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![]() The Spirit of '76 by Archibald McNeal Willard U.S. State Department, Washington, D.C.
See theAmerican Revolution Chart for a quick summary of the key events and battles.
A. Washington driven out of New York by large British force (500 ships, 35,000 men). He retreats to New Jersey. Gen. Howe declines to pursue aggressively. B. Americans victorious at Trenton and Princeton C. British plan to control Hudson River Valley, sealing off New England. Three-part strategy: 1) Gen. Burgoyne to move south from Lake Champlain 2) Col. St. Leger to move east from Lake Ontario 3) Gen. Howe to move north from New York City. D. Gen. Burgoyne gets stuck in woods, is surrounded by Americans, and surrenders 5800 men at Saratoga, which becomes turning-point battle for war. 1. French become convinced that America now has a chance to win and offers navy, money, and international support with a treaty of alliance. 2. First entangling alliance for America. 3. Colonial fight begun at Lexington & Concord was now a European war with Spain and Holland joining France. E. British Southern strategy. Frustrated in the north, Britain switched its attention to the Southern colonies and overran Georgia and South Carolina (5000 Americans captured at Charleston in 1780) before Gen. Cornwallis was harassed by Gen. Nathanael Greene. F. Yorktown. Cornwallis moved to Chesapeake Bay to await supplies and reinforcements. 1. French navy blockaded peninsula 2. Washington's army marched from New York area to join French army. 3. Cornwallis surrendered 7,000 men on October 19,1781. IV. Treaty of Paris (1783) A. American negotiators (Franklin, Jay, John Adams) sought to advance American interests though instructed by Congress to consult French. B. Major provisions 1. Britain formally recognized independence of U.S. 2. Boundaries set from Great Lakes on the North to the Mississippi River on the West to Florida on the South 3. No further persecution of Loyalists and restitution for confiscated property "recommended" to states.
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Feldmeth, Greg D. "U.S. History Resources"
http://home.earthlink.net/~gfeldmeth/USHistory.html (31 March 1998).