Washington-Rochambeau Revolutionary RouteBrochure |
Official Brochure of Washington-Rochambeau Revolutionary Route National Historic Trail in MA, RI, CT, NY, NJ, PA, DE, MD, VA, DC. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
Washington-Rochambeau
Revolutionary Route
Washington-Rochambeau Revolutionary Route
National Historic Trail
Massachusetts to Virginia
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
"The essential and direct End ofthe present defensive alliance is to maintain...
the liberty, Sovereignty, and independence... of said united States"
—from the 'Treaty of Alliance," 1778, National Archives and Records Administration
France Joins the Cause *
When leaders of 13 of the American colonies boldly
declared independence from Great Britain in 1776, they
knew that without military supplies, naval power, and
money their quest would fail. At that time Great Britain
possessed the greatest navy and one of the best armies
in the world. Well-trained and better-equipped British
forces overpowered America's Continental
Army troops from the beginning of the
Revolutionary War.
Facing a strong enemy with so few resources forced the
Americans to search for allies to aid them in their cause.
Beginning in 1775, contacts were underway between the
Court of Louis XVI and the patriots. France had deep ties
to North America, establishing settlements there long
before the French and Indian War of the 1750s. There
were, however, other motives for the king's support of
a colonial rebellion on a distant continent—bolstering
his nation's economic and political power worldwide,
as well as avenging France's loss to Great Britain in the
Seven Years War.
The American mission was a success. Louis XVI agreed
to provide muskets, mortars, gunpowder, and cash to the
new nation. In 1778 France signed a "Treaty of Alliance"
with the United States of America. Their recognition of
the young country as a sovereign power earned the
fledgling nation respect throughout the world.
French aid helped the Americans, but by March 1780
the war in the colonies was at a stalemate. France responded by sending thousands of its best soldiers across
the Atlantic to help George Washington's patriots hold off
the British. Their commander was a man of great experience and respect, General Jean Baptiste Donatien de
Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau.
The Long March to Independence
Officers and Men
The 450 officers and 5,300 men of Rochambeau's Expeditionary Forces landed
on the coast of Rhode Island in July 1780.
Generals Washington and Rochambeau
agreed to wait until the spring of 1781
to launch a joint military offensive, so
the French army spent the bitter winter
camped in Newport, Rhode Island, and
Lebanon, Connecticut. During that time,
French officers prepared for the march
that would unite them with Continental
troops at the Hudson River. From there
the allied forces planned to attack British
General Clinton's stronghold in New York
City, a few days' march to the south.
The allied forces comprised a diverse
group with a common goal. French troops
impressed colonists with their professional
military training and elegantly decorated
uniforms. The Continental Army, however,
included able bodies, from boys who were
barely teens to men who were grandfathers. Some had been trained; others
had never fired a shot. A man's social or
political status often determined his rank.
Although most American soldiers were of
British ancestry, some descended from
Germans, Africans, and American Indians.
Only one black soldier served under
Rochambeau but Baron von Closen, a
member of Rochambeau's French army at
Yorktown, noted in July 1781, "A quarter
of [the American army] are Negroes,
merry, confident and sturdy." Many of
those African Americans who fought
under Washington were freedmen and
former slaves who hoped American
independence would improve the status
of their race.
The first French forces left Newport on
June 11, 1781. Moving thousands of men
and animals over waterways, through
unfamiliar forests, and across hilly terrain
was an enormous and risky undertaking.
Roads were sometimes impassable. Finally
on July 4, 1781, the two armies met in
Phillipsburg, New York.
There was, however, a change in plans. On
learning that French Admiral de Grasse
was steering his warships to the Chesapeake Bay, Washington and Rochambeau
decided to abandon the offensive on
Clinton and head south. Allied troops
departed from Phillipsburg, New York,
on August 18 and arrived outside Yorktown, Virginia, on September 28.
