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hello I'm Forrest Sawyer in this program
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five of Liberty the war shifts to the
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southern states I grew up in the south
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surrounded by powerful reminders of the
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Civil War not the American Revolution
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but as we shall see the southern states
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played a decisive role in the war that
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created this country the war of
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independence was until Vietnam the
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longest ever fought by the United States
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and in 1780 when our episode begins the
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conflict has become a question of who
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can hold out the longest on the American
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side the states are bankrupt and there
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are mutinies among the ragged ill-fed
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soldiers in England members of
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parliament are getting impatient while
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the war drains the Treasury the
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rebellion drags on stalemated in the
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north the British now decide to focus on
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the south a volatile land fraught with
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old feuds and rivalries here the British
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see a chance to divide and conquer
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travelers in the 18th century coming
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down from the north enter a wild and
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strange land the air becomes
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increasingly hot and humid deadly
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mosquitoes spread malaria with its
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unending fevers people blame the swamp
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air thick and steamy unbreathable even
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at night this is the Tidewater region
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the low country of the Carolinas and
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Georgia let us encourage the Negroes and
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the southern provinces to rise up
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against their masters better send some
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regiments to support them in carrying
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the design into execution the Negroes
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will arise as deep their hands and the
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blood of their masters
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December 1779 the war in America has
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been going on for five years and is at a
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stalemate for England it has expanded
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into a world war with her archenemy
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France British colonies around the world
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are under attack and France seems poised
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to invade England itself the American
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War has become a costly sideshow the
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British are growing desperate
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general henry clinton set sail from New
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York he leaves behind a garrison of
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troops to tie down Washington's army
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his destination is Charleston South
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Carolina the commercial and political
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center of the American lower south the
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decision to go south was really a last
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attempt they failed in New England they
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failed in the middle colonies as they
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regarded them and where else could they
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go the answer was that they could
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attempt to go south but they could
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pacify the entire south and then use
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that as a springboard from which they
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could reconquer the rest of the colonies
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Clinton lays siege to Charleston
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the entire southern division of the
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American army defends the city valiantly
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for six weeks but in May of Charleston
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falls to the British 16 year old Eliza
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Wilkinson keeps a diary recording the
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events of the day a day of sorrow I have
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seen my countrymen bound and dragged
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away so many young men have died in her
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defense now America must fall we are
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entirely at the mercy of the British
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soldiers even women are being sent to
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the prison ships do the Britons think
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that their conquer America this way we
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may be led but we'll never be driven the
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entire southern army is captured
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most of South Carolina falls into
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British hands Georgia has been pacified
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and North Carolina will soon follow a
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delighted general Clinton reports back
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to London with greatest pleasure I
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report to your lordship that inhabitants
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from every quarter rush to declare their
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allegiance to the king I may venture to
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assert that there are few men in South
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Carolina who are not either in arms with
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us or our prisoners since the beginning
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of the war the British have issued two
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extraordinary proclamations offering
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protection to slaves who run away from
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their Patriot masters they gave the
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African Americans the knowledge that
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they could become involved in this war
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and that force could have worked for
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their own freedom they could work among
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the British they would have occupations
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they were paid by the British and the
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march from plantations to the Clinton
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forces was for them or freedom march we
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ask for nothing more than is our right
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we are the creatures of that God who
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made all nations of the earth of one
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blood and one kindred we are no more
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obliged to serve you than you to serve
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us the more we consider the matter the
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more we are convinced we were not
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created to be slaves
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it became very apparent to British
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military leadership that racial
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manipulation might be used successfully
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to bring white Southerners to heel
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it created widespread panic
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among white Southerners because every
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southerner whether he or she was a slave
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owner or a non slave owner feared the
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prospect of a massive slave uprising
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they all felt their own vulnerability a
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Negro man named Charles ran off for me
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last night I believe he intends to try
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to get to the British he may prove
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resolute and Darren if endeavoured to be
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taken his leavin was from no cause of
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complaint or dread of a weapon for he
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has always been remarkably indulged did
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too much so but from a determination to
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get his Liberty by flying to the British
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he's very black has a large nose and is
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about 5 feet 8 or 10 inches high I would
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give 5 pounds to any person who secures
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him
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the British see the proclamations as a
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powerful weapon to destabilize the south
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but the Patriots are determined to hold
