(7) "Washington sought French naval help to trap the British there [in NYC], but the French Gen Jean-Baptiste Rochambeau deftly raised another possibility. He observed that the British army under Lord Cornwallis had marched from the Carolinas to Virginia and presented an easier target along Chesapeake. Soon enough, boats had conveyed American and French troops to the head of the Chesapeake Bay even as a French fleet won a crucial victory that closed the bay to British ships [Battle of the Chesapeake; Sept 5, 1781]. Clinton remained fixated on defending New York until it was too late. Before a rescue expedition could reach the Chesapeake, he had news that Cornwallis had surrendered."
(a) Henry Clinton (British Army officer, born 1730)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Clinton_(British_Army_officer,_born_1730)
(1730 – 1795; from 1778 to 1782 he was the British Commander-in-Chief in North Americal section 2.4 Commander in Chief: paragraph 3: Philadelphia to New York City by land + a strike force tp Georgia while Clinton stayed in NYC pthat was when Corwallis surrendered])
(b)
(i) Siege of Yorktown
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Yorktown
(introduction: Cornwallis's surrender resulted in capture of more than 7,000 British soldiers)
Quote (showing ARMY strength on both sides):
A couple of days before May 24, 1781: "With the arrival of Cornwallis [at Yorktown] and after more reinforcements from New York, the British Army numbered 7,200 men.[3] Cornwallis wanted to push Lafayette, whose force now numbered 3,000 men with the arrival of Virginia militia.
Then Washington's and French soldiers marched from Rhode Island to Yorktown, Virginia: "section 3 March to Virginia: * * * 4,000 French and 3,000 American soldiers began the march in Newport, Rhode Island
(ii) History of the Siege. National Park Service (NPS), undated.
https://www.nps.gov/york/learn/h ... ry-of-the-siege.htm
(iii) Yorktown campaign
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yorktown_campaign
("British naval forces in North America and the West Indies were weaker than the combined fleets of France and Spain * * * de Grasse's last minute decision [at Santo Domingo in present-day Dominican Republic; see (7)(b)(i) at introduction] to take his entire fleet to North America, thus ensuring a French superiority of three to two in battleship strength")
(A) Recall UK maintained uninterrupted naval superiority after Horatio Nelson's 1805 Battle of Trafalgar (against, again, both France and Spain)
(B) There is no need to read the rest of this Wiki page.
(c) "boats had conveyed American and French troops to the head of the Chesapeake Bay"
What does this mean? Washington's and French soldiers marched from Newport, Rhode Island, on land for the most part, yet the last legs on boats via Chesapeake Bay southbound.
(i) NPS website does not have the map any more, which is very helpful to visualize the last legs on boats. The following Wiki page reproduces the map.
Washington–Rochambeau Revolutionary Route
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington–Rochambeau_Revolutionary_Route
(map caption: "NPS map of the W3R Route" (Wikipedia adds "NPS" to the original caption "Map of the W3R Route.")
ON the map is the wording: "Routes of Washington and Rochambeau in 1781"
(ii) Washington and Rochambeau Revolutionary Route, NPS, undated.
https://www.nps.gov/waro/learn/h ... lutionary-route.htm
Quote:
"Though large as far as American armies [led by George Washington at Rhode Island] were concerned, Rochambeau's forces were quite small by European standards. Under his immediate command were about 4,250 officers and men.
"On September 6-8, 1781, the allied armies camped just south of the Hollingsworth Tavern in Elkton, Maryland [read the content, which is too long to reproduce] The French considered these craft not seaworthy and continued their land march on September 17. That evening baron de Vioménil, who commanded French forces in the absence of Rochambeau, received word of the arrival of a French fleet in Annapolis and immediately changed direction. In the morning of September 18, the French columns reached Annapolis and over the next few days the infantry with their baggage and tents as well as the field artillery embarked on 15 vessels sent by de Grasse.
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