Yorktown, Cornerstone of IndependenceU.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs, 1981 - 44ÆäÀÌÁö |
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3 ÆäÀÌÁö
... fleet under Admiral Graves by French Admiral de Grasse on September 5. Thereafter the focus of the conflict shifted from the battlefield to peace negotiations conducted in Paris . On the face of it , these bat- tles were not conclusive ...
... fleet under Admiral Graves by French Admiral de Grasse on September 5. Thereafter the focus of the conflict shifted from the battlefield to peace negotiations conducted in Paris . On the face of it , these bat- tles were not conclusive ...
5 ÆäÀÌÁö
... fleet . Britain , by contrast , con- trolled the Atlantic waters . The British army under Sir Henry Clinton opposing Washington in New York was well entrenched and well supplied . To the south , com- mand of the sea gave mobility and ...
... fleet . Britain , by contrast , con- trolled the Atlantic waters . The British army under Sir Henry Clinton opposing Washington in New York was well entrenched and well supplied . To the south , com- mand of the sea gave mobility and ...
7 ÆäÀÌÁö
... fleet . Although many in Europe were pleased to see Britain discomfited by a revolt within its empire , few were prepared to join the French in courting British wrath by endorsing the revolt . The American diplomatic representatives ...
... fleet . Although many in Europe were pleased to see Britain discomfited by a revolt within its empire , few were prepared to join the French in courting British wrath by endorsing the revolt . The American diplomatic representatives ...
15 ÆäÀÌÁö
... fleet mainte- nance during the same period . The cost of supporting the conflict seriously strained French resources , how- ever . Despite the dispatch of Rochambeau's army , pros- pects for success in America seemed so remote at the be ...
... fleet mainte- nance during the same period . The cost of supporting the conflict seriously strained French resources , how- ever . Despite the dispatch of Rochambeau's army , pros- pects for success in America seemed so remote at the be ...
17 ÆäÀÌÁö
... fleet Admiral de Grasse was bringing to American waters . The plan also depended upon deceiving Clinton as to the point of attack in order to prevent both an effort to intercept French and American forces moving south and the ...
... fleet Admiral de Grasse was bringing to American waters . The plan also depended upon deceiving Clinton as to the point of attack in order to prevent both an effort to intercept French and American forces moving south and the ...
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Admiral de Grasse America American cause American commissioners American diplomatic American independence Amérique armée armies baie de Chesapeake bataille de Yorktown began Benjamin Franklin Benjamin Lincoln Brit British army British fleet Carolina Catherine century Charleston Clinton à New commandement conflict Congrès continental Continental Congress délégués américains diplomates américains dispatch Dutch efforts Etats-Unis first Floridablanca Foreign française French General George government Grande-Bretagne Graves Great Britain guerre held Henry Laurens Holland hope ington interests John Adams John Jay King l'Amiral de Grasse l'Espagne l'indépendance américaine Lafayette left Lord Cornwallis Lord North made ment ministre Mount Vernon naval negotia New York Newport November O'Hara paix peace treaty Philadelphia pointed preliminary articles prepared prospect reached received recognition revolution Richard Oswald Rochambeau Russia Secretary September Shelburne signed south Spain Spanish surrender Thomas Jefferson Tilghman time tion town troops turned United States Valley Forge victoire de Yorktown victory at Yorktown Virginia Washington Williamsburg world years