On 
  January 10 1778, John Houstoun was elected as the new Governor of Georgia. 
  Born at Frederica, he was a lawyer in Savannah ---only 27 years old when 
  elected governor.  Expectations were high as one on the Council of Safety 
  stated, "We have some reason to expect Good order and harmony will succeed 
  the Anarchy and Tyranny which has so long distracted this unhappy State"  
  Instead Houstoun became one of Georgia's greatest disappointments in the 
  American Revolution.
  
  
  
  The frontier between the Independent state of
  Georgia and 
  the
  Loyal 
  British province of
  East Florida 
  was, for the first three years of the
  American Revolutionary 
  War, the scene of ongoing cattle raids by the Loyalist Florida 
  Rangers and allied Indians. Political and military leaders in Georgia believed 
  that East Florida's capital,
  St. Augustine, 
  was vulnerable, and repeatedly promoted expeditions to capture it. 
  The first two failures did not dissuade Georgians from a third attempt upon 
  Florida in 1778.
 
  the
  American Revolutionary 
  War, the scene of ongoing cattle raids by the Loyalist Florida 
  Rangers and allied Indians. Political and military leaders in Georgia believed 
  that East Florida's capital,
  St. Augustine, 
  was vulnerable, and repeatedly promoted expeditions to capture it. 
  The first two failures did not dissuade Georgians from a third attempt upon 
  Florida in 1778.  
  
  
  
  The southernmost post in Georgia was Fort Howe (before the war known as Fort 
  Barrington), 
  on the banks of the
  Altamaha River 
  above Darien, and the northernmost Florida outpost was at
  Fort Tonyn, 
  near Kings, also called Mills, Ferry on the St. Marys River, in present-day 
  Nassau County. East Florida Governor
  Patrick Tonyn 
  had under his command a regiment of Florida Rangers led by Lieutenant Colonel
  Thomas Brown, 
  and five hundred British Regulars under the command of Brigadier General
  Augustine Prevost.
  
  
  
  
  Tonyn and Prevost squabbled over control of Brown's regiment, and disagreed on 
  how the province should be defended against the recent forays from Georgia. 
  Prevost was under orders to stay on the defensive, while Tonyn sought a more 
  vigorous defense. To that end Tonyn deployed Brown's force along the
  St. Marys River, 
  which formed the border between Florida and Georgia. Brown and his men, 
  sometimes with support from
  Creeks and
  Seminoles, 
  engaged in regular raids into coastal Georgia, harassing the defenders and 
  raiding plantations for cattle to supply some of the province's food needs.
  
  
  
  In February 1778, Georgia's assembly authorized Governor
  John Houstoun 
  to organize a third expedition against East Florida. The expedition was 
  opposed by the Continental Army's Southern Department commander, Major General
  Robert Howe, 
  who, like his counterpart Prevost, sought a more defensive posture. Plans 
  began to take shape in March taking on more urgency after Brown's Rangers 
  captured and burned Fort Howe in a surprise attack. After this occurred, the 
  Loyalists ranged freely throughout Georgia's backcountry, and began recruiting 
  in the upcountry of Georgia and the Carolinas. Their actions led Georgia's 
  leadership to conclude that a British invasion of the state was being planned, 
  and military preparations began to accelerate.
  
  
  
  In addition to land forces, both sides had coastal naval forces to marshal. 
  Florida Governor Tonyn deployed several ships near Darien and in the
  Frederica River, 
  separating
  Saint Simons Island 
  from the mainland, seeking to neutralize the
  row galleys 
  in the Georgia arsenal. Commodore Oliver Bowen commanded the Continental 
  Georgia Navy, consisting of six Continental galleys which defended the 
  intercoastal waterways, several provincial sloops brought supplies, and a few 
  privateers screened the open sea. 
  
  
  
  General Howe reluctantly agreed to support the expedition, and in early April, 
  Georgia's 500 Continental troops, under Colonel Samuel Elbert began to move 
  south, occupying the site of the burned Fort Howe on April 14.
   The next day, Elbert 
  learned that four British vessels were sailing in the St. Simons Sound; he 
  sailed with three Georgia Navy galleys and captured three British ships near 
  the ruins of Fort Frederica. Elbert returned to Fort Howe to wait 
  for General 
  Howe and additional 
  troops. On May 
  10, they were joined by Howe with 
  detachment of 500 South Carolina Continentals and Artillery, and they 
  understood that General Andrew Williamson, leading 800 to 1,000 South Carolina 
  Militia, was en route to Fort Howe.  
  