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on to their slaves they unite in
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opposition to the British and so in a
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great irony the retention of this slave
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system becomes a significant objective
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of the revolution in the south so we
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have a revolution on behalf of freedom
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and independence and part of the freedom
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independence is the maintenance of the
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slave system a victorious Clinton
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returns to New York leaving the South
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under the command of General Charles
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Cornwallis a 40 year old aristocrat and
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professional soldier
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Cornwallis is charged with executing the
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second part of the strategy to conquer
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the South the British are aware that a
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large percentage of the population has
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never supported the revolution for the
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first time in the war the British intend
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to make these loyalists a key component
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of their war effort the plan is to
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conquer an area and then put loyalists
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in charge the idea is that you send in a
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relatively small force certainly far
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smaller than the force counter to Staten
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Island in 1776 you send it send in a
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relatively small force that defeats
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whatever major Union Patriot units you
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have in the area and once those Patrick
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units have been defeated the loyalists
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are encouraged to rise to organize
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themselves in a militia that that
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militia will terrorize their opponents
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and in effect take over the civil
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government and produce resources and
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recruits for the British and that this
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process will be extendable throughout
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the south so it is a new strategy
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it is a strategy doomed from the start
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the British have no idea that they are
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walking into a hornet's nest their
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loyalist allies have little enthusiasm
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for the British cause they are mainly
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interested in revenge against the
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Patriots the loyalists tend to be recent
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immigrants poor scots-irish who have
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settled the backcountry these new
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arrivals have been treated with contempt
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by the established well-to-do Gentry and
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there is bad blood between them they're
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descended from Britons perhaps but they
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are one step removed from the brutes
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there's no authority of churches schools
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huh and no law fighting brawl and
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fornicating of glowered in practiced in
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the open new day they calls us pack of
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beggar's
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at Charleston Jen Carina fine Linens
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and who were you rancid a few years back
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the British Armed these backwoods
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loyalists and put them into positions of
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power the loyalists seize the
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opportunity to settle old scores British
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soldiers are soon horrified by the
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actions of their southern allies we
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approach the farm and we see pastures
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littered with the carcasses of dead
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cattle and horses we walk into the
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plantation house but everything is
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silent on the floor of the smashed
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fragments of porcelain figurines which
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had been collected by the owner on the
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shelf in their stead we see five severed
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human heads and then
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all the barbarians
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they lay a pregnant woman murdered in
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her bed they had cut open each of her
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breasts with stabs from their bayonet
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and above the canopy they wrote in our
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own blood I shall never give birth to a
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rebel patriots fight back they form
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partisan bands burning farms torturing
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and killing suspected Tories friend and
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foe alike were often pillaged and
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indiscriminant indiscriminately people
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who had publicly declared their
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neutrality or pillage by both sides all
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the sides were involved in all sides
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were guilty of the cruelest barbarities
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against one another I come home after
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six months of hunting Tories and there
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is the wreckage of our farm and I find
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mother they tied her up and whipped her
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she's a widow but they stole everything
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they couldn't burn the house I joined up
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with another company and we go to the
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house of a tour named Campbell we
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capture a few of them we shoot a fellow
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named McPherson and Campbell was
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picketed
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it works like this first we hammer a
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sharp pin through a block of wood and
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then it was Tom Archer he got hold of
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Campbell and he pushed his foot on the
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spike and then he turns him round and
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round till the pan runs clear through
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his foot cruel you think I loved seeing
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Campbell speaking we figured he was part
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of the gang at horsewhipped two helpless
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Widow what has she ever done except
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telling her son to be true to the cause
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the British strategy of using loyalists
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to pacify the south is proving to be
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disastrous Cornwallis is frustrated and
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perplexed if the loyalists allow
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themselves to be plundered and their own
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families ruined by these rebel bandits
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how did he expect us to protect them in
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1780 George Washington is with the main
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American forces outside of New York
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locked in a stalemate with the British
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Army stationed in the city
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he and his soldiers have suffered two
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devastating winters at Valley Forge and
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Morristown
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his thoughts turned to his beloved Mount
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Vernon which he hasn't seen in six years
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he writes to his cousin managing the
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estate I wait here with impatient
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anxiety for news from the south I can do
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nothing
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do you have any prospects of getting
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paint
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I trust you have taken care of the
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fallen trees and the hedges
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how many lambs do you have this spring
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right me how many horses are now on mrs.
