Last revised: 24 Dec 2009
Thomas Scott
(22 Feb
1754 - 24 Sep 1834)
Thomas Scott, son of John and Margaret Thornton Scott, was
born in Pennsylvania, on Feb. 22, 1754 and as a young boy
moved with his family in 1763 to the Haw River Valley of
Guilford County, North Carolina. Thomas Scott married Nancy
Carothers on February 9, 1775. At age 21, he began his
military service at Guilford Courthouse when the Cherokee
Indians sided with the British at the out-break of the
Revolutionary War. In July 1776, he was drafted for eight
months and served under Captain Fleck and Colonel Alexander
Martin during General Rutherford's Campaign against the
Middle Cherokee Indians in the mountains west of modern day
Asheville. In a three- pronged campaign from North and
South Carolina, the 2,000 man frontier Militia destroyed
the Cherokee Indian villages east of the Blue Ridge. On
June 16, 1777, Thomas Scott enlisted as a Private in
Williams Company of the 2nd North Carolina Regiment under
command of Colonel Alexander Martin. His service was cut
short in 1778 when the Scotts and their in-laws, the
Carothers and Frost families, moved to Washington County,
Virginia where the young men all became "Minuteman" in the
Virginia Militia. At this time, many Virginia and North
Carolina families, like the Boones and McCorkles, were
migrating to the Southwest Virginia frontier. The threat of
attack from Indians and Tories on the Virginia frontier was
a daily reality. These early settlers were clearly in
violation of the King's Proclamation of 1763 forbidding
settlement west of a line following the Blue Ridge. Their
resistance to Royal Decree soon attracted the attention of
English authorities. In late August 1780, Colonel Isaac
Shelby received a verbal message from British Colonel
Patrick Ferguson to the effect that "If they [the settlers]
did not desist from their opposition to British Arms, he
would march his army over the mountains, hang their
leaders, and lay waste to their country with fire and
sword. "When word of Ferguson's threat arrived, William,
Thomas and Samuel Scott, James Carothers and Simeon Frost
assembled with 400 Virginia Militia under the command of
Colonel William Campbell at Bradley's Farm on Wolf Creek
several miles west of Abington, Virginia. On September 25,
they joined the small frontier army gathering at Sycamore
Shoals on the Watauga River near present day Elizabethton,
Tennessee.
This rugged force of pioneers became known as the
"Overmountain Men". All the men carried flintlock
long-rifles and a tomahawk or hunting knife, but not a
bayonet. Despite the cold, early winter weather, none of
them had a tent. A Presbyterian preacher, the Reverend
Samuel Doak, delivered a sermon entitled "The Sword of the
Lord and Gideon" to inspire the men and their families.
Only 900 of these men were mounted as they proceeded over
snow covered Roan Mountain determined to meet Ferguson and
his Loyalist army. In a short but decisive battle on
October 7, 1780, the slightly outnumbered Overmountain Men
surprised and defeated Ferguson at King's Mountain, South
Carolina. Although Ferguson's men held the high-ground,
British muskets and bayonets were no match for long-rifles
in the hands of expert frontier marksmen. In contrast, the
British muskets overshot their targets and inflicted few
casualties on the attackers. The Overmountain Men fought
Indian-style, a tactic well-suited to the terrain and the
long-rifles. They surrounded the Tories in their exposed
position on the hill and shot at them with great accuracy
from behind every tree and depression in the earth. Colonel
Campbell's men were assigned to assault the steepest slope
of King's Mountain from the southwest corner of the
encirclement. Repeated bayonet charges down the hill by the
Loyalists were not only completely ineffective, but proved
disastrous. The frontiersmen simply gave ground and melted
away into the dense woods, only to return a few minutes
later and resume shooting as soon as Ferguson's men turned
and struggled back up the hill. It was said afterwards that
"King's Mountain was more easily assaulted with the
long-rifle than defended with the bayonet." Colonel
Ferguson himself was killed while trying to escape and the
remaining Tories surrendered with great losses. The Battle
at King's Mountain is considered by many to have been the
turning point of the Revolutionary War.
The Revolution in the Carolinas had been a particularly
bitter and partisan conflict because of the large number of
Loyalists living in the region. Many of Ferguson's captured
men were considered to be little more than renegades,
although atrocities had been regularly committed on both
sides. The victorious Overmountain Men marched their
prisoners back toward the western mountains. As they camped
at the Biggerstaff Farm near Rutherford, North Carolina,
the Patriots decided to bring the worst Tory offenders to
trial for their crimes. Many of the Patriots were angered
and vindictive because their families and neighbors had
been victims of Tory raids. Consequently, 13 Tories were
tried and hanged according to the harsh code of frontier
justice. William Scott served as one of the Judges while
Samuel Scott stood guard and Thomas Scott helped tie the
ropes around the condemned men's necks. Thomas Scott went
on to serve another 12 months as Orderly Sergeant in
Captain William Neill's Company of the Virginia Militia .
In the Spring of 1783, he spent 47 days carrying provisions
by horse to the various Stations along the Clinch River.
Sometime in 1783, the Scotts and their in-Iaws moved
through the Cumberland Gap into the Bluegrass Region of
Kentucky .Thomas Scott received a Kentucky Land Warrant
dated May 7, 1785 for 500 acres in an area of Fayette
County, in an area that would later become Jessamine
County. The Scott, Carothers, and Frost families all
settled on adjacent or nearby farms along Clear Creek.
Although the Revolutionary War effectively ended in the
East with the surrender of Lord Comwallis at Yorktown,
Virginia in 1781, these were still dangerous times on the
Kentucky frontier. There was still a constant threat of
raids by Indians and renegades against the widely-scattered
frontier farms and settlements. After the disastrous Battle
at Blue Licks, Kentucky in 1786, Thomas Scott served as
Lieutenant during Colonel Benjamin Logan's expedition
against the Shawnee Indians across the Ohio River.
Chillicothe and many Shawnee villages along the Scioto
River were burned. This campaign ended Thomas Scott's
military service, although the threat of Indian raids in
Kentucky lasted until after statehood in 1792. Thomas and
Nancy
[ Carothers ] Scott moved to what was then Fayette County ,
Kentucky where they settled into farming and family life on
their land beside Clear Creek.
Thomas Scott's first wife, Nancy [Carothers], died soon
after their fifth son Harvey Scott was born on February 12,
1800 (probably from complications of child- birth). Thomas
Scott subsequently married Sarah "Sally" Ward on October 6,
1800. On May 28, 1818, Thomas Scott gave most of his land
on Clear Creek to his youngest sons, William Scott, Harvey
Scott, and Thomas J. Scott. Sometime afterwards Thomas
Scott moved to Henry County, Kentucky. On August 9, 1833
Thomas Scott was issued a Revolutionary War Pension
effective March 4,1831. He was entered onto the Kentucky
Pension Roll at $40 per annum. At 80 years old, Thomas
Scott died September 24, 1834 and is said to be buried at
Drennon's Lick, in Henry County, Kentucky.