Before They Were Heroes at King's Mountain SIGNED Full Version Randell Jones

The following is taken from the authors website:  https://www.randelljones.com/books-and-dvds/before-they-were-heroes-at-kings-mountain

The men who fought at King's Mountain were experienced fighters. In addition to the story of the campaign and the battle, Before They Were Heroes at King's Mountain tells six years of Revolutionary War history in the South from the militia side. The fearsome reputation of the "shirtmen" had grown at the Battle of Great Bridge. Some of the men patrolled the Carolina and Virginia countryside, chasing bands of Tories, whipping some and hanging others.

The Battle of Kings Mountain, fought October 7, 1780, was a turning point in the War for American Independence. Patriot militiamen from the Overmountain region of North Carolina and Virginia marched over the Appalachian Mountains and joined with militiamen from the North Carolina back country, Georgia, and South Carolina to track down, surround, and defeat Scottish Major Patrick Ferguson and his army of American Loyalists. This was a fiercely fought contest of Americans against Americans—Whig rebels against Tory loyalists—in which the horse and the rifle played prominent roles. These were citizen militia; not a single man or officer there was a Continental soldier.