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Washington tells me that she's taken a
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fancy to a horse belonging to James
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Cleveland if he is as fine a horse as is
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claimed
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try to get him I shall be very pleased
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if you do
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1780 was a low point because both
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militarily and politically if things
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look bad there's no money states are
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broke and the Army is in terrible
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condition
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not being supported so I think you have
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a lot of disillusionment and real
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feeling that maybe we've made a terrible
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mistake
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I think there was that in that sense
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psychologically it was a low point as
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well at this moment Washington and the
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country get devastating news general
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Benedict Arnold Washington's most
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brilliant general and one of the
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revolutions greatest heroes has become
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convinced that the Americans are losing
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the war he has gone over to the British
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Arnold was an incredible figure in the
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minds of the Americans this was not just
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a general that led an army this was one
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who had accomplished incredible feats
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and fort ty in front of Quebec at
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Valcour Island at Saratoga and it was an
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incredible blow on Americans belief in
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themselves if Arnold has turned traitor
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what else can happen to us can we last
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and we survived it was the great
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betrayal of Washington's life I don't
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think he ever got over it and yet
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Washington for all the gloom in the
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sixth year of the war never lost faith
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at least publicly and that's what
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counted Washington understood this was
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not a military conflict in the
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conventional certainly the old world
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sense this was ultimately a test of
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political endurance and while he by
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temperament and inclination would prefer
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to play the part of the lion he learn to
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play the Fox brilliantly he only fought
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nine battles in the revolution of which
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he only won three his genius was in
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keeping the cause alive in keeping the
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army such as it was together it was that
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endurance that made him even at the time
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a legend
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Washington has one great hope his
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alliance with the French King Louie's
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money is sustaining the war effort and
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France is now America's principal source
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of military supplies muskets gunpowder
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even uniforms the American army is
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flooded with idealistic foreign
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volunteers many of them noblemen the
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German Baron Vilhelm French turban the
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Polish Colonel Terriers Kosciusko
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count Casimir Pulaski the most famous of
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them is a young enthusiastic and very
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well-connected French aristocrat named
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Marie Joseph Paul Yves ro Gilbert du
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motier
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Americans know him as the Marquis de
