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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,700 --> 00:00:01,978 Announcer: Major funding 2 00:00:02,002 --> 00:00:03,045 for "The American Revolution" 3 00:00:03,069 --> 00:00:04,480 was provided by The Better Angels Society 4 00:00:04,504 --> 00:00:05,748 and its members 5 00:00:05,772 --> 00:00:06,949 Jeannie and Jonathan Lavine 6 00:00:06,973 --> 00:00:08,951 with the Crimson Lion Foundation 7 00:00:08,975 --> 00:00:10,853 and the Blavatnik Family Foundation. 8 00:00:10,877 --> 00:00:14,390 Major funding was also provided by David M. Rubenstein, 9 00:00:14,414 --> 00:00:17,526 the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Family Foundation, 10 00:00:17,550 --> 00:00:18,861 the Lilly Endowment, 11 00:00:18,885 --> 00:00:21,030 and by Better Angels Society members: 12 00:00:21,054 --> 00:00:23,366 Eric and Wendy Schmidt, Stephen A. Schwarzman, 13 00:00:23,390 --> 00:00:26,068 and Kenneth C. Griffin with Griffin Catalyst. 14 00:00:26,092 --> 00:00:27,837 Additional support was provided by 15 00:00:27,861 --> 00:00:29,905 The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, 16 00:00:29,929 --> 00:00:31,540 the Pew Charitable Trusts, 17 00:00:31,564 --> 00:00:33,676 Gilbert S. Omenn and Martha A. Darling, 18 00:00:33,700 --> 00:00:35,111 the Park Foundation, 19 00:00:35,135 --> 00:00:36,846 and by Better Angels Society members: 20 00:00:36,870 --> 00:00:40,016 Gilchrist and Amy Berg, Perry and Donna Golkin, 21 00:00:40,040 --> 00:00:42,551 The Michelson Foundation, Jacqueline B. Mars, 22 00:00:42,575 --> 00:00:46,022 the Kissick Family Foundation, Diane and Hal Brierley, 23 00:00:46,046 --> 00:00:48,724 John H.N. Fisher and Jennifer Caldwell, 24 00:00:48,748 --> 00:00:50,259 John and Catherine Debs, 25 00:00:50,283 --> 00:00:52,128 The Fullerton Family Charitable Fund, 26 00:00:52,152 --> 00:00:53,963 and these additional members. 27 00:00:53,987 --> 00:00:55,398 "The American Revolution" 28 00:00:55,422 --> 00:00:57,033 was made possible with support 29 00:00:57,057 --> 00:00:59,268 from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, 30 00:00:59,292 --> 00:01:02,062 and Viewers Like You. Thank You. 31 00:01:03,129 --> 00:01:05,274 Announcer: The American Revolution caused 32 00:01:05,298 --> 00:01:07,543 an impact felt around the world. 33 00:01:07,567 --> 00:01:12,848 The fight would take ingenuity, determination, 34 00:01:12,872 --> 00:01:14,984 and hope for a new tomorrow 35 00:01:15,008 --> 00:01:17,186 to turn the tide of history 36 00:01:17,210 --> 00:01:20,447 and set the American story in motion. 37 00:01:25,018 --> 00:01:27,863 What would you like the power to do? 38 00:01:27,887 --> 00:01:29,456 Bank of America. 39 00:01:33,593 --> 00:01:35,604 [Cannon fire] 40 00:01:35,628 --> 00:01:43,628 ♪ 41 00:01:46,806 --> 00:01:48,384 Voice: I have of late lost 42 00:01:48,408 --> 00:01:51,654 a great many intimate friends. 43 00:01:51,678 --> 00:01:55,791 The numbers of fine young men from 15 to 5 and 20 44 00:01:55,815 --> 00:02:00,529 with loss of limbs hurts me beyond conception, 45 00:02:00,553 --> 00:02:03,432 and I every day curse Columbus 46 00:02:03,456 --> 00:02:07,736 and all the discoverers of this diabolical country. 47 00:02:07,760 --> 00:02:11,107 In what manner the Parliament will act on this occasion 48 00:02:11,131 --> 00:02:14,844 we cannot conceive. 49 00:02:14,868 --> 00:02:18,514 Major John Bowater. 50 00:02:18,538 --> 00:02:22,118 ♪ 51 00:02:22,142 --> 00:02:24,854 Voice: You cannot... I venture to say, 52 00:02:24,878 --> 00:02:28,190 you cannot conquer America. 53 00:02:28,214 --> 00:02:31,160 My lords, in 3 campaigns, 54 00:02:31,184 --> 00:02:34,563 we have done nothing and suffered much. 55 00:02:34,587 --> 00:02:36,198 [Gavel bangs] 56 00:02:36,222 --> 00:02:39,301 You may swell every expense and every effort, 57 00:02:39,325 --> 00:02:42,204 pile and accumulate every assistance 58 00:02:42,228 --> 00:02:44,006 you can buy or borrow, 59 00:02:44,030 --> 00:02:48,277 traffic and barter with every little pitiful German prince 60 00:02:48,301 --> 00:02:50,312 that sells and sends his subjects 61 00:02:50,336 --> 00:02:53,349 to the shambles of a foreign country. 62 00:02:53,373 --> 00:02:57,887 Your efforts are forever vain and impotent. 63 00:02:57,911 --> 00:03:01,257 If I were an American, as I am an Englishman, 64 00:03:01,281 --> 00:03:04,126 while a foreign troop was landed in my country, 65 00:03:04,150 --> 00:03:07,363 I never would lay down my arms... 66 00:03:07,387 --> 00:03:10,065 Never, never, never. 67 00:03:10,089 --> 00:03:11,934 [Men shouting] 68 00:03:11,958 --> 00:03:14,336 William Pitt, Earl of Chatham. 69 00:03:14,360 --> 00:03:15,704 [Gavel bangs] 70 00:03:15,728 --> 00:03:22,511 ♪ 71 00:03:22,535 --> 00:03:25,714 [Distant cannon fire] 72 00:03:25,738 --> 00:03:28,851 ♪ 73 00:03:28,875 --> 00:03:32,421 [Fife and drums playing] 74 00:03:32,445 --> 00:03:34,857 Jane Kamensky: The American Revolution is, 75 00:03:34,881 --> 00:03:38,594 on the one hand, an intensely local war, 76 00:03:38,618 --> 00:03:42,765 and, on the other hand, a great global war. 77 00:03:42,789 --> 00:03:45,901 As a global war, the American Revolution 78 00:03:45,925 --> 00:03:50,206 continues the series of wars among empires 79 00:03:50,230 --> 00:03:53,242 for the prize of North America. 80 00:03:53,266 --> 00:03:57,413 Britain, Spain, France are all seeking 81 00:03:57,437 --> 00:04:00,749 some form of victory or advantage... 82 00:04:00,773 --> 00:04:02,051 ♪ 83 00:04:02,075 --> 00:04:04,453 But the beginning of 1778, 84 00:04:04,477 --> 00:04:07,823 the rebellious United States' cause 85 00:04:07,847 --> 00:04:10,693 is at the thread end 86 00:04:10,717 --> 00:04:14,496 of its ability to continue to exist. 87 00:04:14,520 --> 00:04:16,265 ♪ 88 00:04:16,289 --> 00:04:18,467 Voice: There comes a soldier, 89 00:04:18,491 --> 00:04:22,338 his bare feet are seen through his worn-out shoes, 90 00:04:22,362 --> 00:04:25,074 his legs nearly naked from the tattered remains 91 00:04:25,098 --> 00:04:27,576 of an only pair of stockings, 92 00:04:27,600 --> 00:04:31,714 his breeches not sufficient to cover his nakedness. 93 00:04:31,738 --> 00:04:36,852 His whole appearance pictures a person forsaken and discouraged. 94 00:04:36,876 --> 00:04:41,523 Dr. Albigence Waldo, surgeon, First Connecticut Infantry. 95 00:04:41,547 --> 00:04:44,059 ♪ 96 00:04:44,083 --> 00:04:47,463 Narrator: The weary Continentals whom George Washington led 97 00:04:47,487 --> 00:04:49,531 into winter quarters at Valley Forge 98 00:04:49,555 --> 00:04:52,001 in December of 1777, 99 00:04:52,025 --> 00:04:56,705 were, a visitor, said, just "a skeleton of an army." 100 00:04:56,729 --> 00:04:59,708 They'd been fighting and marching for months, 101 00:04:59,732 --> 00:05:02,911 but many hadn't been paid since August. 102 00:05:02,935 --> 00:05:08,017 Nearly 3,000 of them were officially unfit for duty. 103 00:05:08,041 --> 00:05:12,755 Over the next 6 months, 2,500 soldiers would die, 104 00:05:12,779 --> 00:05:18,627 mostly from typhus, typhoid, influenza, and dysentery. 105 00:05:18,651 --> 00:05:22,564 Clothing was so scarce that when a man died, 106 00:05:22,588 --> 00:05:26,735 what was left of his uniform was washed and carefully preserved 107 00:05:26,759 --> 00:05:29,271 so that another member of his unit 108 00:05:29,295 --> 00:05:31,974 might be at least a little warmer. 109 00:05:31,998 --> 00:05:34,576 ♪ 110 00:05:34,600 --> 00:05:36,478 Voice: I am now convinced 111 00:05:36,502 --> 00:05:39,148 that unless some great change takes place, 112 00:05:39,172 --> 00:05:43,085 this army must inevitably be reduced to one or the other 113 00:05:43,109 --> 00:05:48,223 of these things... Starve, dissolve, or disperse 114 00:05:48,247 --> 00:05:52,928 in order to obtain subsistence in the best manner they can. 115 00:05:52,952 --> 00:05:57,132 George Washington, headquarters at the Valley Forge. 116 00:05:57,156 --> 00:05:59,335 ♪ 117 00:05:59,359 --> 00:06:03,072 Narrator: Valley Forge took its name from an abandoned ironworks 118 00:06:03,096 --> 00:06:05,908 that stood at the intersection of a small creek 119 00:06:05,932 --> 00:06:07,643 and the Schuylkill River 120 00:06:07,667 --> 00:06:10,679 some 20 miles northwest of Philadelphia. 