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May 26
American Revolution
Colonel William Crawford proceeds toward the Ohio, 1782
On this day in 1782, American Colonel William Crawford marches his army towards the Ohio River, where General George Washington has charged him with…
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Battle of Guilford Courthouse
(March 15, 1781), in the American Revolution, strategic victory for the Americans in North Carolina over the British, who soon afterward were obliged to abandon control of the Carolinas.
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Nathan Hale
(born June 6, 1755, Coventry, Conn. [U.S.]—died Sept. 22, 1776, Manhattan Island, N.Y.) American Revolutionary officer who attempted to spy on the British and was hanged.
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Sir Henry Clinton
(born April 16?, 1730?—died Dec. 23, 1795, Cornwall, Eng.) British commander in chief in America during the Revolutionary War.
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Tadeusz Kosciuszko
(born February 4, 1746, Mereczowszczyzna, Poland [now in Belarus]—died October 15, 1817, Solothurn, Switzerland) Polish army officer and statesman who gained fame both for his role in the American Revolution and for his leadership of a national insurrection in his homeland.
(September 5, 1781), in the American Revolution, French naval victory over a British fleet that took place outside Chesapeake Bay. The outcome of the battle was indispensable to the successful Franco-American Siege of Yorktown from August to October.
In late summer 1781 Lord Cornwallis led the main British army of the South onto the Yorktown Peninsula, Virginia, where he confidently awaited rescue by reinforcements from the British fleet. In the meantime the French admiral comte de Grasse proceeded with his entire fleet of 24 ships from the West Indies to Chesapeake Bay.
Sailing from New York, a British fleet of 19 ships under the command of Admiral Thomas Graves confronted the French at Virginia Capes on September 5. Only the leading squadrons of the two fleets engaged in moderate fighting in the late afternoon. Although British losses were heavier, the contest was by and large undecided, and the two partly becalmed fleets drifted along parallel courses for the next three days without incident. Then, reinforced by additional vessels and siege guns from Newport, Rhode Island, the French sailed back into Chesapeake Bay to take final control of the harbour, while the British fleet returned to New York. British naval historian Sir William M. James labeled this the decisive battle of the war, one that sealed the fate of Cornwallis and of the British cause in America.
Copyright © 1994-2011 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. For more information visit Britannica.com.
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