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Lafayette at age 19 Lafayette had become
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one of Washington's most trusted aides
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he has returned to France to promote
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support for the revolution and writes
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washington frequently be so kind
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Michels in Havana as to present my best
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respects to your lady I do not allow but
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I have a wife who is madly in love with
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you but my feelings for you are too
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strong but I can't object your feelings
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and indeed all of Europe wants to see
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you so much that I have boldly affirmed
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that you will pay me a visit after the
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peace is settled Moshe Amidala how happy
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I will be to embrace you again
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Washington royal admirer Lafayette is a
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young man of royal birth with liberal
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politics and what Jefferson later called
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a canine appetite for fame someone said
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he was a statue in search for pedestal
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but he was intoxicated with a love a
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rather theoretical love of Liberty
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it was theoretical because Liberty
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wasn't no to many Europeans but he was a
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great romantic he fell in love with
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America the concept of America that the
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French had this
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new world we could start the world over
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two years Tom Payne's phrase and he came
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to America and he became an effective
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surrogate son to Washington I think that
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Washington when he met Lafayette was
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charmed by this ganic schwa vive by this
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very exaggeration and exuberance that
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this very young Lafayette he was only 19
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when he arrived in America had and I'm
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sure enough I yet had the best possible
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influence on loosening up Washington my
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dear Marquis you invite me to visit
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France after independence remember my
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friend I don't speak your language and I
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am too old to learn it I cannot bear the
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idea that I would appear awkward and
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insipid in front of the ladies
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especially in front of your young life
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convey to her in any event my most
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tender affection and don't be afraid of
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arrival alas in all of history
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there's no example of a young woman
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preferring an old man if she follows her
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own real inclinations George Washington
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Lafayette meets with louis xvi and
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secures for washington what he most
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wants from the king a regiment of french
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troops to be sent to america lafayette
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fully expects to be the commander of
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this army he is disappointed when king
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louie chooses instead a far more
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experienced general count Giambattista
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Rochambeau Rochambeau is horrified by
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what he finds in america proposed a
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mobile a Minister of War
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Monsieur the country is ruined
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they have nothing not a single coin
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Washington's army grows and shrinks from
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moment to moment