121 00:06:10,703 --> 00:06:14,950 Washington himself called it "a dreary kind of place," 122 00:06:14,974 --> 00:06:18,554 but he chose it because it was close enough to Philadelphia 123 00:06:18,578 --> 00:06:21,423 to move quickly against British foragers 124 00:06:21,447 --> 00:06:23,759 when they dared venture out of the city 125 00:06:23,783 --> 00:06:28,630 and far enough from it to make surprise attacks unlikely. 126 00:06:28,654 --> 00:06:31,500 Pennsylvania legislators complained 127 00:06:31,524 --> 00:06:33,969 that instead of withdrawing to Valley Forge, 128 00:06:33,993 --> 00:06:36,638 Washington should be about the business 129 00:06:36,662 --> 00:06:39,775 of recapturing Philadelphia. 130 00:06:39,799 --> 00:06:42,111 Voice: I can assure those gentlemen 131 00:06:42,135 --> 00:06:45,447 that it is a much easier and less distressing thing 132 00:06:45,471 --> 00:06:48,617 to draw remonstrances in a comfortable room 133 00:06:48,641 --> 00:06:50,652 by a good fireside 134 00:06:50,676 --> 00:06:53,288 than to occupy a cold, bleak hill 135 00:06:53,312 --> 00:06:58,026 and sleep under frost and snow without clothes or blankets. 136 00:06:58,050 --> 00:07:01,597 It would give me infinite pleasure to afford protection 137 00:07:01,621 --> 00:07:04,967 to every individual and to every spot of ground 138 00:07:04,991 --> 00:07:07,736 in the whole of the United States. 139 00:07:07,760 --> 00:07:10,606 Nothing is more my wish, 140 00:07:10,630 --> 00:07:13,375 but this is not possible with our present force. 141 00:07:13,399 --> 00:07:15,477 George Washington. 142 00:07:15,501 --> 00:07:17,679 [Canon fire in distance] 143 00:07:17,703 --> 00:07:25,703 ♪ 144 00:07:28,014 --> 00:07:30,616 [Fire crackling] 145 00:07:32,919 --> 00:07:34,830 Voice: I'd experienced what I thought 146 00:07:34,854 --> 00:07:38,133 sufficient of the hardships of military life the year before, 147 00:07:38,157 --> 00:07:41,904 but we were now absolutely in danger of perishing, 148 00:07:41,928 --> 00:07:45,307 and that too in the midst of a plentiful country. 149 00:07:45,331 --> 00:07:47,342 Joseph Plumb Martin. 150 00:07:47,366 --> 00:07:49,077 [Horse neighs] 151 00:07:49,101 --> 00:07:51,713 Narrator: Private Joseph Plumb Martin had survived 152 00:07:51,737 --> 00:07:54,450 the Battles of Long Island, Kips Bay, 153 00:07:54,474 --> 00:07:59,788 the disaster at Germantown, and the siege of Fort Mifflin, 154 00:07:59,812 --> 00:08:02,257 and he was still just 17. 155 00:08:02,281 --> 00:08:04,092 ♪ 156 00:08:04,116 --> 00:08:07,729 Now huddled in tattered canvas tents at Valley Forge, 157 00:08:07,753 --> 00:08:11,867 soldiers went for days with nothing to eat but fire cakes... 158 00:08:11,891 --> 00:08:16,371 Just flour and water baked on hot stones. 159 00:08:16,395 --> 00:08:21,410 Several days went by when many soldiers had no food at all. 160 00:08:21,434 --> 00:08:24,980 There was talk of mutiny. 161 00:08:25,004 --> 00:08:29,685 Rick Atkinson: The apparatus of war supporting the army 162 00:08:29,709 --> 00:08:32,921 has come unglued. 163 00:08:32,945 --> 00:08:35,557 All of these support functions 164 00:08:35,581 --> 00:08:39,261 that help keep an army thriving, keep it healthy, 165 00:08:39,285 --> 00:08:42,764 have really begun to implode. 166 00:08:42,788 --> 00:08:46,935 Narrator: Congress, still in exile in York, Pennsylvania, 167 00:08:46,959 --> 00:08:49,771 told Washington to commandeer food and fodder 168 00:08:49,795 --> 00:08:52,007 from the surrounding countryside, 169 00:08:52,031 --> 00:08:53,809 but he resisted, 170 00:08:53,833 --> 00:08:57,779 worried it might turn civilians against the cause. 171 00:08:57,803 --> 00:09:01,250 Instead, he tried to purchase everything his men needed, 172 00:09:01,274 --> 00:09:05,354 but the steady depreciation of Continental currency 173 00:09:05,378 --> 00:09:08,056 made that problematic. 174 00:09:08,080 --> 00:09:10,559 William Hogeland: Nothing like the American Revolutionary War 175 00:09:10,583 --> 00:09:12,194 had been fought. 176 00:09:12,218 --> 00:09:14,897 No public project like it had been undertaken before, 177 00:09:14,921 --> 00:09:17,099 and it was incredibly expensive. 178 00:09:17,123 --> 00:09:18,934 What happens with a paper currency 179 00:09:18,958 --> 00:09:21,537 if it isn't well-supported and isn't handled properly is, 180 00:09:21,561 --> 00:09:24,840 it depreciates wildly against gold and silver. 181 00:09:24,864 --> 00:09:27,142 It was useless as a currency, 182 00:09:27,166 --> 00:09:30,812 and in that sense, the Congress went broke. 183 00:09:30,836 --> 00:09:32,247 ♪ 184 00:09:32,271 --> 00:09:34,883 Stephen Conway: The British Army, on the contrary, 185 00:09:34,907 --> 00:09:37,886 has lots of hard cash, and lots of Americans 186 00:09:37,910 --> 00:09:42,090 who are not politically interested one way or the other 187 00:09:42,114 --> 00:09:45,060 see opportunities for commercial benefit... 188 00:09:45,084 --> 00:09:46,728 Selling products, 189 00:09:46,752 --> 00:09:50,132 selling goods and services to the British Army. 190 00:09:50,156 --> 00:09:53,402 Narrator: Washington's army was dwindling again. 191 00:09:53,426 --> 00:09:55,137 Men simply went home. 192 00:09:55,161 --> 00:09:58,006 Hundreds enlisted in Loyalist regiments. 193 00:09:58,030 --> 00:10:00,809 Others joined roving outlaw bands 194 00:10:00,833 --> 00:10:03,345 that looted isolated farmhouses. 195 00:10:03,369 --> 00:10:07,416 Still others made their way to Philadelphia to surrender, 196 00:10:07,440 --> 00:10:10,819 hoping they would be treated better as prisoners of war 197 00:10:10,843 --> 00:10:13,989 than as soldiers at Valley Forge. 198 00:10:14,013 --> 00:10:17,993 Washington's officers were leaving, too. 199 00:10:18,017 --> 00:10:20,028 Voice: The number of resignations 200 00:10:20,052 --> 00:10:22,898 in the Virginia Line is induced by officers 201 00:10:22,922 --> 00:10:26,101 finding that every man who remains at home 202 00:10:26,125 --> 00:10:29,104 is making a fortune whilst they are spending 203 00:10:29,128 --> 00:10:32,774 what they have in the defense of their country. 204 00:10:32,798 --> 00:10:35,143 Thomas Nelson. 205 00:10:35,167 --> 00:10:37,112 ♪ 206 00:10:37,136 --> 00:10:38,947 Narrator: Over the coming months, 207 00:10:38,971 --> 00:10:43,118 more than 500 of Washington's officers would resign. 208 00:10:43,142 --> 00:10:46,922 To add to his troubles, some members of Congress 209 00:10:46,946 --> 00:10:50,125 and a handful of commanders had begun whispering 210 00:10:50,149 --> 00:10:54,062 that he had proved himself weak and indecisive in battle. 211 00:10:54,086 --> 00:10:57,132 If the Revolution were to succeed, some argued, 212 00:10:57,156 --> 00:11:01,103 command of the Continental Army should pass to Horatio Gates, 213 00:11:01,127 --> 00:11:03,905 who had recently accepted the surrender 214 00:11:03,929 --> 00:11:07,309 of an entire British army at Saratoga. 215 00:11:07,333 --> 00:11:09,111 ♪ 216 00:11:09,135 --> 00:11:11,780 Voice: I did not solicit this command, 217 00:11:11,804 --> 00:11:14,516 but accepted it after much entreaty. 218 00:11:14,540 --> 00:11:18,020 As soon as the public gets dissatisfied with my service, 219 00:11:18,044 --> 00:11:21,256 I shall quit the helm with as much satisfaction 220 00:11:21,280 --> 00:11:25,794 and retire to a private station with as much content 221 00:11:25,818 --> 00:11:28,563 as ever the weariest pilgrim felt 222 00:11:28,587 --> 00:11:30,832 upon his safe arrival in the Holy Land. 223 00:11:30,856 --> 00:11:32,534 George Washington. 224 00:11:32,558 --> 00:11:34,770 Narrator: Until that moment came, 225 00:11:34,794 --> 00:11:36,972 Washington would work tirelessly, 226 00:11:36,996 --> 00:11:41,243 first to maintain, and then to improve his army. 227 00:11:41,267 --> 00:11:43,945 Shelter came first. 228 00:11:43,969 --> 00:11:46,615 He ordered the men to cut down trees, 229 00:11:46,639 --> 00:11:49,685 dismantle farmers' outbuildings and fences, 230 00:11:49,709 --> 00:11:53,422 and bang together row upon row of log huts, 231 00:11:53,446 --> 00:11:59,061 perhaps 2,000 of them, each one 14 by 16 feet 232 00:11:59,085 --> 00:12:01,229 and meant to house 12 men. 233 00:12:01,253 --> 00:12:02,798 ♪ 234 00:12:02,822 --> 00:12:04,966 Valley Forge would for a time 235 00:12:04,990 --> 00:12:07,169 be the fourth largest city in America... 