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Monday, January 11, 2016

Francis Salvador - the Southern Paul Revere

Francis Salvador was a wealthy young Jewish man in England until the collapse of the East India Company. Seeking to reclaim his fortune in the colonies, he traveled to Georgia with a group of 42 Jews in 1773. They moved to South Carolina when the Spaniards, who held Florida at that time, threatened to push into Georgia.

Salvador was quickly caught up in the furor for independence. At the age of 27, he was elected to the South Carolina General Assembly in 1774, even though it was illegal for a Jew to vote, much less serve in elected office.

In 1775 he served in the second South Carolina Provincial Congress. He argued that South Carolina's delegates to the Continental Congress should vote in favor of independence from England. He also fought to ensure payment to the troops in the new Continental Army.

The British had stirred up their Native American allies to fight on the frontier in South Carolina, creating a diversion to keep the militias away from the British troops at the coast. On July 1, 1776, Salvadore earned his nickname Southern Paul Revere when he rode 28 miles to warn of a Cherokee attack on the back country settlements.

On July 31, 1775, Salvador's militia group captured a pair of loyalists who then led the militia into an ambush laid by Cherokee and loyalists. He was shot and scalped, but survived long enough to talk to Colonel William Thompson. Thompson later wrote, "When I came up to him, after dislodging the enemy, and speaking to him, he asked, whether I had beat the enemy? I told him yes. He said he was glad of it, and shook me by the hand - and bade me farewell - and said, he would die in a few minutes."

Francis Salvador, at the age of 29, was the first Jewish soldier killed in the Revolutionary War.




PeggThomas.com

13 comments:

  1. This is very interesting Pegg. I had not heard of "Southern Paul Revere" before. Thanks for sharing.
    Blessings, Tina

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  2. Me either, so when I ran across this fellow, I made a note to look into who is was.

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  3. Wow, Pegg, I can't imagine being able to communicate so well after being scalped.

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    1. And I hope neither of us ever has to try it, either. Yikes!

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  4. Oooh, fun bit of South Carolina history! Do you know whereabouts in the state this took place? (I'd look it up but I have my sources out on loan...)

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    1. The sign says Coronaca, but I don't know South Carolina, so I've no idea where that is.

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  5. Fascinating article, Pegg! Thanks so much!

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  6. Very interesting, Pegg. I have a Cherokee Great granmother on my family tree. Sorry about the scalping! Keep up the good work.
    Elva Cobb Martin, Pres. ACFW-SC Chapter www.elvamartin.com
    www.carolinaromancewithelvamartin.blogspot.com

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    1. I have Blackfoot in my family tree. We can't take the blame for everything our forefathers - or mothers - did. :)

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  7. Very interesting! Thanks for your research :)

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  8. You're welcome! Thanks for reading. :)

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