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Revolutionary War Timeline By: Julianna Crespo

  • Traders

    Still bitter from their defeat by the British in the French and
    Indian War, the French had secretly sent weapons to the Patriots
  • British Migrate

    The British had previously retreated from Boston, Moving the theater of war to the Middle states.
  • British Sail into New York Harbor

    General William Howe and Admiral Richard Howe, joined forces on Staten Island and sailed into New York harbor
  • Withdraw

    Michael Graham, a Continental Army volunteer, described the
    chaotic withdrawal
  • Delaware River into Pennsylvania

    the British had pushed Washington’s army across the Delaware
    River into Pennsylvania.
  • Christmas Night

    Washington resolved to risk everything on one bold
    stroke set for Christmas night
  • Trenton

    By 8 o’clock the next morning, the men had marched nine miles through sleet and snow to Trenton, New Jersey, held by a garrison of Hessians
  • Princeton

    The Americans were rallied by another astonishing victory eight days later against 1,200 British stationed at Princeton
  • Philadelphia

    As the muddy fields dried out in the spring, General Howe began his campaign to seize the American capital at Philadelphia
  • Victory at Saratoga

    Victory at Saratoga
    Massed American troops finally surrounded Burgoyne at Saratoga, where he surrendered his battered army to General Gates
  • Period: to

    Valley Forge

    Served as the site of the Continental Army's camp
  • Alliance with French

    The French recognized American independence and signed an alliance, or treaty of cooperation, with the Americans
  • Troop Transformation

    In the midst of the frozen winter at Valley Forge, American troops began an amazing transformation
  • Shift Operations to the South

    After their devastating defeat at Saratoga, the British changed their military strategy and began to shift their operations to the South
  • Savannah, Georgia

    A British expedition easily took Savannah, Georgia
  • Lafayette

    The young Lafayette joined Washington’s staff and bore the misery of Valley Forge, lobbied for French reinforcements, and led a command in Virginia in the last years of the war.
  • Commands Georgia

    A royal governor once again commanded Georgia
  • Sailed South

    General Henry Clinton, who had replaced Howe in New York, along with the ambitious general Charles Cornwallis sailed south with 8,500 men
  • Charles Town, South Carolina

    In their greatest victory of the war, the British captured Charles Town, South Carolina, and marched 5,500 American soldiers off as prisoners of war
  • Newport, Rhode Island

    A French army of 6,000 had landed in Newport, Rhode Island, after the British left the city to focus on the South
  • Camden, South Carolina

    Cornwallis’s army smashed American forces at Camden, South Carolina, and within three months the British had established forts across the state
  • Cowpens, South Carolina

    When the forces met at Cowpens, South Carolina, the
    British expected the outnumbered Americans to flee; but the Continental Army fought back, and forced the redcoats to surrender
  • Guilford Court House

    Angered by the defeat at Cowpens, Cornwallis attacked Greene at Guilford Court House, North Carolina
  • Letter to Lafayette

    Greene wrote a letter to Lafayette, asking for help.
  • Superintendent of finance

    The Congress appointed a rich Philadelphia merchant named Robert Morris as superintendent of finance
  • Troops Were Paid

    The troops were finally paid in specie, or gold coin
  • Cornwallis Surrendered at Yorktown

    Cornwallis Surrendered at Yorktown
    With his troops outnumbered by more than two to one and
    exhausted from constant shelling, Cornwallis finally raised
    the white flag of surrender
  • Yorktown

    Colonel William Fontaine of the Virginia militia stood with the American and French armies lining a road near Yorktown, Virginia, to witness the formal British surrender
  • Peace Talks

    Peace talks began and representatives of four
    nations the United States, Great Britain, France, and Spain joined the negotiations, with each nation looking out for its own interests
  • Treaty of Paris

    Treaty of Paris
    The delegates signed the Treaty of Paris, which confirmed U.S. independence and set the boundaries of the new nation