by Albert Bobbett, 1877, depicts a raid by the East Florida Rangers or "Florida Scout" In the early days of the Revolutionary War, Charles and Jermyn Wright, brothers of Georgia's
Governor Wright, built a fort at their plantation on the
Florida side of the
St. Marys River. This fort, which was named
Fort Tonyn after the governor of
East Florida,
Patrick Tonyn, became a refuge for the
Tories of
Georgia, from which they made numerous raids on the southern settlements of that province. In mid-May 1776, Capt. John Baker marched against the fort with 70 mounted men. His plan was to wait until nightfall, surprise the fort by a sudden assault and then make a rapid retreat. His movements were conducted with great secrecy, but his approach was discovered by a slave, who alerted the fort's defenders. Three cannon were fired from the fort and were answered by the schooner
St. John of eight guns lying in the river a short distance below. Baker, surmising that this was a signal for reinforcements from the
schooner, placed his men in ambush along the banks and fired on the boats as they came up the stream. Several of the British were killed, wounded or captured, and from one of the prisoners Baker learned that a large body of Indians was encamped near the fort. He then retreated eight or nine miles before making camp for the night. During the darkness two of his men, Daniel and James McGirth, stole nearly all the horses belonging to the company and deserted to the enemy. The loss of the horses caused the failure of the expedition and Baker returned north to Georgia. For his act of daring Daniel McGirth was later made a lieutenant colonel in the Florida Rangers. book Dr. Johnson recounts a tradition purporting to explain the reason for young McGirt's desertion of the patriot cause. He says that as a young man, Daniel McGirt was an accomplished hunter and rider, intimately familiar with the woods and trails from the
Santee River to the lands of the
Catawba Nation. He was a valuable scout to the Americans, as much for his courage as for his accurate knowledge of the countryside. McGirt's driving passion before the war had been the breeding and racing of fine horses. His favorite mount was an iron-grey mare that he called “Grey Goose”. At Fort Mcintosh, a militia lieutenant, Clarke Christie, coveted the horse, and offered McGirt a lieutenant's commission in exchange for it, but he was refused. Not being able to get the horse by other means, Christie swore that he would have her by force. The threat led to a confrontation in which Daniel either struck the officer or threatened to do so. For this he was court-martialed and found guilty of striking an officer, a very serious offense, then publicly whipped with ten lashes and confined in the local jail. By the terms of his sentence, two more whippings were subsequently to be inflicted. Stung by this disgrace, McGirt determined to escape, and succeeded by dislodging the window bars of his cell with a broken trowel probably passed to him by a guard. Mounting “Grey Goose”, who happened to be tethered nearby, he dashed away, turning in his saddle as he rode off to hurl threats of vengeance. McGirt fled to
St. Augustine, the capital of
East Florida and a
Loyalist haven, where he was made a lieutenant colonel in
Thomas Brown's East Florida Rangers. ==Loyalist raider==