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(Credit
Americanrevolution.org)
| Virginia Militia Capt. Jack Jouett
Less Famous Than
Revere's, His Midnight Ride Also Influenced Revolution's Outcome
By Bethanne
Kelly Patrick Military.com Contributing Writer
The strapping young
captain was on leave from the militia and had enjoyed an early summer
evening at his father's tavern in Louisa County, Va. In the nighttime
quiet of June 3, 1781, Jack Jouett reclined (some say dozed) on its wide
lawn.
The sound of hoof beats broke the young man's reverie -- or sleep. As
he watched in astonishment, Jack Jouett saw a large unit of Col. Banastre
Tarleton's British dragoons, led by "The Butcher" Tarleton himself, riding
along the main Charlottesville road.
Jouett, a long-time patriot whose father "Commissary" Jouett supplied
the militia, quickly realized the objective of the "whitecoats." The
five-year-old Revolutionary War was at a stalemate, but the British had
succeeded in driving the Virginia Assembly from its Richmond seat 70 miles
west to Charlottesville. Its members included the illustrious Thomas
Jefferson, fiery orator Patrick Henry, and presidential ancestor Benjamin
Harrison, among other luminaries.
With Tarleton and 170 men galloping towards them, the Virginia Assembly
was virtually helpless. Most of Virginia's fighting men were up north with
Gen. George Washington. Jouett knew he had to warn the assembly of the
encroaching threat, but he faced a 40-mile ride over rain-roughened
terrain and through thick backwoods.
Nevertheless, Jouett jumped on his thoroughbred and began his all-night
dash to Jefferson's home, Monticello. Avoiding the main roads, he was
forced to subject his face and his horse Sallie to cruel whipping from
branches. In one portrait, he is depicted with scars that resulted from
the lacerations.
At 4:30 a.m., the intrepid Jouett ascended Jefferson's hilltop, roused
the company at Monticello, and warned them of Tarleton's approach. He
accepted a glass or two of Madeira from Jefferson, and then turned Sallie
and galloped into Charlottesville to spread the alarm.
Jack Jouett had single-handedly saved the Virginia Assembly from attack
and imprisonment. For his bravery, the state presented him with a
brace of pistols and a jeweled sword. They could not, however, assure
him of the kind of fame Paul Revere won with his 1775 ride.
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