236 00:12:07,193 --> 00:12:13,875 20,000 men, women, and children from all 13 states. 237 00:12:13,899 --> 00:12:17,079 For many, English was not their native language. 238 00:12:17,103 --> 00:12:20,482 They spoke German, Irish, Scots, 239 00:12:20,506 --> 00:12:23,418 Welsh, Dutch, Swedish, French, 240 00:12:23,442 --> 00:12:28,857 Mohican, Oneida, Wolof, Kikongo, and more. 241 00:12:28,881 --> 00:12:32,060 Nearly 10% were African American, 242 00:12:32,084 --> 00:12:36,998 most of whom served alongside whites in integrated regiments. 243 00:12:37,022 --> 00:12:41,837 Some 60 men were enrolled in a brand-new all-Black company 244 00:12:41,861 --> 00:12:44,573 belonging to the First Rhode Island Regiment. 245 00:12:44,597 --> 00:12:48,076 The state legislature promised those who were enslaved 246 00:12:48,100 --> 00:12:52,214 their freedom at war's end and pledged to pay compensation 247 00:12:52,238 --> 00:12:54,683 to those whose property they had been. 248 00:12:54,707 --> 00:12:56,418 ♪ 249 00:12:56,442 --> 00:12:59,121 Among the Native American soldiers and scouts 250 00:12:59,145 --> 00:13:04,359 at Valley Forge were Tuscaroras, Oneidas, as well as Mohicans 251 00:13:04,383 --> 00:13:07,429 and Wappingers from Stockbridge, Massachusetts. 252 00:13:07,453 --> 00:13:08,997 ♪ 253 00:13:09,021 --> 00:13:11,933 The hundreds of women who lived among the soldiers 254 00:13:11,957 --> 00:13:15,737 did the men's laundry, nursed the sick and wounded, 255 00:13:15,761 --> 00:13:19,975 and cared for an unknown number of children. 256 00:13:19,999 --> 00:13:24,346 When men went to war, they were gone 257 00:13:24,370 --> 00:13:27,382 and so was whatever pay they were going to get, 258 00:13:27,406 --> 00:13:31,887 and many women just could not survive on their own, 259 00:13:31,911 --> 00:13:35,690 and so it was actually better for everybody 260 00:13:35,714 --> 00:13:37,459 when women traveled with the armies. 261 00:13:37,483 --> 00:13:39,361 ♪ 262 00:13:39,385 --> 00:13:41,429 Narrator: Martha Washington joined her husband 263 00:13:41,453 --> 00:13:43,031 at Valley Forge. 264 00:13:43,055 --> 00:13:47,135 At least 8 servants... Men and women, white and Black, 265 00:13:47,159 --> 00:13:51,406 enslaved and free... Lived alongside the Washingtons 266 00:13:51,430 --> 00:13:54,009 in a stone house they rented from the family 267 00:13:54,033 --> 00:13:56,711 of the mill owner who had built it. 268 00:13:56,735 --> 00:13:59,781 8 of General Washington's closest aides 269 00:13:59,805 --> 00:14:01,650 were crowded in there, as well, 270 00:14:01,674 --> 00:14:05,687 among them, two especially idealistic young officers 271 00:14:05,711 --> 00:14:07,522 in their early 20s... 272 00:14:07,546 --> 00:14:11,159 John Laurens and the Marquis de Lafayette. 273 00:14:11,183 --> 00:14:13,028 ♪ 274 00:14:13,052 --> 00:14:14,429 Iris de Rode: As soon as Lafayette arrived, 275 00:14:14,453 --> 00:14:16,264 he starts to look around and get inspired 276 00:14:16,288 --> 00:14:18,800 by everything he sees, and he's young, 277 00:14:18,824 --> 00:14:21,670 and he's excited to be in this new country 278 00:14:21,694 --> 00:14:23,171 in what, to him, is the New World, 279 00:14:23,195 --> 00:14:25,307 and he's going to explore and understand. 280 00:14:25,331 --> 00:14:27,876 He really starts to believe in the cause 281 00:14:27,900 --> 00:14:30,745 for equalities, for liberties. 282 00:14:30,769 --> 00:14:32,380 ♪ 283 00:14:32,404 --> 00:14:34,883 Narrator: John Laurens of South Carolina 284 00:14:34,907 --> 00:14:36,885 was the son of Henry Laurens, 285 00:14:36,909 --> 00:14:39,087 the current president of Congress 286 00:14:39,111 --> 00:14:42,457 and one of the biggest slave traders in North America. 287 00:14:42,481 --> 00:14:47,863 From Valley Forge, the young Laurens wrote to his father. 288 00:14:47,887 --> 00:14:49,798 Voice: I would solicit you to seed me 289 00:14:49,822 --> 00:14:52,300 a number of your able-bodied men slaves 290 00:14:52,324 --> 00:14:54,870 instead of leaving me a fortune. 291 00:14:54,894 --> 00:14:58,039 I would bring about a twofold good. 292 00:14:58,063 --> 00:15:01,810 First, I would advance those who are unjustly deprived 293 00:15:01,834 --> 00:15:03,945 of the rights of mankind, 294 00:15:03,969 --> 00:15:07,182 and I would reinforce the defenders of liberty 295 00:15:07,206 --> 00:15:09,351 with a number of gallant soldiers. 296 00:15:09,375 --> 00:15:11,319 ♪ 297 00:15:11,343 --> 00:15:13,321 My dearest friend and father, 298 00:15:13,345 --> 00:15:15,523 I hope that my plan for serving my country 299 00:15:15,547 --> 00:15:18,059 and the oppressed Negro race will not appear to you 300 00:15:18,083 --> 00:15:22,197 the chimera of a young mind, but a laudable sacrifice 301 00:15:22,221 --> 00:15:26,067 of private interest to justice and the public good. 302 00:15:26,091 --> 00:15:28,503 John Laurens. 303 00:15:28,527 --> 00:15:31,806 Narrator: Henry Laurens rejected his son's proposal. 304 00:15:31,830 --> 00:15:35,577 Freeing some slaves, he said, would simply "render Slavery 305 00:15:35,601 --> 00:15:39,180 more irksome to those who remained in it." 306 00:15:39,204 --> 00:15:41,349 ♪ 307 00:15:41,373 --> 00:15:43,652 [Wind blowing] 308 00:15:43,676 --> 00:15:46,955 In February, the bad conditions at Valley Forge 309 00:15:46,979 --> 00:15:48,623 grew still worse. 310 00:15:48,647 --> 00:15:53,194 Some 1,000 soldiers would sicken and die that month. 311 00:15:53,218 --> 00:15:56,598 Voice: I was called to relieve a soldier 312 00:15:56,622 --> 00:15:58,500 thought to be dying. 313 00:15:58,524 --> 00:16:01,870 He was an Indian, an excellent soldier. 314 00:16:01,894 --> 00:16:03,805 He has fought for those very people 315 00:16:03,829 --> 00:16:07,075 who disinherited his forefathers. 316 00:16:07,099 --> 00:16:09,544 Having finished his pilgrimage, 317 00:16:09,568 --> 00:16:13,381 he was discharged from the war of life and death. 318 00:16:13,405 --> 00:16:16,284 His memory ought to be respected 319 00:16:16,308 --> 00:16:19,354 more than those rich ones who supply the world 320 00:16:19,378 --> 00:16:22,691 with nothing better than money and vice. 321 00:16:22,715 --> 00:16:25,551 Dr. Albigence Waldo. 322 00:16:26,719 --> 00:16:28,163 [Chickens clucking] 323 00:16:28,187 --> 00:16:30,298 Narrator: Desperate to feed his hungry men, 324 00:16:30,322 --> 00:16:34,302 Washington now organized what was called the Great Forage, 325 00:16:34,326 --> 00:16:36,438 more than 1,500 men in all, 326 00:16:36,462 --> 00:16:39,708 to scour the countryside in eastern Pennsylvania, 327 00:16:39,732 --> 00:16:42,877 western New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland, 328 00:16:42,901 --> 00:16:45,280 seizing whatever they could find 329 00:16:45,304 --> 00:16:48,650 and handing out promissory notes in exchange. 330 00:16:48,674 --> 00:16:50,385 ♪ 331 00:16:50,409 --> 00:16:54,356 Voice: The militia and some regular troops on one side, 332 00:16:54,380 --> 00:16:56,891 and Loyalist refugees with the Englishmen on the other, 333 00:16:56,915 --> 00:16:58,893 were constantly roving about, 334 00:16:58,917 --> 00:17:01,062 plundering and destroying everything 335 00:17:01,086 --> 00:17:02,931 in a barbarous manner. 336 00:17:02,955 --> 00:17:07,002 Everywhere distrust, fear, hatred 337 00:17:07,026 --> 00:17:09,971 and abominable selfishness were met with. 338 00:17:09,995 --> 00:17:12,674 Reverend Nils Collin. 339 00:17:12,698 --> 00:17:14,342 ♪ 340 00:17:14,366 --> 00:17:17,178 Narrator: Nils Collin was a Swedish missionary 341 00:17:17,202 --> 00:17:20,081 sent to America to serve as rector 342 00:17:20,105 --> 00:17:23,718 of the Swedish Church in Swedesboro, New Jersey. 343 00:17:23,742 --> 00:17:27,555 Since he considered himself a subject of the Swedish monarch, 344 00:17:27,579 --> 00:17:30,892 his conscience would not allow him to swear allegiance 345 00:17:30,916 --> 00:17:36,765 to the British king or to ally himself with the Patriot cause. 346 00:17:36,789 --> 00:17:39,067 He vowed to remain neutral, 347 00:17:39,091 --> 00:17:42,170 but bands of American and British soldiers 348 00:17:42,194 --> 00:17:45,840 and their sympathizers took turns occupying the town, 349 00:17:45,864 --> 00:17:48,510 seizing livestock and provisions, 350 00:17:48,534 --> 00:17:52,313 and punishing those who stood in their way. 351 00:17:52,337 --> 00:17:53,715 ♪ 352 00:17:53,739 --> 00:17:55,517 Voice: Many members of the congregation 353 00:17:55,541 --> 00:17:58,887 suffered injury in various ways by this frenzy. 