Their efforts were worthwhile. The allied
victory at Yorktown proved to be a turning
point in the war. American colonists, who
initially greeted the French with suspicion
on the 600-mile trip south from Rhode
Island to Virginia in 1781, hailed them as
heroes on their return trip north. The
trail both armies marched is now preserved as the Washington-Rochambeau
Revolutionary Route and celebrates the
allies' joint labors to achieve American
independence.
Jean Baptiste Antoine de Verger, Soldiers in Uniform, 1781. Soldiers of
the Continental Army, sketched by a French soldier at Yorktown.
COURTESY A N N E S K B R O W N MILITARY C O L L E C T I O N , B R O W N UNIVERSITY
"the [American] men were with out
uniforms and covered with rags;
most ofthem were barefoot"
—comte de Clermont Crevecceur, commenting on
the appearance of the American troops, 1781
George Washington
by James Peale
comte de Rochambeau
by Charles Willson Peale
INDEPENDENCE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK
INDEPENDENCE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK
Many officers played important roles in the WashingtonRochambeau story, including (I to r) British generals Sir
Henry Clinton and Lord Charles Cornwallis and French
Admiral Francois-Joseph Paul, comte de Grasse.
CLINTON: PRODUCED COURTESY OF THE A M E R I C A N M U S E U M IN BRITAIN ( B A T H , UK); CORNWALLIS
© N A T I O N A L PORTRAIT GALLERY, L O N D O N
Every Continental Army soldier received a musket
and tools to keep the weapon in working order.
COURTESY NATIONAL RARK SERVICE M U S E U M M A N A G E M E N T PROGRAM
A N D MORRISTOWN NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK
fieged'York, 1781
ROCHAMBEAU M A P COLLECTION,
R R A R Y OF CONGRESS
This iron kettle was used by the
Americans to melt and pour lead into
molds to make musket balls or shot.
Bullet molds, used to cast musket
and pistol caliber balls, were
among the essential supplies
issued by the Continental Army.
COURTESY NATIONAL PARK SERVCE M U S E U M M A N A G E M E N T
COURTESY NATIONAL PARK SERVICE M U S E U M M A N A G E M E N T
PROGRAM A N D MORRISTOWN NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK
PROGRAM A N D MORRISTOWN NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK
Each Continental soldier carried
a powder horn and musket.
COURTESY NATIONAL PARK SERVICE M U S E U M M A N A G E M E N T
PROGRAM A N D MORRISTOWN NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK
Playing cards, like these French ones,
provided entertainment in camp.
COURTESY N A T I O N A L PARK SERVICE M U S E U M M A N A G E M E N T
P R O G R A M A N D VALLEY FORGE N A T I O N A L HISTORICAL PARK
Moving an Army
From June through September 1781 soldiers
on the march to Yorktown carried their own
weapons, utensils, and other personal items.
A man often hauled 60 pounds or more for
up to eight hours a day. Troops of both
armies required food, water, and a safe
place to rest each night.
A soldier's lodging depended on his military
rank. On the way to and from Yorktown
French and American officers stayed in
nearby homes or taverns, while the men
slept outside in tents. A camp of thousands
required hours to assemble. French Chaplain
Abbe Robin complained of having to wait
"until the hottest part of the day for the
baggage wagons before we can take any
repose. The sun has sometimes finished
her course, before our weak stomachs
have begun to receive and digest the
necessary food."
The troops received meal rations and dug
pits where they could set their cooking
kettles. Collecting pure water was essential.
Robin described being "stretched out full
length upon the ground, panting with
thirst." The heat plagued the French. American troops did not have elaborate uniforms,
but their linen overalls were better suited to
summer in the eastern United States than the
wool garments worn by most of Rochambeau's
men. To avoid marching at the hottest time
of day, soldiers were on the road by 4 a.m.
and walked 12 to 15 miles to their next
campsite by late morning.
Wives and children of the Continental Army
and French troops sometimes followed their
husbands, brothers, and fathers to camp.
These civilians, uprooted by war, sewed,
cooked, and washed clothes for the men,
often earning a bit of money for their services. They also nursed the wounded.
American soldiers benefited by the presence
of women in the camps, but Washington
noted that these "camp followers" presented
a physical and financial burden for the army.
