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had captured. Such was the confidence in his fidelity and skill, that a roving commission was granted him, with liberty to pick his associates from the brigade. Of these he seldom chose more than six. He would often go off and return with a prisoner before his absence was known. He was known to catch a party that was looking for him. On one occasion he went into the British lines at Savannah, as a deserter, and was gladly received. After a stay of eight days in which time he learned of the strength, situation and intentions of the enemy, he returned to his companions.

"While in the exercise of his roving privileges he, on one occasion, visited the post of the enemy at Ebenezer. At this post he had a brother, who held the same rank in the British service, that he held in the American. This instance was quite too common in the history of the period and country, to occasion much surprise, or cause any suspicion of the integrity of either party. William Jasper loved his brother and wished to see him: it is very certain, at the same time, that he did not deny himself the privilege of seeing all around him. The Tory was alarmed at William's appearance in the British camp, but the other quieted his fears, by representing himself as no longer an American soldier. He checked the joy which this declaration excited in his brother's mind, by assuring him that, though he found little encouragement in fighting for his country, "he had not the heart to fight against her." Our scout lingered for two or three days in the British camp, and then, by a detour, regained that of the American's; reporting to his Commander all that he had seen. He was encouraged to repeat his visit a few weeks after, but this time he took with him a comrade, one Sergeant Newton, a fellow quite as brave in spirit, and strong in body as himself. Here he

was again well received by his brother, who entertained the guests kindly for several days. Meanwhile, a small party of Americans were brought into Ebenezer as captives, over whom hung the danger of “short/shrift and sudden cord." They were on their way to Savannah for trial. They had taken arms with the British, as hundreds more had done, when the country was deemed reconquered; but, on the approach of the American army, had rejoined their countrymen, and were now once more at the mercy of the power with which they had broken faith. 'It will go hard with them,' said the Tory Jasper to his Whig brother; but the secret comment of the other was, 'it shall go hard with me first.' There was a woman, the wife of one of the prisoners, who, with her child, kept them company. William Jasper and his friend were touched by the spectacle of their distress; and they conferred together, as soon as they were alone, as to the possibility of rescuing them. Their plan was soon adopted. It was a simple one, such as naturally suggests itself to a hardy and magnanimous character. The prisoners had scarcely left the post for Savannah, under a guard of eight men, a sergeant and corporal, when they took leave of their host, and set forth also, though in a different direction from the guard. Changing their course when secure from observation, they stretched across the country and followed the footsteps of the unhappy captives. But it was only in the pursuit that they became truly conscious of the difficulty, nay, seeming impossibility, of effecting their object. The guard was armed, and ten in number; they but two, and weaponless. Hopeless, they nevertheless followed on. Two miles from Savannah there is a famous spring, the waters of which are well known to travelers. The conjecture that the guard might stop there, with the prisoners, for refreshment, suggested itself to

our companions; here, opportunities might occur for the rescue, which had nowhere before presented themselves. Taking an obscure path with which they were familiar, which led them to the spot before the enemy could arrive, they placed themselves in ambush in the immediate neighborhood of the spring. They had not long to wait. Their conjecture proved correct. The guard was halted on the road opposite the spring. The corporal with four men conducted the captives to the water, while the sergeant, with the remainder of his force, having made them ground their arms near the road, brought up the rear. The prisoners threw themselves upon the earth-the woman and her child, near its father. Little did any of them dream that deliverance was at hand. The child fell asleep in the mother's lap. Two of the armed men kept guard, but we may suppose with little caution. What had they to apprehend, within sight of a walled town in the possession of their friends? Two others approached the spring, in order to bring water to the prisoners. Resting their muskets against a tree they proceeded to fill their canteens. this moment Jasper gave the signal to his comrade. In an instant the muskets were in their hands. In another, they had shot down the two soldiers upon duty; then clubbing their weapons, they rushed out upon the astonished enemy, and felling their first opponents each at a blow, they succeeded in obtaining possession of the loaded muskets. This decided the conflict, which was over in a few minutes. The surviving guard yielded themselves to mercy before the presented weapons. Such an achievement could only be successful from its audacity and the operation of circumThe very proximity of Savannah increased the chances. But for this the guard would have taken better precautions. None were taken. The prompt valor, the bold decision,

stances.

of success.

At

the cool calculation of the instant, were the essential elements which secured success. The work of our young heroes was not done imperfectly. The prisoners were quickly released, the arms of the captured British put into their hands, and, hurrying away from the spot which they have crowned with a local celebrity not soon to be forgotten, they crossed the Savannah in safety with their friends and foes."

Soon after this Jasper lost his life in a manner that has immortalized him. After the celebrated victory achieved by Moultrie at the fort which bears his name, the citizens of Charleston vied with each other in doing honor to the conquerors. A lady, named Mrs. Elliot, presented a pair of colors to the regiment, and in a speech that accompanied the presentation she invoked its courage to defend them "as long as they can wave in the air of liberty." Subsequently, in the attack upon Savannah, the ensign bearers, Lieutenants Bush and Hume, in planting them on the British lines, were shot down. Lieutenant Gay, in endeavoring to carry them forward, also fell; and Jasper in seizing one of the flags, as it fell from Hume, was mortally wounded, but he succeeded in bearing it away in safety.

AN ACT OF MERCY REWARDED.

Ar the time when the cause of the patriots looked so dark in the south, and when the few whigs who refused to receive the offered protections of the British commander, were beginning to gather in partizan bands with the determination to resist the foe unto the last, Col. Bratton assumed an important influence in

furthering the plans of the whigs, and gathering them together to resist the enemy. The active energy he manifested in the cause, made him particularly obnoxious to the British, who at last resolved to crush him. Captain Huck, with a command of four hundred men, was dispatched with instructions to hunt him down.

Col. Bratton resided near Brattonsville, South Carolina, and his grounds became the scene of a victory, known in the history of the war, as Huck's defeat. To this spot, Captain Huck proceeded, and entered the house, on the enemy, of the day which preceded the the victory, roughly demanding of. Mrs. Bratton, where her hus

band was.
She calmly replied that he was in Sumter's army.
This reply enraged the British officer, but he controlled his anger,
while he endeavored to persuade her to confess her knowledge of
his retreat, and promising that if she would induce him to join
the royalists, he should receive a commission in the army. The
officer eloquently pictured the hopelessness of the "rebel" cause,
and stated truly that the whigs themselves generally despaired of
success. But to these specious arguments, and tempting promi-
ses, the heroic lady yielded nothing, and declared that she would
rather see her husband perish at once, in the cause he had assu-
med to defend, than to wear lofty honors in the armies of her
country's enemy. This reply broke down the officer's command
of his temper, and one of the soldiers, actuated by that spirit of
deadly hatred, and unrelenting cruelty, that so pervaded the
breasts of our country's invaders, seized a reaping hook near at
hand, and bringing it into contact with her throat, would in an
instant have ruthlessly murdered her, had not the officer second
in command, sprang forward and rescued her from his hands.

The troops, after partaking of a supper in Mrs. Bratton's resi

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