Tag Archives: Revolutionary War Travel

Yorktown: The Victory That Secured American Independence

In the summer of 1781, the Revolutionary War had dragged on for more than six years.

The British still held New York City. Their army remained one of the most powerful fighting forces in the world. Yet events set in motion during the Southern Campaign were about to converge on a small Virginia tobacco port called Yorktown.

As discussed in my previous article, British General Charles Cornwallis entered Virginia after a frustrating campaign in the Carolinas. Although he had won several tactical victories, British defeats at Kings Mountain and Cowpens, combined with General Nathanael Greene’s relentless strategy of attrition, steadily weakened Britain’s hold on the South.

Cornwallis hoped Virginia would provide a secure base for future operations. Instead, Yorktown became a trap.

A French Fleet Changes Everything

One of the greatest “what if” moments in American history occurred at sea.

In August 1781, a French fleet commanded by Admiral François Joseph Paul de Grasse sailed into the Chesapeake Bay. His arrival transformed the strategic situation.

The British navy, long considered invincible, attempted to regain control of the bay. The resulting Battle of the Chesapeake proved decisive. The French prevented British ships from reaching Yorktown and cut off Cornwallis’s most reliable escape route.

For the first time during the war, British forces found themselves vulnerable and isolated.

Seige of Yorktown Map, from Mount Vernon website.

Washington Sees His Opportunity

General George Washington had spent years watching British forces occupy New York City. Although he had hoped to recapture the location, circumstances rarely favored such an attack.

When news arrived that de Grasse would support operations in Virginia, Washington quickly changed plans.

Together with French General Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, Comte de Rochambeau, Washington secretly moved thousands of American and French troops south. The march covered more than 400 miles and remains one of the most impressive military maneuvers of the war.

The British commander in New York did not fully realize Washington’s intentions until it was too late.

By late September, allied forces were converging on Yorktown.

The Siege Begins

Unlike many famous Revolutionary War battles, Yorktown was NOT decided in a single dramatic afternoon.

Instead, it became a carefully executed siege.

American and French troops surrounded the town while the French fleet blocked escape by sea. Cornwallis’s army found itself trapped between land and water.

Engineers dug trenches closer and closer to British defenses. Artillery batteries bombarded the town day and night. The thunder of cannon fire echoed across the Virginia countryside.

Yorktown Redoubt 10

As the siege tightened, British options dwindled.

Two key British defensive positions, Redoubts 9 and 10, became critical obstacles. In one of the most celebrated actions of the war, American troops led by Alexander Hamilton stormed Redoubt 10 with fixed bayonets during a nighttime assault. French forces simultaneously captured Redoubt 9.

The fall of the redoubts brought allied artillery within range of the British interior defenses and accelerated the collapse of Cornwallis’s position.

Canon at Yorktown Battlefield today. Photo ©Bylandersea

The Surrender

On October 19, 1781, Cornwallis surrendered.

Nearly 8,000 British soldiers laid down their arms.

The Surrender of Lord Cornwallis
The Surrender of Lord Cornwallis (at Yorktown, Virginia, on October 19, 1781), oil on canvas by John Trumbull, completed in 1820; in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda, Washington, D.C. The painting captures the moment when major fighting during the American Revolution ended and the colonies achieved independence.

Legend holds that Cornwallis claimed illness and sent a subordinate to represent him at the surrender ceremony. Whether motivated by pride or genuine sickness, the gesture reflected the magnitude of Britain’s defeat.

The war did not officially end until the Treaty of Paris was signed in 1783, but Yorktown effectively ended major combat operations in North America.

Parliament soon recognized that continuing the war would be costly and increasingly unpopular. The American Revolution had been won.

Why Yorktown Matters

As America commemorates its 250th anniversary, Yorktown offers more than a history lesson. It is a place to reflect on the perseverance, sacrifice, and international cooperation that made independence possible. The victory achieved here on October 19, 1781, did not end the Revolutionary War overnight, but it marked the decisive turning point that led to the birth of the United States.

After following the Road to Revolution from Lexington and Concord through the battles of New England, the Middle Colonies, and the Carolinas, there is no more fitting place to conclude the journey than Yorktown—where the dream of independence became a reality.

Yorktown Travel Guide

Start your visit at the multi-media American Revolution Museum of Yorktown. Photo ©Bylandersea

Few places bring the story of American independence to life more vividly than Yorktown.

The battlefield, riverfront village, and museums bring the final chapter of the Revolution vividly to life, while the quiet landscape encourages reflection on the extraordinary events that unfolded here in October 1781.