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sometimes he claims he has 15,000 troops
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sometimes only 3,000
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send men money and ships don't count on
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any health these people Rochambeau and
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his 6,000 soldiers stationed themselves
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at newport rhode island and wait for
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reinforcements
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privately Rochambeau is convinced that
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the americans are near defeat as is that
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he must re-establish an American
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military presence in the south
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he sends his most able and trusted
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general Nathanael green green is
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appalled by what he finds I have never
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witnessed such scenes of desolation
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bloodshed and deliberate murder wherever
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you turn the weeping widows and
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fatherless children pour out stories to
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shame humanity and like the British
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invaders we too have become savages
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there's not a day goes by that some Tory
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deluded as he maybe is not shot to death
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just for standing in his doorway
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Nathaniel Greene is a remarkable general
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absolutely remarkable Green has learned
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one thing from history he knows that you
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never have to win the battle in order to
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win the war but green recognizes in the
00:24:08
south very quickly is the side that
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ultimately secures the support of the
00:24:14
people will prevail and he designs his
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military strategy to win popular opinion
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he knows that the best way to do that is
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to make the British presence
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unacceptable to make the British
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presence so oppressive that the other
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side is preferable that's his genius
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Green leads Cornwallis on a six-month
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chase through the backwoods further and
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further from the British base on the
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coast further and further from their
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stores of food and supplies
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this strategy forces the British to
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plunder the countryside
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they also liberate slaves and pursue a
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policy of pillage and burning
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the British army appeared to be
00:25:14
incapable of distinguishing between a
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loyal American and a rebel they all look
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the same as a result the British Army
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proved to be an extraordinary asset for
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the revolutionary cause as the Americans
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confronted the enemy in the flesh and
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experienced firsthand the arrogance the
00:25:37
atrocities that occasionally came from
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British hands needless to say they
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became more ardent supporters of the
00:25:43
revolution
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Cornwallis pursues Greene with a
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vengeance from South Carolina into North
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Carolina up to Virginia and back in one
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long march north with green crossing and
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recrossing rivers the British in furious
00:26:03
pursuit lose 500 men to heat disease and
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exhaustion there are a few generals who
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run often or more lustily than I do I
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run as fast backwards as forwards to
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convince our enemy that we are like a
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crab we can run in any direction as long
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as it's away as the months go by
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Greene and his army succeed both in
