American History

The Secret Agent

The summer of 1781 was crucial for King George III’s military in America and for the colonial forces opposing the British. Earlier that year, in March, General George Washington had ordered Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette, to depart Philadelphia and lead Continental forces in Virginia. Lafayette was to help counter a British invasion of the American South, as well as confront the traitor Benedict Arnold and his marauders, then ranging around Virginia. In addition, the French officer was to gather intelligence on British troop strength, positions, and strategies.

That August, upon arriving in Virginia, British General Charles Lord Cornwallis, commander of British forces in the South, sent Arnold and his troops north to New York. Cornwallis then sparred with Lafayette across the Virginia Tidewater in actions at the North and South Anna, Rapidan, and James Rivers. From New York, British commander in chief General Henry Clinton ordered Cornwallis to secure a locale on the Virginia coast with a harbor sufficient to accommodate a fleet of warships that would be reinforcing British ground troops. Cornwallis drew his forces back from Portsmouth to Yorktown to meet the enemy, but American and French forces, always seeming to know his movements, steadily dogged the British general and his troops. By October 1781, the rebels and their French enablers were besieging Cornwallis’s army at Yorktown, where circumstance forced the Briton to surrender.

Unknown to Cornwallis, for months writer described as “arguably, the most important Revolutionary War spy,” was James Armistead, an enslaved African-American.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from American History

American History2 min read
25 Films Selected for Preservation in National Film Registry
Twenty-five influential films have been selected for the 2023 Library of Congress National Film Registry, Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden announced in December. The films are selected each year for their cultural, historic, or aesthetic importance
American History1 min read
Truth, Justice, and the American Way $408,000
Action Comics #1, published by DC Comics is, “The most important comic book ever published,” according to leading comic book pricing authority, Overstreet. Why? It’s the first appearance of Superman, and many say, the book that started the Golden Age
American History1 min read
Ice Age Trail Becomes NPS Site
Wisconsin’s Ice Age Trail is now a part of the National Park System, a change that will allow for more resources as organizers push to complete it. Senator Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) and National Park Service Director Chuck Sams announced in December the

Related Books & Audiobooks