Although I first visited the former Yorktown Victory Center years ago, the experience today is dramatically different. The American Revolution Museum at Yorktown, which opened in 2017, brings the story of the Revolution to life through immersive exhibits, films, and engaging living- history experiences. It is wonderful for children, as well.

An interactive exhibit called The Liberty Tree in the American Revolution Museum at Yorktown. Photo ©Bylandersea

Stepping into history at the American Revolution Museum at Yorktown’s living-history area. Trying on the uniform of an eighteenth-century soldier offered a small glimpse into the lives of those who fought for independence in 1781.
Activities at the Encampment at the American Revolution Museum at Yorktown Photos ©Bylandersea

Afterward, continue to the  Colonial National Historical Park for the Yorktown Battlefield Visitor Center and follow the self-guided battlefield driving tour. Stop at the siege lines, Surrender Field, the Moore House where the surrender terms were negotiated, and the monuments commemorating the American and French victory. The visitor center and interpretive exhibits provide additional context for one of the most significant military campaigns in American history.

The Yorktown Victory Monument commemorates the decisive Allied victory that secured American independence. Authorized by the Continental Congress in 1781, the monument was not completed until 1884 and today stands overlooking the York River where history changed forever.

Allow time to stroll Historic Yorktown’s charming waterfront, browse its small museums and shops, and enjoy views of the York River that remind visitors why this peninsula became the setting for a world-changing victory. While you are in this area, known as the Virginia Historic Triangle, be sure to visit Colonial Williamsburg (my favorite) and Jamestown.  

Yorktown’s Waterfront offers shops and restaurants. Photo ©Bylandersea

Did You Know?

Legend says the British army that surrendered at Yorktown marched out to the tune of “The World Turned Upside Down.” While historians still debate whether that tune was actually played, the phrase has become a lasting symbol of how the Revolutionary War transformed the world.

The stories of the Treaty of Paris and Washington’s resignation will follow soon.

The Road to Yorktown: How the Southern Campaign Won the Revolution

When Americans think of the Revolutionary War, they often picture Lexington and Concord, Valley Forge, or Washington crossing the Delaware, (all stories I have covered earlier in this series). Yet the road to independence did not end in New England. It ended hundreds of miles to the south at Yorktown, Virginia.

The final victory at Yorktown in October 1781 was not the result of a single battle. Instead, it was the culmination of a long and grueling Southern Campaign that slowly wore down British forces and changed the course of the war.

By 1778, Britain had shifted its focus to the southern colonies. British leaders believed they would find large numbers of Loyalists willing to support the Crown in Georgia and the Carolinas. Capturing the South, they hoped, would isolate the rebellious northern colonies and restore royal control.

Initially, the strategy seemed successful.

The British captured Savannah in 1778 and Charleston in 1780. Charleston’s surrender was one of the worst American defeats of the war. Thousands of Patriot soldiers were taken prisoner, and British General Charles Cornwallis appeared poised to restore British authority throughout the South. Then the tide began to turn.

Kings Mountain: The First Blow

In October 1780, Patriot militia from the frontier settlements gathered at what is now known as the Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail. These rugged backcountry fighters crossed the Appalachian Mountains and pursued Loyalist forces under Major Patrick Ferguson.

At Kings Mountain, on the border of North and South Carolina, the Patriots surrounded Ferguson’s force and won a decisive victory. Ferguson was killed, and more than 1,000 Loyalists were captured, killed, or wounded.

Thomas Jefferson later called Kings Mountain “the turn of the tide of success.” The victory shattered British hopes of raising large numbers of Loyalist supporters in the Carolina backcountry.

Cowpens: A Tactical Masterpiece

Three months later, another Patriot victory further weakened British control.

At Cowpens, South Carolina, General Daniel Morgan devised one of the most brilliant battle plans of the Revolution. He arranged his militia and Continental troops in successive lines, carefully anticipating how the British would attack.

The plan worked perfectly. British commander Banastre Tarleton’s forces were routed. More than 800 British soldiers were killed, wounded, or captured.

Cowpens not only damaged British military strength but also boosted Patriot morale throughout the South.

The Race to the Dan

General Nathanael Greene

After Cowpens, General Nathanael Greene faced a difficult challenge. His army was smaller and less experienced than Cornwallis’s veteran troops. Rather than risk destruction in a major battle, Greene chose a strategy of movement and endurance.

For weeks, Patriot forces retreated across North Carolina while Cornwallis pursued them. The campaign became known as the Race to the Dan.

Greene successfully crossed Virginia’s Dan River and escaped. Cornwallis had failed to destroy the American army. Greene then turned and marched south again.

