>From the Writer's Almanac 10/19/2007

It's the anniversary of the surrender that effectively ended the American 
Revolutionary War, in Yorktown, Virginia, in 1781. That summer, the British 
had expected Washington to attack New York City. But when he learned that he 
might be able to capture the British forces on the Yorktown Peninsula in 
Virginia, he executed one of the boldest moves of the entire war, moving his 
army 400 miles in order to catch his enemy by surprise. He had to march his 
troops toward New York City first, to scare the British into hunkering down 
for an attack. Then he quickly moved south. The British commander only 
realized what Washington was doing two days after he'd already gone.

Washington's men and their French allies marched every day from 2:00 a.m. 
until it grew too hot to continue. It was a hot summer, and on one day, more 
than 400 men passed out from the heat. Few armies in history had ever moved 
so far so fast. By the second week of October, they had reached Yorktown and 
surrounded Cornwallis. He agreed to a surrender that began at 2:00 a.m. on 
this day in 1781. The one soldier who didn't surrender was Cornwallis 
himself. He sent his sword with his second-in-command to be offered to the 
French general, signifying that the British had been defeated by the French, 
not the Americans. Washington was furious, but it didn't matter. England 
didn't have enough money to raise another army. Two years later, the Treaty 
of Paris was signed, and the war was officially over.





Tom C.



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