had two 
  competing governments---Loyalist, with allegiance to King George III, and Whig, 
  which favored independence. 
  
  British warships arrived in the Savannah River in January 1776, and the 
  Council of Safety arrested the Royal governor. The following month, the 
  British ships took possession of several rice-laden merchant ships, leading to 
  a heavy exchange of cannon fire with the Whigs as the  
  "Battle of the Rice boats." 
  The British sailed away with the fugitive Royal governor. The Whigs countered 
  with the Tybee Raid to clear the river of Loyalist raiders. 
  
  In February 1777, a convention in Savannah adopted Georgia's first 
  Constitution, thereby becoming a state with that city as its capital. This 
  document provided for a superior court in each county, a general assembly with 
  an executive committee, and an elected governor. It also created eight 
  counties from the provincial parishes, naming seven of them for British 
  political figures sympathetic to the cause of American liberty and the eighth 
  as Liberty County in honor of the early zeal by the Whigs of St. John's 
  Parish. 
  
  The Georgia Whigs soon divided into Radical and Conservative factions, 
  resulting in contention for civil and military dominance. This struggle led to 
  a duel between Lachlan McIntosh and Button Gwinnett in May of 1777. Both men 
  were wounded, and Gwinnett died of complications three days later. 
  
  By 1778, the American Revolution had reached a stalemate, so the British high 
  command decided to initiate a  
  "Southern Strategy." They felt that Loyalists in 
  the Georgia backcountry would support the Crown. Sir Henry Clinton ordered Lt.Col. Archibald Campbell to invade Georgia, restore British rule, and set 
  the stage for the British capture of the Southern colonies. 
  
  On December 28, 1778, Campbell's 3,500 troops landed below Savannah at 
  Brewton's Hill, brushed away token resistance, and advanced on the Whig line, 
  commanded by Continental Gen. Robert Howe along the east side of the city. 
  Campbell sent a force of light infantry south to flank Howe's line, and thence 
  north into Savannah in a move to trap the defenders. The British lost only 
  seven men killed and ten wounded, while the Whigs lost 83 men killed and 483 
  captured---and the capital of Georgia. Royal Governor James Wright returned to 
  Savannah in July of 1779, restored the parishes, and reorganized the Loyalist 
  government and militia. Georgia became the only state to have its institutions 
  returned to colonial status. 
  
  
  In September 1779, the French Mediterranean Squadron, commanded by
   
  Count 
  Charles Henri d’Estaing, arrived off the Georgia coast. Four thousand troops 
  disembarked at Beaulieu on the Vernon River.  
  Continental Maj. Gen. Benjamin 
  Lincoln joined them from Charleston with 600 Continentals, 200 men of the 
  Pulaski Legion, and 750 militiamen. 
  
  D'Estaing demanded the surrender of Savannah on September 16. However, British 
  Lt.Col. John Maitland led 800 Highlanders from Beaufort on a remarkable forced 
  march through the marsh and swamps, slipping through the blockade into 
  Savannah. Thus reinforced,  
  British Gen. Augustine Prevost refused to 
  surrender. D'Estaing's delay allowed Prevost to complete his defensive 
  fortifications around the city. 
  
  The Franco-American attack began in the early morning of October 9, the 
  British redoubt at Spring Hill being its principal objective. British 
  artillery and musketry ripped the attackers as they advanced. Scottish 
  bagpipes responded to the French battle cry, "Vive le roi!" British, Loyalist, 
  and Hessian defenders cut down the French and Americans who reached the 
  parapet and planted their colors. None of the attackers were able to get 
  inside the redoubt. 
  
  The combined Allied attacks failed with the loss of about 1,094 killed, of 
  whom 650 were French.  
  General Casimir Pulaski, Polish-born commander of the 
  Pulaski Legion, received a mortal wound while conducting a reconnaissance in 
  search of a breach in the British lines. He died two days later. Sergeant 
  William Jasper, the hero of the British attack on Charleston, also received a 
  mortal wound as he defended the South Carolina standard on the parapet. The 
  British reported a loss of 16 killed and 39 wounded. Sir Henry Clinton in New 
  York stated that the British victory at Savannah was "the greatest event that 
  has happened in the whole war."
  
  In January 1782, Maj. Gen. Nathanael Greene ordered Brig. Gen. Anthony Wayne 
  to enter Georgia with a detachment of dragoons and artillerymen. Wayne's 
  mission was to restore Whig authority and conduct a war of attrition against 
  the British defenders of Savannah. Wayne established his headquarters at 
  Ebenezer, and after a series of brutal fights around Savannah, Wayne drove the 
  British outposts into the city and cut off their supplies. In a serious battle 
  at Gibbons' plantation in June, Wayne defeated an attempt by Creek Chief Guristersigo and 300 warriors to break into Savannah. 
  
  
  On July 11, Gen. Alured Clarke, British commandant at Savannah, began the 
  evacuation of the city. The British garrison of 1,200 regulars and Loyalists, 
  along with Indian warriors and their families, and slaves, set sail for the 
  West Indies, St. Augustine, and New York. Only about 750 white inhabitants 
  remained in Savannah. 
  
  Lt.Col. James Jackson led his Georgia Legion into the city. Whig Governor John 
  Martin convened the Georgia Assembly on July 13, and symbolically reclaimed 
  Georgia. The last battle of the Revolution in Georgia took place on July 25, 
  1782 between Jackson's Georgia Legion and British Marines at Delegal's 
  Plantation on Skidaway Island. 
  
  Prepared by Norman J. Hoffman of the Edward Telfair Chapter, and edited by 
  Bill Ramsaur of the Marshes of Glynn Chapter, Georgia Society, Sons of the 
  American Revolution.