Guilford Courthouse: A Costly Victory

In March 1781, Greene confronted Cornwallis at Guilford Courthouse in present-day Greensboro, North Carolina. The British won the battle and held the field at day’s end. On paper, it appeared to be a British victory.

But the cost was enormous.More than a quarter of Cornwallis’s army became casualties. The British could not easily replace experienced soldiers operating far from their bases.

Greene’s army remained intact. The battle demonstrated a critical truth: Cornwallis could win battles and still lose the campaign.

The Long Fight for the South

Photo from Journal of the American revolution

Greene continued to pressure British forces throughout the Carolinas.

At Hobkirk’s Hill, Ninety Six, and Eutaw Springs, Patriot troops repeatedly challenged British positions. Although Greene did not win every engagement, he forced the British to expend men, supplies, and energy simply to hold territory.

British forces gradually abandoned much of the interior South and retreated toward coastal strongholds.

The Southern Campaign became a war of attrition.Greene later summarized his strategy:

“We fight, get beat, rise, and fight again.”

His persistence slowly achieved what dramatic victories alone could not.

Cornwallis Moves North

Unable to secure the Carolinas, Cornwallis shifted his attention to Virginia.

The decision marked a turning point in the war. British forces had captured major southern cities and won several battles, yet they had failed to crush the Patriot cause. Nathanael Greene’s relentless campaign had steadily weakened British control of the countryside and forced Cornwallis to seek a new strategy.

By the summer of 1781, the war’s center of gravity was moving north.

Cornwallis marched into Virginia, believing he could establish a secure base and continue British operations. Instead, he was heading toward a place that would become synonymous with the end of the Revolutionary War.

The Southern Campaign had accomplished its purpose. Through persistence, sacrifice, and a series of hard-fought victories, Patriot forces had worn down one of Britain’s finest armies and pushed the war toward its final chapter.

The road to Yorktown had begun.

Next in the America 250 series: Yorktown – The Victory That Won Independence.

Hikers may enjoy the Overmountain Victory Trail: Stretching 330-miles through four states (Virginia, Tennessee, North and South Carolina) the Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail traces the route used by Patriot militia during the pivotal Kings Mountain campaign of 1780. Follow their campaign by utilizing a Commemorative Motor Route along existing state highways marked with the distinctive trail logo, or 80+ miles of walkable trail.

Savannah 1779: Where the Revolution Turned International

By Debi Lander
Bylandersea.com | Bylandersea America 250

This article is part of my ongoing Bylandersea America 250 series, exploring the Road to Revolution as we approach the nation’s 250th anniversary.

A Southern City of Grace and a Forgotten Battlefield

Savannah is easy to love.

Spanish moss drapes from live oaks like soft gray lace. Sunlight filters through cathedral canopies of green. Brick paths lead past wrought-iron balconies and pastel townhouses that seem untouched by time.

But history is rarely as gentle as the light.

In 1779, these serene squares filled with smoke. Cannon fire echoed between orderly streets. French and American soldiers charged across open ground while British defenses thundered back.

Savannah was not always graceful. It was once a battlefield.

After the stalemate at the Battle of Monmouth (read my previous post here) in 1778, the British shifted their focus south. Convinced that Loyalist support would secure victory, they targeted Georgia first. In December 1778, British forces captured Savannah with stunning speed.

The war had moved to the Deep South.

Within a year, Savannah would become the site of one of the bloodiest and most significant assaults of the Revolutionary War.

Spanish moss hangs from live oaks along the streets of Savannah. Photo ©Bylandersea

The Siege of Savannah, 1779

In October 1779, American forces under General Benjamin Lincoln joined French troops commanded by Admiral d’Estaing to retake the city. This was one of the earliest major Franco-American operations after France formally allied with the United States in 1778.

It was ambitious.
It was bold.
It failed.

Instead of continuing a slow siege, allied leaders chose a direct frontal assault on British defenses at Spring Hill redoubt. In less than an hour, nearly 1,000 allied troops were killed or wounded.

Among the fallen was Casimir Pulaski, the Polish nobleman who helped organize the Continental cavalry. He later died from wounds received in the attack. Today, Savannah honors him with a monument in Monterey Square and another pictured below in Washington, DC.

Statue of Casimir Pulaski in Washington, DC.

Savannah would remain in British hands until 1782.

But something larger had happened here.

The Revolution was no longer simply a colonial rebellion. It was now international.

French ships and soldiers had crossed the Atlantic. Caribbean bases supported the effort. European rivalries now shaped American battlefields. Savannah marked the widening of the war.