  Frederica Naval Action  
   
  
  
  
  
  During the preparation for the Third Florida Expedition at Fort Howe, Elbert 
  learned on April 15 that four British vessels were sailing in the St. Simons 
  Sound, between St, Simons and Jekyll Islands. Sailing from Darien with three row galleys and artillery in another vessel, 
  Elbert's flotilla arrived near
  Fort Frederica 
  on April 18. (The "fort" was ruins of a British fort commanded by General 
  James Oglethorpe, beginning in 1736 until 1748, when a peace treaty was signed 
  with the Spaniards.)
 
  Sailing from Darien with three row galleys and artillery in another vessel, 
  Elbert's flotilla arrived near
  Fort Frederica 
  on April 18. (The "fort" was ruins of a British fort commanded by General 
  James Oglethorpe, beginning in 1736 until 1748, when a peace treaty was signed 
  with the Spaniards.) 
  
  
  
  Colonel Elbert observed the attack preparations of the British, and at 
  daybreak on April 19, he initiated an attack against the British vessels as 
  anchored at the fort. Beginning at dawn on April 19, 1778, the Georgia Navy galleys: Lee, Washington, and Bulloch, attacked HM brigantine
  Hinchinbrook, the armed sloop Rebecca, and another armed brig.  The 
  British attempted to retaliate, but were out-gunned and out-maneuvered.  As 
  they tried to gain an advantage by moving down river their ships grounded, 
  were abandoned, and captured.  This remarkable victory, called the  
  Frederica 
  Naval Action, boosted patriot morale and delayed by more than eight months the 
  British invasion of Georgia.
  
  The Third 
  Florida Expedition was better equipped than the other two. Armaments of all 
  sorts were in better supply than they had been, and even Artillery was 
  available. Nevertheless, such amenities as tents, camp kettles, canteens and 
  medicines continued to be almost nonexistent. As the 
  days passed at Fort Howe, the weather grew hotter, heavy rains seriously 
  endangered their ammunition, provisions ran short, morale deteriorated 
  steadily,
  
  and there were frequent desertions, leading to at least eleven executions.
  
  
  Governor John Houstoun had issued a proclamation calling on volunteers to meet 
  at a camp in Burke County, offering plunder that they may capture. On April 
  26, a force of 400 Georgia militia arrived at the camp, and General James 
  Screven was designated the military commandant of this contingent.
  
  Governor Tonyn and General Prevost were aware of Howe's progress, since 
  Brown's Rangers and Indian forces continued to perform reconnaissance, 
  occasionally skirmishing with the Georgians and testing the security of their 
  camps. On one occasion, Brown was challenged by a picket, and followed by 
  horseman so closely that he was forced to drop his baggage, including his 
  coat, in order to escape into the swamp. The contents of the baggage revealed 
  that the Georgians had nearly captured Thomas Brown, himself. General Prevost 
  moved some of his Regulars forward to the Alligator Creek Bridge on the Nassau 
  River, placing most of them on the King's Road, the main route to St. 
  Augustine. 
  
  Houstoun, who had no prior military experience, and his volunteer militia 
  finally reached General Howe's troops on the St. Marys River in late June. At
  
  this point the expedition almost broke down because General Howe and Governor 
  Houstoun could not agree on how to proceed. Houstoun wanted to march directly 
  toward St. Augustine, forcing a confrontation with the 
  Major 
  Prevost's Regulars posted fifteen miles away on the King's Road.
  
   Howe wanted to first 
  attack 
  the East Florida Rangers and capture Fort Tonyn, ten miles downstream. 
  
  
  The 
  destruction of Fort Tonyn was one of the principal goals of Howe's forces 
  invading East Florida. The fort, located in present-day Nassau County on the 
  south side of the St. Mary's River, about one mile east of Kings Ferry which 
  was also called Mills Ferry, had become a nuisance to Georgians because it was 
  a base for raids into that state by Brown's Florida Rangers as well as a haven 
  for fleeing Loyalists.    
  
  Raiding 
  parties of Florida Rangers and Indians fired on the Patriot forces, but their 
  greatest enemy was sickness.
  