354 00:17:58,911 --> 00:18:03,124 Dr. Otto's house was burnt down by Loyalist refugees. 355 00:18:03,148 --> 00:18:06,561 James Stillman lost most of his cattle. 356 00:18:06,585 --> 00:18:09,798 Sutherland, a Scotchman, together with a young Swede, 357 00:18:09,822 --> 00:18:13,468 Hendrickson, were taken to New York as prisoners. 358 00:18:13,492 --> 00:18:14,969 ♪ 359 00:18:14,993 --> 00:18:18,573 On the opposite side, the militia pillaged the following... 360 00:18:18,597 --> 00:18:21,643 Jacob and Anders Jones, who had traded with the English; 361 00:18:21,667 --> 00:18:25,513 a sea captain, Jan Cox, whose beds were cut up 362 00:18:25,537 --> 00:18:29,417 and his China, tea tables, and bureaus smashed. 363 00:18:29,441 --> 00:18:32,387 From all this it is apparent 364 00:18:32,411 --> 00:18:35,423 how terrible this civil war raged, 365 00:18:35,447 --> 00:18:39,094 party hatred flamed in the hearts of my people. 366 00:18:39,118 --> 00:18:42,397 Some would not go to church because the sight of their enemy 367 00:18:42,421 --> 00:18:45,266 aroused the memory of the evils they had suffered. 368 00:18:45,290 --> 00:18:47,001 Nils Collin. 369 00:18:47,025 --> 00:18:51,206 Vincent Brown: Given the choice to fight for the Patriot cause 370 00:18:51,230 --> 00:18:55,076 or join the British effort to suppress the Patriots, 371 00:18:55,100 --> 00:18:56,678 most people stood to the side. 372 00:18:56,702 --> 00:18:58,613 Most people tried to let it pass. 373 00:18:58,637 --> 00:19:00,949 They tried to get out of the way. 374 00:19:00,973 --> 00:19:02,717 Kamensky: It's common individuals, 375 00:19:02,741 --> 00:19:05,487 ordinary individuals asking the question 376 00:19:05,511 --> 00:19:08,723 that I think we all ask about politics every day... 377 00:19:08,747 --> 00:19:11,793 "What does this have to do with me?" 378 00:19:11,817 --> 00:19:14,453 ♪ 379 00:19:18,223 --> 00:19:20,835 Voice: Girls at the age of 12 and 13 380 00:19:20,859 --> 00:19:23,304 require a mother's care. 381 00:19:23,328 --> 00:19:26,174 A girl of 13, left without an advisor 382 00:19:26,198 --> 00:19:28,209 and fancying herself a woman, 383 00:19:28,233 --> 00:19:32,180 stands on a precipice that trembles beneath her. 384 00:19:32,204 --> 00:19:34,916 Betsy Ambler. 385 00:19:34,940 --> 00:19:38,319 Narrator: Betsy Ambler and her younger sister Mary 386 00:19:38,343 --> 00:19:41,055 spent that winter in Winchester, Virginia. 387 00:19:41,079 --> 00:19:44,626 They were left with an aunt and uncle while their parents 388 00:19:44,650 --> 00:19:48,897 and little sisters headed southeast to avoid the cold. 389 00:19:48,921 --> 00:19:53,401 Betsy spent much of her time trying to win the attention 390 00:19:53,425 --> 00:19:55,970 of "charming young..." Continental "officers." 391 00:19:55,994 --> 00:20:01,309 "Here," she said, "was a fine field open for a romantic girl." 392 00:20:01,333 --> 00:20:03,845 Voice: Early in the spring, 393 00:20:03,869 --> 00:20:05,547 our good father returned. 394 00:20:05,571 --> 00:20:08,516 And though he treated us himself as children, 395 00:20:08,540 --> 00:20:11,352 he saw that we had been considered of an age 396 00:20:11,376 --> 00:20:13,688 to attract too much attention. 397 00:20:13,712 --> 00:20:15,290 Betsy Ambler. 398 00:20:15,314 --> 00:20:18,193 Narrator: The Ambler family would be reunited, 399 00:20:18,217 --> 00:20:20,662 and they would be returning to Yorktown, 400 00:20:20,686 --> 00:20:24,065 what Betsy called her "beloved birthplace." 401 00:20:24,089 --> 00:20:27,468 Her father's finances had been hit hard by the war. 402 00:20:27,492 --> 00:20:30,738 He and his two daughters had to make the long, 403 00:20:30,762 --> 00:20:34,542 dusty trip home in a wagon, not a coach. 404 00:20:34,566 --> 00:20:39,380 "We were rather ashamed of our cavalry," Betsy remembered. 405 00:20:39,404 --> 00:20:41,783 Voice: The only possible good 406 00:20:41,807 --> 00:20:44,886 from the entire change in our circumstances was that 407 00:20:44,910 --> 00:20:47,121 we were made acquainted with the manner 408 00:20:47,145 --> 00:20:49,290 and situation of our country, 409 00:20:49,314 --> 00:20:52,327 which we otherwise should never have known. 410 00:20:52,351 --> 00:20:54,696 We were forced to industry 411 00:20:54,720 --> 00:20:58,299 and to endeavor by amiable and agreeable conduct 412 00:20:58,323 --> 00:21:00,868 to make amends for the loss of fortune. 413 00:21:00,892 --> 00:21:03,304 Betsy Ambler. 414 00:21:03,328 --> 00:21:05,873 Narrator: When the Amblers finally got to Yorktown, 415 00:21:05,897 --> 00:21:07,575 they settled not 416 00:21:07,599 --> 00:21:10,078 in "our former mansion," she recalled, 417 00:21:10,102 --> 00:21:13,147 but in a much smaller house on the edge of town. 418 00:21:13,171 --> 00:21:15,583 [Birds chirping] 419 00:21:15,607 --> 00:21:17,885 Voice: My imagination frequently recurs 420 00:21:17,909 --> 00:21:21,689 to that enchanting spot situated on a little eminence 421 00:21:21,713 --> 00:21:25,326 overlooking a smiling meadow, where a gentle stream 422 00:21:25,350 --> 00:21:26,961 meandering round the sloping hill 423 00:21:26,985 --> 00:21:30,398 was lost in one of the noblest rivers in our country. 424 00:21:30,422 --> 00:21:34,535 Here, my sister and myself often wandered, 425 00:21:34,559 --> 00:21:37,639 gathering wildflowers to adorn our hair, 426 00:21:37,663 --> 00:21:41,442 till we almost fancied ourselves heroines. 427 00:21:41,466 --> 00:21:44,946 Betsy Ambler. 428 00:21:44,970 --> 00:21:47,649 [Officer saying commands] 429 00:21:47,673 --> 00:21:50,685 Christopher Brown: Washington had this really interesting 430 00:21:50,709 --> 00:21:56,824 quality of being able to project authority and confidence 431 00:21:56,848 --> 00:22:00,495 and allowing that to spill out into others, 432 00:22:00,519 --> 00:22:03,531 so that they acquired authority and confidence 433 00:22:03,555 --> 00:22:05,867 by being in his orbit. 434 00:22:05,891 --> 00:22:09,937 I think he had the effect of pulling out 435 00:22:09,961 --> 00:22:13,608 some of the best in the people who were around him. 436 00:22:13,632 --> 00:22:15,910 Narrator: To provide his army 437 00:22:15,934 --> 00:22:19,614 with the reliable logistical support it desperately needed, 438 00:22:19,638 --> 00:22:22,450 Washington insisted that Congress appoint 439 00:22:22,474 --> 00:22:26,521 as quartermaster general the officer he trusted most... 440 00:22:26,545 --> 00:22:28,756 Nathanael Greene, 441 00:22:28,780 --> 00:22:31,793 but Greene was a fighting general. 442 00:22:31,817 --> 00:22:34,062 He knew there was more combat ahead 443 00:22:34,086 --> 00:22:38,366 and wanted to be in on what he called "the mischief." 444 00:22:38,390 --> 00:22:40,401 Atkinson: Greene says, nobody in history 445 00:22:40,425 --> 00:22:42,470 has ever heard of a "quartermaster." 446 00:22:42,494 --> 00:22:46,107 He doesn't want the job, but he takes the job. 447 00:22:46,131 --> 00:22:48,076 Like Washington, he's got a brain 448 00:22:48,100 --> 00:22:49,844 built for executive action, 449 00:22:49,868 --> 00:22:52,747 and he's good at being the quartermaster. 450 00:22:52,771 --> 00:22:54,782 Narrator: Thanks to Nathanael Greene's 451 00:22:54,806 --> 00:22:58,086 mastery of logistics and Washington's appeals 452 00:22:58,110 --> 00:23:02,357 to state governors, by the end of March 1778, 453 00:23:02,381 --> 00:23:06,828 herds of cattle and sheep were plodding toward Valley Forge 454 00:23:06,852 --> 00:23:10,098 from several directions, along with wagon trains 455 00:23:10,122 --> 00:23:13,034 filled with everything from barrels of nails 456 00:23:13,058 --> 00:23:18,373 to brand-new uniforms and crates of bayonets and muskets. 457 00:23:18,397 --> 00:23:20,007 [Snare drum playing] 458 00:23:20,031 --> 00:23:23,678 Now that his men were better fed, clothed, and equipped 459 00:23:23,702 --> 00:23:26,714 and their ranks were swelling as fresh recruits, 460 00:23:26,738 --> 00:23:30,284 recalled regulars, and returning convalescents 461 00:23:30,308 --> 00:23:32,854 all converged on Valley Forge, 462 00:23:32,878 --> 00:23:37,258 Washington wanted every man in his newly reorganized army 463 00:23:37,282 --> 00:23:39,727 to undergo formal military training 464 00:23:39,751 --> 00:23:43,965 to end what he called the confusion that had too often 465 00:23:43,989 --> 00:23:48,269 undercut its performance on the battlefield. 