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rallying popular support and in wearing
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down the British he loses every major
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engagement he fight he lose as a
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Guilford Courthouse he loses at Hopkirk
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till he loses had 96 he loses at Utah
00:26:50
Springs and nonetheless his forces are
00:26:54
gradually becoming more accepted by the
00:26:58
local populace
00:27:00
green strategy in the south is still
00:27:04
admired by all professional military
00:27:06
people he went in and lost every battle
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and he won the South he fought and lost
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and rose and fought again and in doing
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so he reclaimed North South Carolina and
00:27:22
Georgia and he did it with a severe crow
00:27:26
crew I get so emotional leadership and
00:27:29
troops that Europe had to offer Johan
00:27:34
AVO a hessian mercenary has been with
00:27:37
the British since the beginning of the
00:27:39
campaign but other Army in the world
00:27:42
would put up with what these men do even
00:27:45
our best discipline German soldiers
00:27:46
would desert in droves rather than face
00:27:48
these conditions our generals will soon
00:27:50
be all alone
00:27:51
I now see what enthusiasts and what
00:27:55
these ragged fellows call Liberty can do
00:27:58
out of this rabble rises of people who
00:28:01
who defy kings
00:28:05
by the summer of 1781 Cornwallis has
00:28:08
spent six months chasing green through
00:28:11
the swamps and forests he has nothing to
00:28:15
show for it I've had a most difficult
00:28:18
and dangerous campaign often fighting
00:28:20
200 miles from anywhere against an enemy
00:28:23
seven times my number 1/3 of my army is
00:28:26
sick and wounded and I must carry them
00:28:28
in wagons the remainder are without
00:28:30
shoes and are warmed down with fatigue
00:28:33
it's time to find someplace for rest and
00:28:36
resupply I assure you I am quite tired
00:28:40
of marching about the countryside in
00:28:43
search of adventure if we are to have an
00:28:46
offensive war in the South Clinton must
00:28:48
abandon New York and bring his whole
00:28:50
army to Virginia so now what is our plan
00:28:55
if we don't have one what are we doing
00:28:59
here captain New York didn't make any
00:29:04
difference capturing Charleston didn't
00:29:05
make any difference
00:29:06
holding Boston first stage the war
00:29:08
didn't make any difference ultimately it
00:29:12
was like trying to stick a fork in piece
00:29:14
of jelly it kept a the revolution kept
00:29:17
escaping from them because they couldn't
00:29:19
hold territory they couldn't cement
00:29:21
loyalty it couldn't create function
00:29:23
administration they couldn't restore the
00:29:25
authority of the crown which was the
00:29:27
object the exercise to begin with the
00:29:29
sensation that you're winning the
00:29:31
battles but you're not winning the war
00:29:32
is very common in colonial warfare it's
00:29:35
what happened to the French in Indochina
00:29:37
in in their war against the people who
00:29:41
were going to become a Viet Cong and it
00:29:43
happened to the Americans in India that
00:29:45
if you keep on winning the battles but
00:29:47
you're not winning them all it's because
00:29:49
you win but you don't take control of
00:29:53
the territory and you don't could take
00:29:54
control of the population and in that
00:29:57
hackneyed phrase you don't have their
00:29:58
hearts and minds you can kill their
00:30:02
soldiers but your victories don't
00:30:04
convince people go on disliking you
00:30:10
Cornwallis and his weary soldiers begin
00:30:13
a retreat to set up a base camp on the
00:30:16
coast he'll be regaining the sea and
00:30:19
it's always important for the British in
00:30:20
North America to be with their back to
00:30:22
the sea that can be resupplied evacuated
00:30:25
or reinforced on bow and the French army
00:30:36
have been in America for over a year
00:30:39
still waiting for reinforcements they
00:30:42
drill on Rhode Island far from the
00:30:44
action outside of New York Washington is
00:30:49
beside himself with frustration he had
00:30:53
pinned his hopes on the French but they
00:30:55
have done nothing Lafayette now back in
00:30:59
America urges general roshambo to take
00:31:02
action Monsieur ducat here I find myself
00:31:06
in the middle of the foreign land with
00:31:08
the French army sitting idle in what I
00:31:09
know the to command the Tories and the
00:31:12
English is that France has come to stop
00:31:15
our fire but not fight themselves how am
00:31:18
I to conserve them when you are guarding
00:31:20
an island that nobody in America cares
00:31:22
about whatever troops you are expecting
00:31:25
next year from France whatever plans you
00:31:27
have for the future will not make up for
00:31:29
the fatal harm of your inaction now we
00:31:33
must do better
00:31:34
and my vanity makes me believe that we
00:31:37
French can never be bitter Rochambeau
00:31:41
finds Lafayette's proposal less than
00:31:43
appealing My dear fellow I'll let you in
00:31:47
on one of my great secrets learn from
00:31:50
years of experience Frenchmen aren't
00:31:53
invincible
00:31:54
our troops are easily beaten when they
00:31:56
lose confidence in their leaders and
00:31:58
they do it very quickly when they see
00:32:01
that their lives are being risked to
00:32:03
satisfy some generals personal ambition
00:32:07
perhaps the warmth of your spirit has
00:32:09
for the moment gotten the better part of
00:32:11
your sound judgment
00:32:13
keep this fire for when we actually go
00:32:15
into battle then on August 14th events
00:32:20
take a sudden and surprising turn
00:32:23