Like the enlisted troops, they needed to be
fed and sheltered, but did not fight.
The Soldier's Return by Pamela Patrick White
6 PAMELA PATRICK W H I T E
A woman's etui, or case,
contained tools for daily
use, including scissors,
pencil, fork, knife,
corkscrew, bodkin,
tweezers, ear pick, and
an ivory writing board.
COURTESY N A T I O N A L PARK SERVICE M U S E U M
M A N A G E M E N T P R O G R A M A N D GUILFORD
COURTHOUSE N A T I O N A L MILITARY PARK
Allied Victory at Yorktown
The 300-mile trek from New York
to Virginia took five weeks, during
which allied troops endured heatstroke, thirst, and fatigue. The French
and Americans separated for part of
the route, making road travel easier
and effectively deceiving British General Clinton, who was still expecting
an allied attack on New York.
"let history huzzahforyou."
The allies received encouraging news
that on September 5 French Admiral
de Grasse's fleet won the Battle off
the Capes against British war ships.
De Grasse established a blockade of
the Chesapeake Bay, cutting off
naval support to the British and
allowing Cornwallis and his men no
escape route from Yorktown. By
September 28, 1781, when French
and American forces arrived, Cornwallis was cornered and allied troops
immediately opened siege on British
fortifications.
—George Washington, silencing his cheering
troops at the British surrender of Yorktown, 1781
French and American artillery first
fired on the British on October 9. By
October 14 an exhausted French
soldier wrote in his diary, "The whole
redoubt was so full of dead and
wounded that one had to walk on
top of them." Days later, with their
defenses shattered, the British called
for a ceasefire. On October 19, 1781,
British troops solemnly walked
through two lines of soldiers—
Americans on one side, French on
the other—and laid down their arms.
The allied victory at Yorktown was
the last significant mainland battle
of the American Revolution and
enabled the 13 colonies to become
one nation. The cooperation of
Rochambeau's forces under the
leadership of Washington, the
smart coordination of allied land
and naval resources, and the soldiers' perseverance during their
long journey made the effort a success. When French troops marched
back north to New England in 1782,
they were welcomed and thanked
by grateful Americans.
Along the Allied Route Today
Discovering a
Revolutionary War Trail
This atlas page records a camp
occupied by Rochambeau's
troops in Philadelphia, 1782.
ROCHAMBEAU MAP COLLECTION, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
The Washington-Rochambeau Revolutionary Route
comprises a n e t w o r k of roads and waterways used
by allied forces in the Y o r k t o w n campaign.
A l t h o u g h population g r o w t h and urban development have erased almost all traces of the rural
campsites and small taverns t h a t once sheltered
Revolutionary War soldiers, the public can still visit
Having marched all the way from
Williamsburg to Boston, Rochambeau's
infantry sailed out of Boston Harbor for
the Caribbean on Christmas Day 1782.
historic sites t h a t tell the Washington-Rochambeau
story. Strolling the green in Lebanon, Connecticut,
taking a sail on the Chesapeake Bay, seeing a
Revolutionary War reenactment at Colonial
Williamsburg, or exploring the battlefield at
Y o r k t o w n , are just a f e w of many opportunities
t o interact w i t h history.
Travelers driving 1-95 f r o m Massachusetts t o
Virginia now make the t r i p in less t h a n a day,
and GPS systems guide t h e m t o lodging, fuel,
and restaurants. It is w o r t h remembering, how-
French forces under the comte
de Rochambeau quartered in
Newport from their arrival on
July 18, 1780, until their departure
for New York on June 11, 1781.
ever, t h a t in colonial times, most of this land
was wilderness. If not for the detailed surveys
by engineers and cartographers during the allied
campaign, French and American troops might
not have reached Y o r k t o w n . That they did so,
defeated the British, and returned north—the
French t o go home, the Americans t o w i n the
war—remains an impressive feat.
This map of Connecticut from Rochambeau's personal
collection is titled "Connecticut, from the best authorities." In 1780-81 his special cavalry—Lauzun's Legion—
spent eight months camped just west of Lebanon Green.
