October 19 - Yorktown
On this day in 1781 at Yorktown VA, British general
Lord Cornwallis surrendered his entire army to the combined American and French
forces. It represented the last serious
engagement of the Revolutionary War and led directly to the opening of peace
talks. The result was victory in the
American Revolution, and recognition of the new United States of America by the
former mother country – and antagonist – Great Britain.
After years of marginal success by George
Washington against the British, he devised a master strategic stroke at
Yorktown. Washington learned that
Cornwallis had fortified his army there, and that a British fleet on its way to
support him had been turned back.
Instead, a large French fleet was sailing towards Yorktown and
Washington decided to move his entire army there from New York. Working in concert with a French army which
had joined the fight against Britain, Washington had by late September
surrounded the British.
When French warships arrived off Yorktown instead
of British vessels, Cornwallis knew it was only a matter of time. With each passing day the Americans and
French moved closer to the British lines, firing their artillery with great
effect. Alexander Hamilton led a daring
attack during the siege. The big guns of
French ships-of-the-line began pounding the British positions from the
sea.
Finally, Cornwallis sent a message to Washington
asking for surrender terms. Washington
accepted and on October 19 the British army of nearly 8,000 marched past the
Americans and French and laid down their weapons. The band played a popular song “The World
Turned Upside Down” as the British marched away. Cornwallis, pleading illness, was not present
to surrender to Washington. He regarded it
as too great an indignity to hand his sword to the American
commander-in-chief.
Although there was sporadic fighting for the next
few months (news travelled slowly in the 1780s) the Yorktown victory was the
effective end to the Revolutionary War.
Recall that the struggle for independence had taken more than 25 years,
starting with resistance to the Stamp Act in 1765. How many of us would devote a quarter century
to the fight for freedom? I hope the
answer is - all of us.
(And thanks to the Dutch for their financial
support!)

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