In July 1775 Patriot militiamen carried out the first military operation of the Revolutionary War in what became the Tar Heel State. There was no pitched battle. No one died. But the Patriots made their point: Reasserting British control over North Carolina would be no easy task.
Three months earlier, they’d forced Josiah Martin, the royal governor, to abandon the provincial capital of New Bern. Infuriated when North Carolina delegates voted in early April to boycott British goods, Martin dismissed the legislature and refused to call another. Just as infuriated, a mob stormed the governor’s palace. Martin fled to a waiting warship, the HMS Cruizer, which bore him down the coast to Fort Johnston at the mouth of the Cape Fear River.
The site of the North Carolina Maritime Museum in Southport, Fort Johnston was then a small but integral part of the colonies’ coastal defenses. Its foundations were made of tabby, a distinctive building material composed of sand, lime, and oyster shells. The walls of Fort Johnston were made of wood, however, as were its gun emplacements, barracks, officers’ quarters, and other buildings.
Making the fort his headquarters, Martin conferred with civilian and military officials and issued proclamations calling for loyal North Carolinians to take up arms in the service of King George III, the Parliament in England, and the governor himself.
One visitor he received at Fort Johnston was Allan MacDonald, a prominent leader of the Highland Scots who lived in Cross Creek (present-day Fayetteville) and other communities of the Sandhills and Upper Cape Fear region. His Loyalist wife Flora is the more famous MacDonald today, as much for helping Bonnie Prince Charlie escape after the 1746 battle of Culloden as for later exploits during the Revolutionary War (depicted in the recent TV series Outlander). But she wasn’t present at the July 3, 1775, meeting where Allan MacDonald promised to muster many Highlanders to fight against the Patriots of Carolina.
Shortly after the meeting, Martin learned that local militia were planning an attack on Fort Johnston. Recognizing its vulnerability, he once again fled to the safety of the HMS Cruizer, anchored just offshore.
On July 18, some 500 militiamen from Brunswick and New Hanover counties approached Fort Johnston. Led by John Ashe, Cornelius Harnett, and Robert Howe — who had just two years earlier commanded the fort’s garrison as a militia officer — the Patriots were dismayed to discover that the governor’s men had already removed most of the valuable artillery from the stronghold. Resolved not to let the fort be used by British troops or Tories, they set it ablaze early on the morning of July 19, 1775.
As I said, this was the first true military action of the war in North Carolina — but it would hardly be the last, including at Fort Johnston itself.
Martin remained aboard the Cruizer for many months, attempting to rally Loyalists to his cause while awaiting the arrival of British redcoats to help reconquer the province. In November, men from the Cruizer and another sloop, the HMS Scorpion, staged a daring raid on Fort Johnston and retrieved its remaining guns and ammunition. This time, many shots were fired on both sides, although whatever casualties may have resulted were not recorded.
Patriots occupied and partially rebuilt the fort in early 1776. Expecting Allan MacDonald’s Highlanders and other reinforcements to march down the Cape Fear River to its mouth, Martin tried to help them by hurling the Cruizer and Scorpion at Fort Johnston on Jan. 27. Patriot defenders repulsed their repeated attacks. As it turned out, those Loyalist reinforcements would never arrive. But that’s a story for another day.
This article was originally published in the Carolina Journal on July 24, 2025.