ROCHAMBEAU MAP COLLECTION, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Time of day and geographic
J
location were of basic concern to soldiers on the
Lebanon provided winter
quarters for some 220 of
the 300 hussars of Lauzun's
Legion from November 20,
1780, until June 20, 1781.
march. To determine both,
they may have relied on an
RL.„SS.
instrument like this pocket
Having spent the winter of
1780-8TTfssand around
Newburgh, Washington
Land the Continental ArJrrYjc,
"broke camp on June 28, ,
and joined Rochambeau's
forces near White Plains
on July 4, 1781.
compass and sundial.
COURTESY NATIONAL PARK SERVICE MUSEUM
MANAGEMENT PROGRAM AND MORRISTOWN
NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK
Lebanon Green, Lebanon, Connecticut
PHOTO BY SUSAN LAVIGNE
View of Hudson Highlands near
Newburgh, New York ©VESPASIAN/ALAMY
Independence Hall,
Independence National
Historical Park, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania ©DHORSEY/SHUTTERSTOCK
White Clay Creek near
Hale-Byrnes House, Stanton,
Soldiers' cabins, Morristown National
Historical Park, Morristown, New Jersey
Delaware LOWELL SILVERMAN
© BALEFIRE / SHUTTERSTOCK
Generals Washington
and Rochambeau
arrived in Philadelphia
on August 30, 1781.
Their forces paraded
before Congress from
September 2 to 4.
On September 9-10,1781, about 1,450
officers and men of the Continental
Army, as well as about 1,200 of
Rochambeau's forces, embarked at
Elkton for the journey to Virginia.
Mount Vernon, Mount Vernon, Virginia
©CAROLYN M CARPENTER / SHUTTERSTOC K
Thomas Clark House Museum, Princeton
Battlefield, Princeton, New Jersey
ROBERT ROSETTA; ABOUTNEWJERSEYCOM
Late in the afternoon of
September 21, 1781, the
rest of the allied forces,
some 3,800 French and
200 American soldiers,
sailed from Annapolis.
Boats on the Chesapeake Bay
©BRENDANREALS/SHUTTERSTOCK
Having left Elkton early on September 8,
Washington covered the 120 miles to
Mt. Vernon in two days, arriving at his
estate late on September 9, 1781.
More Information
The W a s h i n g t o n - R o c h a m b e a u
Revolutionary Route
Reenactment in historic Colonial
Williamsburg, Williamsburg, Virginia
©MARVIN NEWMAN / STOCKPHOTOPRO
Reenforced by French forces
under the marquis de St. Simon,
as well as Continental Army
troops under the marquis de
Lafayette, the combined allied
armies, 9,000 Americans and
9,000 French strong, set out for
Yorktown on September 28, 1781.
On October 19, 1781, Lord
Cornwallis surrendered his
forces to the victorious allies.
AGPO: 2011—741-932
Printed on reoyoled paper.
Visit other historic sites and scenic byways along the Washington-Rochambeau
Revolutionary Route. The places designated on this map are all open t o the public.
For locations, hours, directions, and other
places of interest, visit http://www.nps.gov.
The National Park Service maintains
a partnership w i t h the National W3R
Association (www.w3r-us.org). W3R is a
nine-state partnership t h a t supports the
Washington-Rochambeau Revolutionary
Route as a National Historic Trail and
educates the public about the three-year
presence of the French Expeditionary
Force in the United States.
The Battle off the Capes
occurred near the mouth
of the Chesapeake Bay
on September 5, 1781.
Yorktown, Virginia
©CURTIS KUTZER/SHUTTERSTOCK
After the siege of Yorktown, Rochambeau's forces
wintered in Virginia. The troops headed north in
summer 1782, continuing all the way to Boston, and
departed the United States on Christmas Day 1782.
The National Park Service works w i t h
federal, state, and local agencies and private organizations along the nine-state
corridor t h a t constitutes the WashingtonRochambeau Revolutionary Route.