466 00:23:48,293 --> 00:23:50,905 The man he picked to oversee that task 467 00:23:50,929 --> 00:23:55,943 was a newcomer to America... Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolf Gerhard 468 00:23:55,967 --> 00:24:00,681 August Heinrich Ferdinand von Steuben. 469 00:24:00,705 --> 00:24:03,584 Voice: Never before or since have I had 470 00:24:03,608 --> 00:24:07,188 such an impression of the ancient fabled God of War 471 00:24:07,212 --> 00:24:09,157 as when I looked on the baron. 472 00:24:09,181 --> 00:24:10,958 The trappings of his horse, 473 00:24:10,982 --> 00:24:13,528 the enormous holsters of his pistols 474 00:24:13,552 --> 00:24:16,063 all seemed to favor the idea. 475 00:24:16,087 --> 00:24:21,002 He seemed to me a perfect personification of Mars. 476 00:24:21,026 --> 00:24:23,471 Private Ashbel Green. 477 00:24:23,495 --> 00:24:26,407 Narrator: Steuben claimed to be a baron, 478 00:24:26,431 --> 00:24:28,743 a lieutenant general in the Prussian Army, 479 00:24:28,767 --> 00:24:31,946 and a close aide to Frederick the Great. 480 00:24:31,970 --> 00:24:35,183 He really was a baron, though a penniless one, 481 00:24:35,207 --> 00:24:37,885 and he had served in Frederick's headquarters 482 00:24:37,909 --> 00:24:41,255 for a time, but his army career in Europe 483 00:24:41,279 --> 00:24:43,558 had been cut short by an accusation 484 00:24:43,582 --> 00:24:47,762 that he had taken familiarities with young boys. 485 00:24:47,786 --> 00:24:50,498 In America, he said, he wanted to put 486 00:24:50,522 --> 00:24:54,969 his "talents in the arts of war in the service of a republic." 487 00:24:54,993 --> 00:24:57,405 ♪ 488 00:24:57,429 --> 00:25:00,241 Steuben was hot-tempered, and his English 489 00:25:00,265 --> 00:25:05,279 was initially limited to a single word... "goddamn." 490 00:25:05,303 --> 00:25:07,782 Voice: When some movement 491 00:25:07,806 --> 00:25:09,951 or maneuver was not performed to his mind, 492 00:25:09,975 --> 00:25:13,387 he began to swear in German, then in French, 493 00:25:13,411 --> 00:25:16,057 and then in both languages together. 494 00:25:16,081 --> 00:25:19,760 When he had exhausted his artillery of foreign oaths, 495 00:25:19,784 --> 00:25:21,529 he would call to his aides, 496 00:25:21,553 --> 00:25:23,631 "Come and swear for me in English. 497 00:25:23,655 --> 00:25:25,833 These fellows won't do what I bid them." 498 00:25:25,857 --> 00:25:27,768 Peter Stephen Du Ponceau. 499 00:25:27,792 --> 00:25:30,738 Edward Lengel: Baron von Steuben is really a comical figure 500 00:25:30,762 --> 00:25:32,740 when he arrives at camp. 501 00:25:32,764 --> 00:25:37,612 The men make fun of him, but he is a man who you need 502 00:25:37,636 --> 00:25:39,547 pulling the men together 503 00:25:39,571 --> 00:25:41,282 and giving them a sense of common purpose. 504 00:25:41,306 --> 00:25:43,317 After the men have drilled with him for a little while, 505 00:25:43,341 --> 00:25:45,453 they stop laughing. 506 00:25:45,477 --> 00:25:46,888 [Man shouting orders] 507 00:25:46,912 --> 00:25:48,890 Narrator: But for all his bluster, 508 00:25:48,914 --> 00:25:52,126 Steuben grasped the character of the men he was to work with. 509 00:25:52,150 --> 00:25:56,764 "The genius of this nation is not to be compared... 510 00:25:56,788 --> 00:25:59,367 with the Prussians, Austrians or French," 511 00:25:59,391 --> 00:26:01,335 he wrote to an old friend back home. 512 00:26:01,359 --> 00:26:05,373 "You say to your soldier, 'Do this, ' and he does it, " 513 00:26:05,397 --> 00:26:07,708 but here, "I am obliged to say, 514 00:26:07,732 --> 00:26:10,611 "'This is the reason why you ought to do that, ' 515 00:26:10,635 --> 00:26:12,813 and then he does it." 516 00:26:12,837 --> 00:26:14,515 ♪ 517 00:26:14,539 --> 00:26:16,584 Steuben taught the men to march 518 00:26:16,608 --> 00:26:19,854 at a "common step" of 75 paces a minute 519 00:26:19,878 --> 00:26:23,791 and a "quick step" of 120 paces, 520 00:26:23,815 --> 00:26:28,162 to move in columns rather than straggle in single file, 521 00:26:28,186 --> 00:26:32,266 to shift into battle line and back again when under fire, 522 00:26:32,290 --> 00:26:35,703 to load and fire musket volleys more quickly, 523 00:26:35,727 --> 00:26:38,773 and to become proficient with the bayonet, 524 00:26:38,797 --> 00:26:41,542 the weapon that had once terrified them 525 00:26:41,566 --> 00:26:44,745 when in British or Hessian hands. 526 00:26:44,769 --> 00:26:48,516 As skills improved, so did morale. 527 00:26:48,540 --> 00:26:50,284 ♪ 528 00:26:50,308 --> 00:26:53,754 By spring, the danger of mutiny had eased. 529 00:26:53,778 --> 00:26:57,391 So had the mutterings about Washington's leadership. 530 00:26:57,415 --> 00:26:59,794 He was, it was clear, 531 00:26:59,818 --> 00:27:02,396 indispensable to the cause of liberty. 532 00:27:02,420 --> 00:27:04,498 ♪ 533 00:27:04,522 --> 00:27:06,801 That year, a German-language almanac 534 00:27:06,825 --> 00:27:08,936 published in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, 535 00:27:08,960 --> 00:27:12,340 would call Washington Des Landes Vater... 536 00:27:12,364 --> 00:27:14,542 "the Country's Father." 537 00:27:14,566 --> 00:27:16,110 ♪ 538 00:27:16,134 --> 00:27:20,648 He was the glue that held people together. 539 00:27:20,672 --> 00:27:24,352 These 13 colonies had to come together, 540 00:27:24,376 --> 00:27:27,088 and he was the person to do it. 541 00:27:27,112 --> 00:27:31,292 We would not have had a country without him. 542 00:27:31,316 --> 00:27:34,962 I don't know, actually. I mean, you know... 543 00:27:34,986 --> 00:27:37,598 God, I can't believe I'm saying this because I'm not a huge fan 544 00:27:37,622 --> 00:27:39,533 of "great man" theories of history 545 00:27:39,557 --> 00:27:44,405 or explanations of history, but let's put it this way. 546 00:27:44,429 --> 00:27:50,177 It's easy to see the American effort for independence 547 00:27:50,201 --> 00:27:53,180 failing without Washington's leadership. 548 00:27:53,204 --> 00:27:56,074 ♪ 549 00:27:56,841 --> 00:27:58,653 [Gull squawks] 550 00:27:58,677 --> 00:28:02,857 Narrator: After midnight on April 23, 1778, 551 00:28:02,881 --> 00:28:05,259 31 sailors and Marines 552 00:28:05,283 --> 00:28:08,295 from the 20-gun Continental Navy sloop "Ranger," 553 00:28:08,319 --> 00:28:12,433 tossing in the Irish Sea, climbed into two longboats 554 00:28:12,457 --> 00:28:15,102 and began rowing toward the port of Whitehaven 555 00:28:15,126 --> 00:28:18,039 on the western coast of England. 556 00:28:18,063 --> 00:28:21,342 Their Scottish-born commander knew these waters well. 557 00:28:21,366 --> 00:28:23,444 He'd begun his seafaring career there 558 00:28:23,468 --> 00:28:28,049 as a 13-year-old apprentice seaman named John Paul Jr. 559 00:28:28,073 --> 00:28:32,186 In the intervening years, he had sailed aboard slave ships, 560 00:28:32,210 --> 00:28:34,822 risen to command merchant vessels, 561 00:28:34,846 --> 00:28:39,160 and then, after killing a crewman, fled to America. 562 00:28:39,184 --> 00:28:42,496 There, he changed his name to John Paul Jones 563 00:28:42,520 --> 00:28:47,902 and volunteered to join the fledgling Continental Navy. 564 00:28:47,926 --> 00:28:50,171 Voice: I resolved to make the greatest efforts 565 00:28:50,195 --> 00:28:52,840 to bring to an end the barbarous ravages 566 00:28:52,864 --> 00:28:55,209 to which the English turned in America 567 00:28:55,233 --> 00:28:58,479 by making good fire in England of shipping. 568 00:28:58,503 --> 00:29:00,614 John Paul Jones. 569 00:29:00,638 --> 00:29:03,317 Narrator: When Jones' men reached the Whitehaven wharf, 570 00:29:03,341 --> 00:29:07,722 they found more than 200 vessels moored in its harbor. 571 00:29:07,746 --> 00:29:10,091 As Jones worked to get a fire going 572 00:29:10,115 --> 00:29:12,259 aboard a boat loaded with coal, 573 00:29:12,283 --> 00:29:15,963 angry townspeople raced to the waterfront. 574 00:29:15,987 --> 00:29:18,899 Voice: I stood between them and the ship of fire 575 00:29:18,923 --> 00:29:22,169 with a pistol in my hand and ordered them to retire, 576 00:29:22,193 --> 00:29:25,072 which they did with precipitation. 