  General Howe's expedition force finally began crossing the Altamaha on May 28, 
  but on June 6, about 300 Continentals became so sick that they returned to 
  Darien. The only encouraging note was Howe's announcement on June 1 that 
  France had publicly acknowledged the independence of the United States of 
  America. In celebration, thirteen cannon were fired, and an issue of grog was 
  served to all. 
  
  
  
  Howe's force m"ved very slowly, crossing the Satilla on June 21 and reaching 
  the St. Marys River on June 26. 
  The "usual order of march" was Georgia Continentals in the lead followed by 
  detachments of militia. The South Carolina Continentals trailed, sometimes as 
  far back as the previous river crossing. No one was sure where Williamson and 
  the South Carolina Militia were, except they were far behind.  
  
  On June 
  28, Howe's Continentals finally began their march to Fort Tonyn. Their delay 
  had given Brown's Rangers time to secure their equipment and burn the fort. On 
  June 28, Brown abandoned the fort and retreated into Cabbage Swamp, from which 
  they annoyed the Continentals as much as possible. The next day, June 29, 
  Howe's force of over 400 men "captured" the fort and occupied it through July 
  11, 1778.  
  
  
  One of 
  Commodore Bowen's Georgia galley had entered the Nassau River, and Continental 
  Colonel John White with ninety infantry and fourteen dragoons (light horsemen) 
  camped at Nassau Bluff near the mouth of the river. Prevost dispatched twenty 
  of his dragoons, and chased White's men into the swamp. The British force 
  dined on the dinner that had been prepared for the Georgians, and then fell 
  back toward Alligator Creek
  
  On June 
  30, Brown's Rangers and Indians left Cabbage Swamp and marched toward the 
  Nassau River and encamped about six miles north of Prevost's forces.
  
  The way south from Fort Tonyn on the King's Road led to a bridge across 
  Alligator Creek, a Nassau River tributary about fourteen miles away, where 
  British General Prevost had placed detachments of the 16th and 60th Regiments 
  of Regulars and 
  the 
  South Carolina Royal Americans
  
  led by Daniel McGirth. They had constructed a redoubt of logs and brush with a 
  wide moat to defend the 
  Alligator Creek Bridge over that tributary of the Nassau River. 
  In addition to Brown's 200 Florida Rangers, these forces 
  included 200 South Carolina Royal Americans
  
  and 500 British Regulars, all under the command of General Prevost's younger 
  brother, Major
  Marc Prevost. 
                                                     
  
  Gov. 
  Houstoun opted to attack the Regulars at Alligator Creek; but first he ordered 
  General Screven's 100 mounted Georgia Militia to pursue Brown's Rangers as 
  they retreated south from Fort Tonyn toward Alligator Creek.
  
  Brown continued moving down the road toward the bridge, but was surprised and 
  overtaken by Screven's militia shortly before he got there. As a result, 
  Brown's men were chased directly into the established British position at the 
  bridge.
  
  
  
  There was some initial confusion, because neither Screven's nor Brown's forces 
  had conventional uniforms, so the British Regulars thought all of those 
  arriving were Brown's men. This changed quickly however, and a firefight broke 
  out. Prevost's Regulars quickly took up positions and began firing on 
  Screven's men, while some of Brown's men went around their flank.
  
  Colonel 
  Elijah Clarke led 100 mounted militia on an attack on the weakest British 
  flank, so Screven could advance on the British front. The British Regulars and 
  Rangers met Clarke's forces whose 
  horses penetrated the abatis of logs and bushes with great difficulty but 
  found the moat too wide to leap. Clarke was shot through his thigh, and barely 
  escaped capture. With the failure of Clarke's attack, Screven's main reserve 
  force did not attack
  
  and many narrowly escaped being trapped before Screven ordered the retreat. In 
  the pitched battle, men on both sides went down; 
  the 
  Georgians' loss being thirteen killed and several wounded, while the British 
  suffered nine casualties.
  
  General 
  Andrew Williamson's South Carolina Militia finally crossed the Altamaha River 
  in July. Like Houston, Williamson refused to co-ordinate with General Howe. 
  The Militia and Continentals were encamped about eight miles apart on 
  opposites of the St. Marys River. 
  Governor Houston urged General Howe to again attack the British at Alligator 
  Creek on July 2. Howe promptly agreed on the condition that Houston supply the 
  Continentals with rice.  The Continental forces were out of rice, since a 
  supply galley had failed to arrive. Houston replied that he did not have 
  sufficient provisions with his own camp for the next day's rations. The 
  Patriot attack did not take place.
  