Rochambeau receives a bulletin from the
00:32:26
french admiral count de Grasse in the
00:32:28
caribbean
00:32:28
he immediately passes the news to
00:32:31
washington count the grass will be
00:32:34
arriving in the Chesapeake area with 29
00:32:37
war boats 3,000 troops several dozen
00:32:40
field guns in 1 million two hundred
00:32:41
thousand pounds in cash because of
00:32:44
obligations in the islands this force
00:32:47
will be available to us only until
00:32:48
October 15th we must make use of it
00:32:51
promptly and efficiently the grass's
00:32:56
ships and troops will be coming to
00:32:57
Virginia close to where Cornwallis is
00:33:00
camped because hurricane season is
00:33:04
approaching they will be available for
00:33:06
two weeks only washington leaps into
00:33:10
action coordinating with Rochambeau he
00:33:13
makes plans to rush their best troops
00:33:15
south to Virginia to meet up with de
00:33:17
grassi's fleet the French and the
00:33:20
Americans are planning an operation in
00:33:24
order to destroy the British position in
00:33:26
Yorktown now they know that the only way
00:33:28
to do that successfully is a combined
00:33:30
operation and a combined operation is
00:33:32
incredibly difficult it means you've got
00:33:35
to have the troops and the ships and
00:33:37
also the Seabourn artillery
00:33:39
which is another crucial element of its
00:33:41
the artillery is too heavy to move over
00:33:43
land and they've all got to arrive in
00:33:45
the same area to provide a local
00:33:47
superiority on force both on land and at
00:33:50
sea at the same moment Washington and
00:33:55
Rochambeau begin a month-long march
00:33:57
south
00:34:00
Lafayette is camped in Williamsburg near
00:34:03
Yorktown
00:34:04
he sends Washington detailed reports
00:34:07
Lord Kamali's is entrenching at Yorktown
00:34:10
he is picking up whatever provisions he
00:34:13
can get from the surrounding countryside
00:34:14
he has a large quantity of Negroes in
00:34:17
town with him they are working day and
00:34:19
night on the fortifications the moment I
00:34:21
can get the plans I will send them to
00:34:22
you the french admiral Count de Grasse
00:34:27
arrives on schedule at the Virginia
00:34:30
caves he is met by a fleet of British
00:34:33
ships coming to Cornwallis as a
00:34:37
they engage in a fierce to our battle
00:34:44
outnumber the British fleet retreats to
00:34:47
New York for reinforcements when
00:34:51
Washington and Rochambeau arrive outside
00:34:53
of Yorktown the French Navy controls the
00:34:56
Chesapeake
00:34:57
Rochambeau sends his greetings to de
00:35:00
Grasse I must confess you are more chef
00:35:04
Ameera the most wonderful Admiral that I
00:35:06
know you have surpassed everything we
00:35:09
could want now we are preparing for our
00:35:12
own equally good piece of work tomorrow
00:35:16
we will move as close as possible to
00:35:17
Yorktown and then our troops will just
00:35:20
wait for the pair to ripen we will of
00:35:24
course yield presidents to the Americans
00:35:26
we will allow them to claim the victory
00:35:32
Cornwallis's troops are camped on the
00:35:34
river's edge facing them are the Allied
00:35:38
French and American armies to their rear
00:35:41
de Grasse is fleet they have blockaded
00:35:45
Chesapeake Bay Cornwallis can get no
00:35:49
reinforcements he really can't move
00:35:52
around because you can send ships up
00:35:56
virtually any River in Virginia and cut
00:35:59
him off so he's pinned in there he can't
00:36:04
get out and the Allies have Chesapeake
00:36:06
Bay as a giant superhighway to bring men
00:36:11
and guns and food and all the other
00:36:15
things necessary to fight back this is
00:36:19
the moment that Washington has been
00:36:21
waiting for the Allies command 17,000
00:36:25
troops the British only 9,000
00:36:30
Washington's troops are ready for action
00:36:33
in the five years of the war they have
00:36:37
become the disciplined army he has
00:36:39
always wanted among the soldiers is a
00:36:43
young man who had fought in the first
00:36:45
major battle of the revolution as a raw
00:36:47
recruit Joseph plum Martin is now a
00:36:51
seasoned veteran of numerous campaigns
00:36:54
they told us that we're about to pay a
00:36:57
visit to our old friends the British
00:37:00
their accommodations are cramped and I
00:37:02
fear that they're not ready to receive
00:37:03
so many visitors but we've come such a
00:37:05
long way to see them we're just not
00:37:07
going to be put off by their excuses
00:37:10
Cornwallis sends a dispatch to Clinton
00:37:13
suggesting that he hurry up the
00:37:15
reinforcements Clinton replies that
00:37:18
rescue is on the way
00:37:21
5,000 soldiers are on the kingships
00:37:23
Joint Operations will commence in a few
00:37:26
days to relieve you while they wait
00:37:30
Cornwallis's men furiously dig trenches
00:37:32
in preparation for the Allied assault
00:37:35
his black auxiliaries do much of the
00:37:38
heavy labor working hard in the heat
00:37:43
works consumed in a tolerable state of
00:37:45
depends the Army is in good health we
00:37:49
have six weeks provisions the French and
00:37:53
Americans prepare for a siege they dig
00:37:58
trenches encircling the town Rochambeau
00:38:02
an expert at siege warfare guides the
00:38:05
activities
00:38:08
the British soldiers watch with
00:38:10
increasing alarm I tried to warn the
00:38:14
Earl of the weakness of our defenses I
00:38:16
show him how I can just jump over the
00:38:19
earthworks it will disgrace our army to
00:38:22
fall in a siege if that happens the
00:38:25
answer's coldly the blame will be on
00:38:28
Clinton not on us
00:38:33
the bombardment of your town now begins
00:38:36
in earnest the French cannon pound the
00:38:43
British defenses day and night when the
00:38:48
British are weak enough the Allies
00:38:50
advanced their lines bringing the cannon
00:38:52
ever closer it's almost an exercise in
00:38:56
