<p>Yorktown (1781) where a British Army commanded by Lord Cornwallis surrendered to the American forces under George Washington and their French allies has generally been considered one of the decisive battles of the American War of Independence. This accessible and authoritative account of the battle and the wider campaign goes back to original source material (diaries letters speeches and newspapers) offering both a narrative of the events themselves and an analysis of how the defeat came about and why it came to be seen as crucial. It shows that the battle was really a siege that it involved relatively few numbers and relatively little fighting and was not immediately seen as decisive with the war continuing for a further two years. It sets the battle and campaign in the wider context of a war which included action in the West Indies Europe Africa Asia and at sea; shows how movements of the French and British navies were a crucial factor; and overall reassesses the causes and significance of the battle. JOHN D. GRAINGER a former school-teacher is the author of numerous books on military history ranging from the Roman period to the twentieth century.</p>
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