577 00:29:25,096 --> 00:29:27,708 The flames had already caught the rigging 578 00:29:27,732 --> 00:29:30,077 and begun to ascend the main mast. 579 00:29:30,101 --> 00:29:32,513 It was time to retire. 580 00:29:32,537 --> 00:29:34,515 John Paul Jones. 581 00:29:34,539 --> 00:29:37,384 Narrator: Jones and his men made it back to the Ranger 582 00:29:37,408 --> 00:29:39,653 and sailed away. 583 00:29:39,677 --> 00:29:40,654 [Cannon fire] 584 00:29:40,678 --> 00:29:42,089 The next day, 585 00:29:42,113 --> 00:29:44,358 they engaged a British warship, the "Drake," 586 00:29:44,382 --> 00:29:46,961 and after a battle that Jones remembered 587 00:29:46,985 --> 00:29:51,499 as "warm, close, and obstinate," captured it and its crew 588 00:29:51,523 --> 00:29:55,536 and brought it into the French port of Brest. 589 00:29:55,560 --> 00:29:59,974 Jones understood his impact on British public opinion. 590 00:29:59,998 --> 00:30:03,144 Mothers began warning their children to be good, 591 00:30:03,168 --> 00:30:08,048 or the fearsome "Pirate" John Paul Jones would get them. 592 00:30:08,072 --> 00:30:10,084 ♪ 593 00:30:10,108 --> 00:30:12,520 Voice: What was done is sufficient to show 594 00:30:12,544 --> 00:30:16,557 that not all their boasted navy can protect their own coasts 595 00:30:16,581 --> 00:30:20,227 and that the scenes of distress which they have occasioned 596 00:30:20,251 --> 00:30:24,698 in America may soon be brought home to their own doors. 597 00:30:24,722 --> 00:30:26,491 John Paul Jones. 598 00:30:28,493 --> 00:30:30,571 ♪ 599 00:30:30,595 --> 00:30:34,542 Voice: What a miraculous change in the political world... 600 00:30:34,566 --> 00:30:37,344 The government of France an advocate for liberty, 601 00:30:37,368 --> 00:30:39,647 espousing the cause of Protestants, 602 00:30:39,671 --> 00:30:42,616 and risking a war to secure their independence; 603 00:30:42,640 --> 00:30:48,122 Britain at war with America, France in alliance with her. 604 00:30:48,146 --> 00:30:51,692 These, my friend, are astonishing changes. 605 00:30:51,716 --> 00:30:54,161 Elbridge Gerry. 606 00:30:54,185 --> 00:30:57,331 Narrator: It had taken nearly 3 months for word 607 00:30:57,355 --> 00:31:01,368 of the new military alliance with France to reach Washington. 608 00:31:01,392 --> 00:31:05,206 The French would be sending soldiers and the fleet. 609 00:31:05,230 --> 00:31:08,175 His army would no longer be alone. 610 00:31:08,199 --> 00:31:11,245 "This... great... glorious... news," he said, 611 00:31:11,269 --> 00:31:14,014 "must put the independency of America 612 00:31:14,038 --> 00:31:17,051 out of all manner of dispute." 613 00:31:17,075 --> 00:31:18,652 [Snare drum playing] 614 00:31:18,676 --> 00:31:20,354 Washington was eager now 615 00:31:20,378 --> 00:31:24,525 to test his newly disciplined army against the enemy. 616 00:31:24,549 --> 00:31:27,428 Voice: The enemy imagined Philadelphia 617 00:31:27,452 --> 00:31:30,397 to be of more importance to us than it really was 618 00:31:30,421 --> 00:31:34,301 and to that belief added the absurd idea 619 00:31:34,325 --> 00:31:38,172 that the soul of all America was centered there 620 00:31:38,196 --> 00:31:40,641 and would be conquered there. 621 00:31:40,665 --> 00:31:42,409 Thomas Paine. 622 00:31:42,433 --> 00:31:44,178 ♪ 623 00:31:44,202 --> 00:31:47,081 Narrator: The British, German, and Loyalist troops 624 00:31:47,105 --> 00:31:50,885 penned up in Philadelphia had had a hard winter, too. 625 00:31:50,909 --> 00:31:53,654 They had subsisted on half-rations. 626 00:31:53,678 --> 00:31:57,625 Wounded troops occupied every public building in town 627 00:31:57,649 --> 00:31:59,360 except the State House, 628 00:31:59,384 --> 00:32:02,429 where the Declaration of Independence had been signed, 629 00:32:02,453 --> 00:32:05,566 which was crowded with Patriot prisoners. 630 00:32:05,590 --> 00:32:07,067 ♪ 631 00:32:07,091 --> 00:32:11,272 1777 had ended badly for the British. 632 00:32:11,296 --> 00:32:16,010 General Burgoyne had surrendered an entire army at Saratoga. 633 00:32:16,034 --> 00:32:18,779 General Howe might have occupied Philadelphia, 634 00:32:18,803 --> 00:32:22,683 and his subordinates still held New York City and Newport, 635 00:32:22,707 --> 00:32:25,853 but they controlled little else, 636 00:32:25,877 --> 00:32:28,989 and now, with the French joining the war, 637 00:32:29,013 --> 00:32:31,325 Britain would be required to defend 638 00:32:31,349 --> 00:32:33,560 all its imperial holdings... 639 00:32:33,584 --> 00:32:37,498 In India, Africa, Ireland, the Mediterranean 640 00:32:37,522 --> 00:32:41,769 and the Caribbean, as well as in North America. 641 00:32:41,793 --> 00:32:44,204 Kathleen DuVal: The French decide to enter the war, 642 00:32:44,228 --> 00:32:48,142 and that changes everything for Britain. 643 00:32:48,166 --> 00:32:52,246 Britain knows that Spain and the Netherlands may be next. 644 00:32:52,270 --> 00:32:55,182 Suddenly, those 13 colonies that were rebelling 645 00:32:55,206 --> 00:32:57,584 are kind of the small potatoes of the war. 646 00:32:57,608 --> 00:33:02,056 They could lose their profitable plantation islands. 647 00:33:02,080 --> 00:33:04,458 They could lose Jamaica. 648 00:33:04,482 --> 00:33:06,593 The stakes are big in this war, 649 00:33:06,617 --> 00:33:10,831 and the 13 colonies have become just a tiny corner of it. 650 00:33:10,855 --> 00:33:12,733 ♪ 651 00:33:12,757 --> 00:33:15,336 Narrator: Lord North, the British prime minister, 652 00:33:15,360 --> 00:33:18,872 dispatched peace commissioners to America that spring, 653 00:33:18,896 --> 00:33:21,141 armed with a series of concessions 654 00:33:21,165 --> 00:33:23,110 aimed at ending the fighting, 655 00:33:23,134 --> 00:33:26,647 everything the Americans had been demanding for years. 656 00:33:26,671 --> 00:33:31,986 All they had to do was renounce independence. 657 00:33:32,010 --> 00:33:33,620 What they're offering is basically terms 658 00:33:33,644 --> 00:33:36,890 that would have been acceptable to the colonists 659 00:33:36,914 --> 00:33:40,260 in 1774 or 1775. 660 00:33:40,284 --> 00:33:43,130 Narrator: Congress would not hear of it. 661 00:33:43,154 --> 00:33:45,432 The very idea of dependence, 662 00:33:45,456 --> 00:33:47,968 its president, Henry Laurens, said, 663 00:33:47,992 --> 00:33:50,471 "is inadmissible." 664 00:33:50,495 --> 00:33:54,074 British negotiators responded with a warning. 665 00:33:54,098 --> 00:33:57,845 Americans could now expect far harsher treatment 666 00:33:57,869 --> 00:33:59,947 than any they had yet received, 667 00:33:59,971 --> 00:34:02,850 and they had appointed a new commander 668 00:34:02,874 --> 00:34:05,386 to deliver that treatment. 669 00:34:05,410 --> 00:34:07,554 Voice: On the 10th of May, 670 00:34:07,578 --> 00:34:10,224 Sir Henry Clinton arrived at Philadelphia, 671 00:34:10,248 --> 00:34:14,361 relieving Sir William Howe as commander in chief. 672 00:34:14,385 --> 00:34:16,697 Captain Johann Ewald. 673 00:34:16,721 --> 00:34:20,434 Atkinson: Henry Clinton is a formidable military officer. 674 00:34:20,458 --> 00:34:23,103 He's had a lot of combat experience, 675 00:34:23,127 --> 00:34:26,707 but he's a very, very difficult personality. 676 00:34:26,731 --> 00:34:28,675 He's easily aggrieved. 677 00:34:28,699 --> 00:34:32,613 He carries his grievances and grudges with him. 678 00:34:32,637 --> 00:34:34,615 He will be the British commander in chief longer 679 00:34:34,639 --> 00:34:36,950 than any other general in the American Revolution, 680 00:34:36,974 --> 00:34:38,719 for 4 years. 681 00:34:38,743 --> 00:34:41,789 Narrator: General Henry Clinton, who had been fighting in America 682 00:34:41,813 --> 00:34:45,259 since Bunker's Hill, had hoped to be relieved. 683 00:34:45,283 --> 00:34:49,229 Instead, he would be asked to do at least as much 684 00:34:49,253 --> 00:34:51,365 as his predecessor had been asked to do 685 00:34:51,389 --> 00:34:55,235 and to do it with far fewer men. 686 00:34:55,259 --> 00:34:58,839 His new orders were to send 8,000 of his soldiers 687 00:34:58,863 --> 00:35:03,143 to protect British interests in Florida and the Caribbean. 688 00:35:03,167 --> 00:35:05,446 He was to leave the rest of the New England 689 00:35:05,470 --> 00:35:09,383 and Mid-Atlantic states in Patriot hands for the most part 690 00:35:09,407 --> 00:35:12,419 and eventually mount seaborne assaults 691 00:35:12,443 --> 00:35:15,823 on the 4 Southern Colonies. 