mathematics in which you aim to break up
00:39:00
the enemy's attack and you want to get
00:39:03
it so you can shoot at him from his
00:39:05
Menace odds as possible so it's a very
00:39:08
structured and formal activity much like
00:39:12
the way that a war constrictor deals
00:39:15
with its victims they grasp them weaken
00:39:18
them let up a little and then grasp them
00:39:21
tighter until eventually they have their
00:39:23
dinner and a siege is like that once one
00:39:26
is properly undertaken unless there is
00:39:29
some outside intervention the people
00:39:33
besieging the town are going to win
00:39:40
the siege began it lasted week after and
00:39:46
as it lasted Cornwallis's provisions
00:39:49
began to grow very short in order to
00:39:55
prevent his horses from starving to
00:39:58
death they had to be slaughtered and
00:40:01
thrown into the river and he did with
00:40:05
the african-americans something very
00:40:07
similar to what he did with the horses
00:40:10
his men were starving and they wanted
00:40:13
every ounce of food for his men and so
00:40:16
they simply drove them out of the camp
00:40:20
the black auxiliaries are forced into
00:40:22
the no-man's land between the fighting
00:40:24
harvest
00:40:28
it's harsh our black friends have served
00:40:31
our army well and now we drive them out
00:40:34
by force between firing guns now they
00:40:37
will have to face the reward of their
00:40:39
crueler masters no I I just I can't talk
00:40:45
about viviendo to them the Americans and
00:40:59
French position themselves to advance on
00:41:01
the British outer defenses the password
00:41:07
for tonight is the name of the French
00:41:09
commander
00:41:10
Rochambeau easy to remember
00:41:14
Rochambeau that sounds just like rush on
00:41:19
noise
00:41:22
the signal is given we silently move on
00:41:25
the readouts bayonets fixed the enemy
00:41:31
sees us and begins firing
00:41:40
I hear people crying the readouts are
00:41:43
ours there's no stopping us and we go it
00:41:50
really is Russia on boys
00:41:59
by now the Americans and French are just
00:42:02
outside the final barricades Yorktown is
00:42:07
ready to be taken
00:42:14
on the 17th of October 1781 the British
00:42:18
send up a flag of truce needless to say
00:42:23
the victorious warriors are in the mood
00:42:26
to celebrate and to rub in their victory
00:42:30
Washington the consummate actor
00:42:32
dramatically appears on a charge of
00:42:34
riding up and down the American lines
00:42:37
forbidding them to engage in any
00:42:39
demonstration and shouting posterity
00:42:42
will huzzah for us the pleas of
00:42:51
the fifth act has ended
00:42:54
I must confess it was a bit uneasy
00:42:56
during the first four lakhs but my heart
00:42:59
keenly enjoyed this last one
00:43:09
their faces darken
00:43:14
they look like boys been whipped at
00:43:16
school on October 24th the huge British
00:43:23
fleet arrives off the Chesapeake capes
00:43:27
Clinton has made good on his promise but
00:43:30
it is one week too late the French fleet
00:43:34
has returned to the Caribbean Cornwallis
00:43:37
and his entire army are prisoners of the
00:43:40
Americans Yorktown is the biggest
00:43:46
British disaster since Saratoga
00:43:50
the news reaches British essayist Horace
00:43:53
Walpole ah yes
00:43:56
Cornwallis that Columbus who was to
00:43:59
bestow America on us again for us to
00:44:02
lose a second army now this is an
00:44:05
achievement well here ends another
00:44:09
volume in the American War I would
00:44:12
suggest that it's all over but for the
00:44:14
fact that there are three are the walls
00:44:16
that have grown out of it and were 40
00:44:19
million pounds in debt it is not
00:44:28
immediately obvious that the war is over
00:44:32
the English still hold New York
00:44:34
Charleston and Savannah with the French
00:44:38
Navy out of the way the British again
00:44:40
ruled the sea but the British have bet
00:44:45
everything on victory in the South they
00:44:49
must now accept that this is a war they
00:44:52
can never really win in Tom Payne's
00:44:55
words they cannot conquer an idea with
00:44:59
an army British popular opinion which
00:45:04
have been so strongly in favor of the
00:45:07
war at the beginning had turned heavily
00:45:10
and it's it turned out irrevocably
00:45:12
against the government it's the same
00:45:16
thing with other Wars of course long
00:45:18
Wars bring higher taxes bring economic
00:45:21
crisis bring an interruption of trade
00:45:24
decline of property prices and so on all
00:45:28
these things and especially the fact
00:45:30
that the war had become a world war
00:45:33
against France all of them created a
00:45:36
crisis which public opinion was no
00:45:38
longer tolerate Yorktown brings down the
00:45:43
government the opposition takes over
00:45:47
committed to ending the war
00:45:50
in 1783 two years after the defeat at
00:45:54
Yorktown a treaty is signed in Paris
00:45:59
the British signatories declined to pose
00:46:02
for the official portrait King George
00:46:06
tries to console himself America seems
00:46:11
to be a land of knaves in the end
00:46:13
perhaps it is for the best that his
00:46:15
inhabitants have become aliens to this
00:46:17
kingdom but it is observed that when he
00:46:21
announces the terms of the American
00:46:23
treaty to Parliament his voice chokes
00:46:26
when he says the word independence the
00:46:33
old man our captain came in and handed
00:46:34
us our discharge papers we didn't say
00:46:39
much and we've lived together for eight
00:46:42
years young men with warm hearts through
00:46:47
hardships dangers
00:46:51
family of brothers and now never to see
00:46:56
each other again it's a sad time and by
00:47:04
now everyone's heard the old story of
00:47:06
the soldiers tracking the blood of their
00:47:08
feet on the frozen ground it literally
00:47:11
happened but you don't know a thousandth
00:47:16
part of how we suffered you never can
00:47:30
you