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9780805073966
In 1780 George Washington's dispirited troops lay idle for want of supplies and money. The new American Congress was unresponsive to Washington's requests, as were the state governments. News came that General Cornwallis's army had destroyed General Gates's troops in South Carolina. Later that year, Benedict Arnold's terrible betrayal would further weaken the American cause. But just as rebel hope seemed to fade, Comte de Rochambeau's powerful French army slipped by the British to land ten thousand trained soldiers at Newport, Rhode Island, on July 11, 1780. Farther south, Nathanael Greene's hit-and-run guerilla fighters were beginning to score victories in North Carolina and Virginia, and by the fall of 1781, the twenty-four-year-old Marquis de Lafayette was harassing Cornwallis's main force near the tobacco port of Yorktown, awaiting the arrival of the Comte de Grasse's French fleet. The scene was set for Washington's and Rochambeau's rapid move south, setting up the daring siege of Yorktown. Drawing on primary research, including diaries and personal letters, acclaimed historian of the American Revolution Richard Ketchum offers a vivid, groundbreaking account of the strategies and personalities behind the victory that surprised the world. Yorktown was that rarest of military and naval operations in which everything fell into place at exactly the right moment. It was a race against time and distance, by land and at sea. After almost seven harrowing years and against all odds, Washington-with French help-defeated the world's finest army. The war was won.Ketchum, Richard M. is the author of 'Victory At Yorktown The Campaign That Won The Revolution', published 2004 under ISBN 9780805073966 and ISBN 0805073965.
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