Why Savannah Matters in the America 250 Story

The army that had endured the winter at Valley Forge was now fighting far from its northern strongholds.

Savannah represents three major turning points:

  1. The beginning of the British Southern Strategy
  2. One of the first large-scale Franco-American military collaborations
  3. Proof that early alliance efforts did not guarantee success

The defeat here stung. Charleston would fall the following year in an even greater disaster. British confidence surged.

Yet the Southern campaign that began in Savannah would eventually exhaust British forces and push them toward Yorktown.

Failure did not end the Revolution. It hardened it.


Walking Revolutionary Savannah Today

Savannah does not preserve its battlefield in the dramatic way that Saratoga or Yorktown does. The Spring Hill redoubt area is largely absorbed into modern neighborhoods, marked by plaques rather than open fields.

Savannah requires imagination.

Stand in Monterey Square beneath Pulaski’s monument.

Pulaski’s Monument in Monterey Square, Savannah. Photo ©Bylandersea


Walk Colonial Park Cemetery where soldiers rest beneath weathered stones.

Colonial Park Cemetery in downtown historic Savannah. Photo ©Bylandersea


Trace James Oglethorpe’s original city grid and consider how this orderly plan became a wartime stronghold.

This photo shows the city grid and one of the squares from the original city plan. Photo ©Bylandersea

Savannah does not shout its Revolutionary history. It whispers.


What to See in Revolutionary Savannah

Savannah today is a layered city where several eras of American history exist side by side. Walking through the historic district, visitors encounter a blend of colonial foundations, elegant antebellum homes from the Civil War era, Victorian architecture from the late nineteenth century, and carefully preserved buildings that continue to serve modern life. The city’s famous squares, laid out in 1733 by General James Oglethorpe, still organize the streets beneath sweeping live oaks draped with Spanish moss. Around them stand churches, townhouses, monuments, and museums that tell the story of a city shaped by colonial ambition, Revolutionary struggle, Civil War survival, and ongoing renewal.

To understand Savannah fully, it helps to begin with its Revolutionary past. The sites connected to that era reveal how the city and its people played a role in the fight for American independence.

Spring Hill Redoubt Site

Historical markers identify the area where the 1779 assault occurred.

The marker reads, “Upon this spot stood the Spring Hill Redoubt. Here on October 9, 1779 one of the bloodiest engagements of the Revolution was fought when repeated assaults were made by the allied troops of Georgia, South Carolina and France in an effort to retake Savannah from the British.” (Ponder the fact that 1,000 soliders lost their lives there.)

Monterey Square

Home to the Pulaski Monument honoring the fallen cavalry officer.

Colonial Park Cemetery

Established in 1750 and containing graves from the Revolutionary period.

Savannah History Museum

The Savannah History Museum includes excellent exhibits on the Revolutionary era and the Southern Campaign.

Photo provided by the Coastal Heritage Society.

Fort Pulaski National Monument

The Fort Pulaski National Monument, maintained by the US National Park Service, is located outside the city on Cockspur Island. Though best known for its Civil War history, it honors Pulaski’s name and offers sweeping coastal views.



Travel Planning Tips

Best time to visit: March through May for blooming azaleas and comfortable temperatures. October is also lovely for photography. Warning: The summer is HOT and humid.

How long to stay: Two to three days allows time for history, architecture, and unhurried wandering.

Savannah layers its stories. Colonial. Revolutionary. Civil War. Gilded Age.

I highly recommend reading Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt or at least watch the movie with the same title, before visiting Savannah. You will learn about the city’s culture and history through a fabulously interesting story, and it will make Savannah come alive. Be sure to visit the Mercer Williams house, Forsyth Fountain, Bonaventure Cemetery, and dine at Mrs. Wilkes Boarding House.

Do not rush Savannah. Linger in the seductive city.

Don’t miss seeing the gorgeous Forsyth Fountain in Forsyth Park, Savannah. Photo available at: https://pixels.com/featured/morning-walk-to-forsyth-fountain-savannah-ga-debi-lander.html

Statue at Bonaventure Cemetery. Photo ©Bylandersea
Mrs. Wilkes Dining Room opens for lunch and serves fried chicken family style with so many side dishes, you won’t need to eat dinner. Photo ©Bylandersea
The Mercer-Williams Home can be toured. Photo ©Bylandersea
This is the book cover, the statue is kept in the Telfair Museum in Savannah.

Next in Bylandersea America 250

The Revolutionary War next moves to Charleston in 1780: America’s Greatest Surrender

Because after Savannah, the war did not improve.

It worsened.