  
  
  The Continental force had been reduced by disease and desertion to only 400 
  effective soldiers; the 
  hospital returns contained one-half of Howe's command. By this time the 
  scarcity of forage had reduced the Continental's horses to below the number 
  required to drag the artillery, ammunition, provisions and baggage.The 
  shortage of food and the ongoing command disagreements spelled the end of the 
  Third Expedition.
  
  On July 
  11, General Howe called a council of war for his Continental officers and they 
  resolved to retreat from the St. Marys River, starting July 14. The militia 
  forces of Houstoun and Williamson had no choice but to follow. Thomas Pickney 
  stated of the 1778 Florida Expedition, "before we had taken possession of 
  Fort Tonyn, which the British abandoned at our approach, more than half of our 
  troops were in their graves or in the hospitals."  
  
  The 
  expedition suffered from the same lack of coordination that doomed the 
  previous two assaults on the southern borderlands. General Howe's Continentals 
  managed to "capture" Fort Tonyn on the St. Marys River after it was burned and 
  abandoned by Brown's Rangers, and Governor Houston's Georgia Militia were 
  repulsed by Major Marc Prevost's Regulars,  Florida Rangers and South Carolina 
  Royal Americans at the Battle of Alligator Creek, which is also the called 
  Battle of Alligator Creek Bridge. With limited successes and significant 
  losses due to sickness, the Patriots returned to Savannah.                  
  
  
  Alligator Creek 
  Historical Marker  
  "SKIRMISH OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION"      
  
  
     June 30, 1778, a force 
  of 300 American Cavalry commanded by Colonel Elijah Clarke, participating in 
  General Robert Howe's invasion of Florida, attacked a column of British at 
  this place (Alligator Creek Bridge), but were unable to penetrate the nearby 
  entrenchments of 450 British Regulars and South Carolina Royalists under the 
  command of Major James Marc Prevost. In this skirmish, Colonel Clarke was 
  wounded and the Americans withdrew. The next day, the British retired in the 
  direction of the St. Johns River. Casualties: Americans 13 British 9.  
  Erected by Jacksonville Chapter, Florida Society Sons of the American 
  Revolution                                 
   
  
  Although not specifically located, the site  
  Battle of Alligator Creek is 
  believed to have occurred on the 
  north side of Callahan where U.S. Highway 301 joins with U.S. Highway 1. The 
  Historical Marker is located on the east side of U.S. Highway 1 in Callahan in 
  Nassau County, located approximately 20 miles northwest of Jacksonville.
   
   
  
  
  Prepared by Bill Ramsaur, Marshes of Glynn Chapter, Georgia Society Sons of 
  the American Revolution, Revised 2/15/2014 
  
  
  
  References:
  
    - 
    
    
    Boatner, Mark M. Landmarks of the American Revolution.  
    (Harrisburg, 
    PA: Stackpole Books, 1973) 
- 
    
    Buker, George E. and Richard A. 
    Martin. "Governor Tonyn's Brown-Water Navy: East Florida During The American 
    Revolution, 1775-1778," The Florida Historical Quarterly, Volume 58, 
    Issue 1, (July 1979), pp   58-71. 
- 
    
    
    Cashin, Edward J (1999). The King's Ranger: Thomas Brown and the American 
    Revolution on the Southern Frontier (Bronx, New York: Fordham University 
    Press, 1999)   
    - 
    
    
    Searcy, Mary. The Georgia--Florida Contest in the American Revolution, 
    1776--1778 (University, AL: University of Alabama Press, 1985) 
     
- 
    
    
    Smith, Gordon Burns. 
     
    Morningstar's of Liberty: The Revolutionary 
    War in Georgia 1775-1783, Volume One 
    (Milledgeville: Boyd Publishing, 2006)  
- 
    
    
    Smith, Gordon Burns. 
     
    Morningstar's of Liberty: The Revolutionary 
    War in Georgia 1775-1783, Volume Two- Georgia Continental Officers During 
    the Revolutionary War
    (Milledgeville: 
    Boyd Publishing, 2011) 
- 
    
    Wood, Virginia Steele. "The Georgia Navy's Dramatic 
    Victory of April 19, 1778" Georgia Historical Society Quarterly 90, 
    no 2 (2006) pp 165-195