692 00:35:15,847 --> 00:35:18,859 Clinton concluded he first had to get his army 693 00:35:18,883 --> 00:35:23,063 back to New York, which meant evacuating Philadelphia 694 00:35:23,087 --> 00:35:25,999 that had been taken just 9 months earlier. 695 00:35:26,023 --> 00:35:30,270 Most of his men, he decided, would have to march to New York. 696 00:35:30,294 --> 00:35:33,941 He had too few ships to carry his entire army 697 00:35:33,965 --> 00:35:36,844 as well as some 3,000 Loyalists 698 00:35:36,868 --> 00:35:39,279 now eager to leave with him. 699 00:35:39,303 --> 00:35:41,748 Voice: All of the loyal inhabitants 700 00:35:41,772 --> 00:35:45,018 who had taken our protection lamented that they 701 00:35:45,042 --> 00:35:47,988 now had to give up all their property. 702 00:35:48,012 --> 00:35:52,226 Brave people who have rendered such good service to the King 703 00:35:52,250 --> 00:35:54,461 are being left behind. 704 00:35:54,485 --> 00:35:57,965 God alone knows what will happen to them. 705 00:35:57,989 --> 00:36:01,101 Johann Ewald. 706 00:36:01,125 --> 00:36:04,438 Maya Jasanoff: Philadelphia has its population turned inside out 707 00:36:04,462 --> 00:36:06,573 a couple of different times in the Revolution. 708 00:36:06,597 --> 00:36:09,042 New York City has its population turned around, 709 00:36:09,066 --> 00:36:12,579 a kind of back-and-forth of Loyalist 710 00:36:12,603 --> 00:36:15,482 and Patriot residents, depending on which army 711 00:36:15,506 --> 00:36:19,319 is in charge, and when an army leaves, 712 00:36:19,343 --> 00:36:22,356 the population that had come in order to live 713 00:36:22,380 --> 00:36:25,058 under their protection have to sort of fumble 714 00:36:25,082 --> 00:36:28,095 and figure out what it is that they're going to do next. 715 00:36:28,119 --> 00:36:30,264 ♪ 716 00:36:30,288 --> 00:36:32,566 Voice: Philadelphia, June 18th. 717 00:36:32,590 --> 00:36:34,601 This morning when we arose, 718 00:36:34,625 --> 00:36:37,604 there was not one redcoat to be seen. 719 00:36:37,628 --> 00:36:40,440 Colonel Gordon and some others had not been gone 720 00:36:40,464 --> 00:36:45,145 a quarter of an hour before the Americans entered the city. 721 00:36:45,169 --> 00:36:47,447 Elizabeth Drinker. 722 00:36:47,471 --> 00:36:51,018 Narrator: To act as military governor of Philadelphia, 723 00:36:51,042 --> 00:36:54,588 George Washington selected General Benedict Arnold, 724 00:36:54,612 --> 00:36:57,624 still suffering from war wounds so severe 725 00:36:57,648 --> 00:37:00,027 that he could not mount a horse. 726 00:37:00,051 --> 00:37:05,599 He was to restore order and preserve tranquility. 727 00:37:05,623 --> 00:37:09,203 Philadelphia was now almost unrecognizable. 728 00:37:09,227 --> 00:37:11,838 Retreating redcoats had looted homes, 729 00:37:11,862 --> 00:37:15,776 desecrated churches, felled orchards for firewood, 730 00:37:15,800 --> 00:37:18,845 and in the houses they had used as barracks, 731 00:37:18,869 --> 00:37:23,383 cut holes in the floor to serve as privies. 732 00:37:23,407 --> 00:37:27,087 Returning Patriot refugees were enraged 733 00:37:27,111 --> 00:37:29,089 at what had been done to their city 734 00:37:29,113 --> 00:37:31,225 and were eager to punish anyone 735 00:37:31,249 --> 00:37:34,661 who had collaborated with the occupiers. 736 00:37:34,685 --> 00:37:38,165 The homes and property of scores of accused Tories 737 00:37:38,189 --> 00:37:40,267 would be confiscated. 738 00:37:40,291 --> 00:37:43,470 23 men were tried for treason. 739 00:37:43,494 --> 00:37:46,873 Two Quakers were hanged. 740 00:37:46,897 --> 00:37:49,676 Nathaniel Philbrick: Philadelphia was divided 741 00:37:49,700 --> 00:37:52,112 between the Loyalists and the Patriots, 742 00:37:52,136 --> 00:37:53,847 who were at each other's throats. 743 00:37:53,871 --> 00:37:57,551 It would have required someone of great tact and sympathy 744 00:37:57,575 --> 00:38:02,389 to keep the lid on this city. 745 00:38:02,413 --> 00:38:04,424 That was not Arnold. 746 00:38:04,448 --> 00:38:09,162 Narrator: By June 18, 1778, most of Clinton's army 747 00:38:09,186 --> 00:38:13,133 was in New Jersey and had begun its march toward New York, 748 00:38:13,157 --> 00:38:14,801 some 90 miles away. 749 00:38:14,825 --> 00:38:17,504 They moved in two great columns... 750 00:38:17,528 --> 00:38:19,873 More than 18,000 soldiers, 751 00:38:19,897 --> 00:38:24,811 nearly 2,000 noncombatants, 46 artillery pieces, 752 00:38:24,835 --> 00:38:27,648 and 5,000 horses. 753 00:38:27,672 --> 00:38:31,618 The next morning, George Washington led his army 754 00:38:31,642 --> 00:38:34,421 out of Valley Forge for the first time in months 755 00:38:34,445 --> 00:38:37,891 and began shadowing the British as they moved east, 756 00:38:37,915 --> 00:38:41,261 looking for an opportunity to strike. 757 00:38:41,285 --> 00:38:43,830 Atkinson: Washington has decided 758 00:38:43,854 --> 00:38:48,235 that he is not going to directly intercept this column, 759 00:38:48,259 --> 00:38:49,770 which is very strong. 760 00:38:49,794 --> 00:38:52,739 He wants to nick at them and... and peck at them 761 00:38:52,763 --> 00:38:56,376 from the rear and make life miserable for them 762 00:38:56,400 --> 00:38:58,979 and watch for an opening. 763 00:38:59,003 --> 00:39:01,882 Narrator: Once again, New Jersey militia 764 00:39:01,906 --> 00:39:05,052 made the British passage as painful as possible, 765 00:39:05,076 --> 00:39:08,855 felling trees across the roads, destroying bridges, 766 00:39:08,879 --> 00:39:12,492 flooding streams to make fording difficult, 767 00:39:12,516 --> 00:39:16,663 and picking off individual soldiers by ambush. 768 00:39:16,687 --> 00:39:17,998 ♪ 769 00:39:18,022 --> 00:39:20,500 Voice: The whole province was in arms, 770 00:39:20,524 --> 00:39:22,936 following us with Washington's army, 771 00:39:22,960 --> 00:39:27,341 constantly surrounding us on our marches and besieging our camps. 772 00:39:27,365 --> 00:39:30,977 Each step cost human blood. 773 00:39:31,001 --> 00:39:33,280 Johann Ewald. 774 00:39:33,304 --> 00:39:34,715 [Thunder] 775 00:39:34,739 --> 00:39:37,184 Narrator: The weather added to their misery... 776 00:39:37,208 --> 00:39:39,653 Heat that soared above 90 degrees, 777 00:39:39,677 --> 00:39:43,724 sudden downpours that turned sandy roads into bogs, 778 00:39:43,748 --> 00:39:48,161 followed by dense humidity, swarms of mosquitoes, 779 00:39:48,185 --> 00:39:50,731 and still more heat. 780 00:39:50,755 --> 00:39:55,736 20 British soldiers died of heat exhaustion on a single day. 781 00:39:55,760 --> 00:39:59,940 As many as 500 men are thought to have deserted 782 00:39:59,964 --> 00:40:02,743 during the march, most of them Hessians, 783 00:40:02,767 --> 00:40:07,438 blending into German-speaking communities nearby. 784 00:40:08,572 --> 00:40:10,984 [Birds chirping] 785 00:40:11,008 --> 00:40:13,086 ♪ 786 00:40:13,110 --> 00:40:16,356 On the morning of June 24, 1778, 787 00:40:16,380 --> 00:40:19,426 Americans otherwise disconnected 788 00:40:19,450 --> 00:40:21,428 by the vastness of their continent 789 00:40:21,452 --> 00:40:23,797 witnessed an otherworldly phenomenon 790 00:40:23,821 --> 00:40:29,669 at roughly the same time as the moon eclipsed the sun. 791 00:40:29,693 --> 00:40:33,173 ♪ 792 00:40:33,197 --> 00:40:35,842 Indians and Spanish colonists 793 00:40:35,866 --> 00:40:39,212 in Mexico and Texas saw it first. 794 00:40:39,236 --> 00:40:43,417 When it reached Spanish New Orleans and British Mobile, 795 00:40:43,441 --> 00:40:46,987 the flags of empire flew in sudden darkness 796 00:40:47,011 --> 00:40:49,589 for more than 4 minutes. 797 00:40:49,613 --> 00:40:52,058 The total eclipse lasted even longer 798 00:40:52,082 --> 00:40:55,996 for the Muscogee Creeks on the Chattahoochee River 799 00:40:56,020 --> 00:41:00,066 and for the "Maroon" communities of self-emancipated 800 00:41:00,090 --> 00:41:03,970 former slaves hidden in the Great Dismal Swamp. 801 00:41:03,994 --> 00:41:06,306 ♪ 802 00:41:06,330 --> 00:41:08,575 When mid-morning darkness descended 803 00:41:08,599 --> 00:41:10,844 on the Virginia capital at Williamsburg, 804 00:41:10,868 --> 00:41:13,713 "Lightening buggs were seen as at Night." 