Service record: •
Lincoln County Regiment, North Carolina militia 1779-1783 • 9/9/1775, a major under
Col. William Graham in the
Tryon County Regiment (North Carolina) • June 1776, back to captain. • 1779, a lieutenant colonel of Riflemen under Col. Andrew Hampton (
Rutherford County Regiment). • May have been at the
Battle of Stono Ferry in South Carolina • At the
Battle of Ramseur's Mill in North Carolina under Col. Francis Locke (Rowan County Regiment). • Wounded at the
Battle of Kings Mountain in South Carolina • Not very active during 1781 and 1782. • Resigned April 30, 1783. Before serving as a soldier, Hambright was a signer of the
Tryon Resolves of August 14, 1775, a document which declared that the signers would vow resistance against the
British for their actions at the
Battle of Lexington. He was a representative of Tryon County, at the
Third Provincial Congress, which lasted from August 20 to September 10, 1775. In late 1776, Hambright took part in the
Rutherford Light Horse expedition against the
Overhill Cherokee. When the war reached Tryon County in 1777, Hambright joined the colonial cause as a lieutenant colonel of the Lincoln County Regiment (locally known as "The South Fork Boys"). Hambright was called the "Terror of the
Tories".
Battle of Kings Mountain On May 22, 1780,
Major Patrick Ferguson was assigned as "Inspector of the British Militia", and was promptly ordered to march to Tryon County, North Carolina, to raise troops and to protect the left flank of
Lord Cornwallis's main body which occupied
Charlotte, North Carolina, at the time. By September 10, Ferguson had established a military camp at Gilbert Town, North Carolina and issued a challenge to the
Patriot leaders to lay down their arms or he would, "
Lay waste to their country with fire and sword." After receiving this message, Patriot leaders
Isaac Shelby and
John Sevier quickly planned a preemptive campaign against Ferguson's army. They sent messages to military leaders
William Campbell and
Benjamin Cleveland to join them. The rendezvous at
Sycamore Shoals on September 25, brought to Campbell's army 200 Virginians and 160 North Carolinians. Another 1,100 "
Overmountain Men," volunteers from the
Washington District, also arrived to fight for the Patriot cause. The army met with Cleveland's 350 men at
Burke County, North Carolina, and the now 1,400–strong force marched towards the
South Mountains. When word of this force reached Ferguson, he sent a message to Cornwallis asking for reinforcements. This message did not reach Cornwallis in time, and on October 1 Ferguson retreated towards the
Broad River, asking for local loyalist militia to join him. By October 6, the Patriots had passed Gilbert Town and had reached Cowpens, South Carolina. Local sympathizers informed the Patriots that Ferguson had 1500 men camped on Kings Mountain. As they were pressed for time before Ferguson would continue on to Charlotte, Patriot leaders picked 900 men—including Hambright's—to ride to Kings Mountain. By the morning of the 7th, they had reached Kings Mountain, surrounded it, and attacked. The militia's commanding officer,
Col. William Graham, was absent during the battle due to an illness in his family, leaving Hambright in command. ==Later life==