Yorktown: Climax of the Revolution
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Yorktown - Good Press
Various Authors
Yorktown: Climax of the Revolution
Published by Good Press, 2022
goodpress@okpublishing.info
EAN 4064066425890
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION
1. Cornwallis Goes to Yorktown
2. The French Fleet Blockades The Chesapeake
3. The Allies Assemble at Williamsburg
4. The British Position
5. The Siege Begins
6. The First Parallel
7. The Bombardment
8. Storming the Redoubts
THE FRENCH ATTACK
THE AMERICAN ATTACK
9. The British Counterattack
10. Cornwallis Tries to Escape
11. Cornwallis Decides to Surrender
12. The Parley
13. The Surrender
14. The Play is Over
15. Washington Congratulates the Army
16. The Meaning of Yorktown
Bibliography
Footnote
Table of Contents
[1] Operated by the Federal Hall Memorial Associates cooperating with the National Park Service.
INTRODUCTION
Table of Contents
The story of the last great act in the drama of American independence has been told many times, but never more vividly than in the words of the actors themselves. This book is an attempt to portray the crowning campaign of the American Revolution in the language of participants. Cornwallis, commander of the British forces, and Tarleton, his dashing cavalry leader, have been called upon to describe scenes and events inside Yorktown, during the campaign which culminated in the surrender of Cornwallis’s army and was followed by the abandonment of British efforts to reduce the revolting American colonies to their old allegiance. Washington, Mad
Anthony Wayne, Surgeon Thacher of the Continental Line, the young and chivalrous Count William de Deux-Ponts, and others recount for us American and French operations around Yorktown, for the most part in words penned while the events themselves were transpiring. Lafayette writes exultantly, on the heels of the surrender, that the play is over,
and Washington congratulates the army on its success. Here is the story of the siege of Yorktown recorded by those who were a part of it.
Here also are estimates of the significance of the surrender by a contemporary American statesman who was in position to view its immediate effects on the watching European world, by an American President who saw Yorktown against the background of a century’s independent national development, and by the commission which prepared the sesquicentennial celebration of the event in 1931. There has been added only sufficient new narrative to fill the obvious gaps in the accounts of contemporaries.
Charles E. Hatch, Jr.
Thomas M. Pitkin.
Colonial National Historical Park,
Yorktown, Virginia,
January 23, 1941.
THE SURRENDER OF CORNWALLIS’S ARMY
Reproduced from a picture made shortly after the American Revolution by the painter Van Blarenburghe, based on an action sketch by Captain Louis Alexandre Berthier, of Rochambeau’s army. It depicts the British army marching out of Yorktown between the French and American troops