805 00:41:13,737 --> 00:41:15,849 ♪ 806 00:41:15,873 --> 00:41:19,586 The same darkness briefly enveloped Washington's army 807 00:41:19,610 --> 00:41:23,723 as it followed the British into New Jersey. 808 00:41:23,747 --> 00:41:27,461 "Had this happened upon such an occasion in "olden time," 809 00:41:27,485 --> 00:41:29,930 Private Joseph Plumb Martin remembered, 810 00:41:29,954 --> 00:41:32,132 "it would have been considered ominous, 811 00:41:32,156 --> 00:41:37,737 either of good or bad fortune, but we took no notice of it." 812 00:41:37,761 --> 00:41:40,807 ♪ 813 00:41:40,831 --> 00:41:43,643 Martin had been detached from his Connecticut regiment 814 00:41:43,667 --> 00:41:46,847 and assigned to join fast-moving light infantry 815 00:41:46,871 --> 00:41:50,016 with orders to follow the enemy closely enough 816 00:41:50,040 --> 00:41:54,721 to capture stragglers and welcome deserters. 817 00:41:54,745 --> 00:41:56,690 The day after the eclipse, 818 00:41:56,714 --> 00:41:59,793 Clinton decided to head east towards Sandy Hook, 819 00:41:59,817 --> 00:42:03,396 a Loyalist stronghold from which royal transports 820 00:42:03,420 --> 00:42:06,032 could ferry his men to New York. 821 00:42:06,056 --> 00:42:09,503 He merged his two divisions into one column, 822 00:42:09,527 --> 00:42:13,773 and, he recalled, hoping that "Mr. Washington might possibly 823 00:42:13,797 --> 00:42:16,710 be induced to commit himself" to battle, 824 00:42:16,734 --> 00:42:19,713 "[I placed] the elite of my army between him 825 00:42:19,737 --> 00:42:23,783 and my [supply train]... to defend it from insult." 826 00:42:23,807 --> 00:42:27,087 He put General Charles Cornwallis 827 00:42:27,111 --> 00:42:28,989 in charge of that force. 828 00:42:29,013 --> 00:42:31,224 ♪ 829 00:42:31,248 --> 00:42:35,829 At Hopewell, Washington convened a council of war. 830 00:42:35,853 --> 00:42:38,732 General Nathanael Greene, back in the field, 831 00:42:38,756 --> 00:42:40,967 was eager for a fight. 832 00:42:40,991 --> 00:42:43,036 Voice: If we suffer the enemy to pass 833 00:42:43,060 --> 00:42:45,772 through the Jerseys without attempting anything upon them, 834 00:42:45,796 --> 00:42:48,542 I think we shall ever regret it. 835 00:42:48,566 --> 00:42:53,079 People expect something from us, and our strength demands it. 836 00:42:53,103 --> 00:42:54,814 Nathanael Greene. 837 00:42:54,838 --> 00:42:57,284 Narrator: But most commanders urged caution. 838 00:42:57,308 --> 00:43:01,321 Major General Charles Lee... Washington's second in command, 839 00:43:01,345 --> 00:43:05,492 captured two years before and only recently exchanged... 840 00:43:05,516 --> 00:43:08,128 Was especially adamant in his opposition. 841 00:43:08,152 --> 00:43:10,997 Sending Americans against British regulars 842 00:43:11,021 --> 00:43:13,567 would be "criminal," he said, 843 00:43:13,591 --> 00:43:16,636 but when Washington decided to send forward 844 00:43:16,660 --> 00:43:19,906 4,500 troops anyway, Lee insisted 845 00:43:19,930 --> 00:43:22,976 seniority required that he lead them. 846 00:43:23,000 --> 00:43:24,978 If he weren't given command, 847 00:43:25,002 --> 00:43:27,981 he said, he would be "disgraced." 848 00:43:28,005 --> 00:43:30,917 Washington relented and ordered Lee 849 00:43:30,941 --> 00:43:33,787 to follow Cornwallis' elite rearguard 850 00:43:33,811 --> 00:43:37,123 and look for an opportunity to attack. 851 00:43:37,147 --> 00:43:38,858 ♪ 852 00:43:38,882 --> 00:43:40,794 [Indistinct conversation] 853 00:43:40,818 --> 00:43:42,629 Narrator: The British left their encampment 854 00:43:42,653 --> 00:43:45,432 around Monmouth Court House well before dawn 855 00:43:45,456 --> 00:43:47,534 on Sunday, June 28th. 856 00:43:47,558 --> 00:43:50,070 [Gunfire] 857 00:43:50,094 --> 00:43:52,772 By mid-morning, Lee's men had formed 858 00:43:52,796 --> 00:43:55,709 west of the British line, trying piecemeal 859 00:43:55,733 --> 00:43:59,379 to attack and dislodge Cornwallis' forces. 860 00:43:59,403 --> 00:44:01,948 All their efforts proved futile. 861 00:44:01,972 --> 00:44:04,017 [Shouting and gunfire] 862 00:44:04,041 --> 00:44:05,919 Narrator: As the Patriots struggled 863 00:44:05,943 --> 00:44:07,787 in the increasingly brutal heat, 864 00:44:07,811 --> 00:44:12,359 Clinton sent an entire division to reinforce Cornwallis. 865 00:44:12,383 --> 00:44:14,928 More than 10,000 British, German, 866 00:44:14,952 --> 00:44:18,889 and Loyalist troops counterattacked. 867 00:44:22,226 --> 00:44:25,405 Atkinson: Things go south in a hurry for the Americans. 868 00:44:25,429 --> 00:44:28,908 Lee loses control, and the next thing you know, 869 00:44:28,932 --> 00:44:31,344 this American advance guard, the vanguard 870 00:44:31,368 --> 00:44:34,714 that's supposed to be attacking, is fleeing. 871 00:44:34,738 --> 00:44:36,349 Lengel: They're confused. 872 00:44:36,373 --> 00:44:41,221 They begin falling back, but then Washington appears. 873 00:44:41,245 --> 00:44:44,958 The knowledge of his presence causes the retreat 874 00:44:44,982 --> 00:44:51,031 to stop instantaneously without even having said a word. 875 00:44:51,055 --> 00:44:54,434 Those who witnessed this moment said that it was like 876 00:44:54,458 --> 00:44:58,271 a bolt of electricity shot through the forces 877 00:44:58,295 --> 00:45:01,608 once they realized that Washington was there. 878 00:45:01,632 --> 00:45:03,576 Voice: His presence stopped the retreat. 879 00:45:03,600 --> 00:45:06,513 His fine appearance on horseback, 880 00:45:06,537 --> 00:45:09,115 his calm courage gave him the air 881 00:45:09,139 --> 00:45:11,551 best calculated to excite enthusiasm. 882 00:45:11,575 --> 00:45:15,722 He rode all along the lines amid the shouts of the soldiers, 883 00:45:15,746 --> 00:45:18,892 cheering them by his voice and example. 884 00:45:18,916 --> 00:45:21,895 Marquis de Lafayette. 885 00:45:21,919 --> 00:45:23,863 Lengel: Washington gives some orders. 886 00:45:23,887 --> 00:45:26,099 The men get back into line... 887 00:45:26,123 --> 00:45:27,867 [Gunshot] 888 00:45:27,891 --> 00:45:30,804 and they face down the British attack, 889 00:45:30,828 --> 00:45:32,672 and they don't break. 890 00:45:32,696 --> 00:45:35,642 Man: Fire! 891 00:45:35,666 --> 00:45:38,511 ♪ 892 00:45:38,535 --> 00:45:41,881 [Men shouting commands] 893 00:45:41,905 --> 00:45:45,251 Narrator: General Steuben's training had paid off. 894 00:45:45,275 --> 00:45:48,288 The British launched a series of assaults. 895 00:45:48,312 --> 00:45:52,525 General Henry Clinton himself led one of them, sword in hand. 896 00:45:52,549 --> 00:45:54,427 ♪ 897 00:45:54,451 --> 00:45:57,263 Colonels Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr 898 00:45:57,287 --> 00:46:00,533 both had horses shot out from under them, 899 00:46:00,557 --> 00:46:03,937 but the Americans held. 900 00:46:03,961 --> 00:46:07,741 Atkinson: Washington places his defenses in a way 901 00:46:07,765 --> 00:46:10,777 that stops the British assault. 902 00:46:10,801 --> 00:46:13,747 He's got good ground for his artillery. 903 00:46:13,771 --> 00:46:15,648 He's hammering the British. 904 00:46:15,672 --> 00:46:18,017 [Men shouting] 905 00:46:18,041 --> 00:46:21,321 ♪ 906 00:46:21,345 --> 00:46:25,091 Narrator: The artillery duel continued for two hours. 907 00:46:25,115 --> 00:46:29,996 Infantry on both sides sought whatever cover they could. 908 00:46:30,020 --> 00:46:33,066 Voice: With the thermometer at 96, 909 00:46:33,090 --> 00:46:35,468 what could be done in a hot pine barren 910 00:46:35,492 --> 00:46:39,205 loaded with everything that the poor soldier carries? 911 00:46:39,229 --> 00:46:41,274 It breaks my heart that I was obliged 912 00:46:41,298 --> 00:46:45,011 under those cruel circumstances to attempt it. 913 00:46:45,035 --> 00:46:47,113 General Henry Clinton. 914 00:46:47,137 --> 00:46:48,882 ♪ 915 00:46:48,906 --> 00:46:51,851 Narrator: Finally, at around 3:45, 916 00:46:51,875 --> 00:46:54,821 Clinton ordered a stop to the firing. 917 00:46:54,845 --> 00:46:57,090 With his supply train now well on its way 918 00:46:57,114 --> 00:46:59,359 towards Sandy Hook and safety, 919 00:46:59,383 --> 00:47:03,897 he reluctantly began to withdraw his exhausted troops. 920 00:47:03,921 --> 00:47:07,200 Washington's men were worn out, too. 921 00:47:07,224 --> 00:47:10,103 The heat, Joseph Plumb Martin remembered, 922 00:47:10,127 --> 00:47:12,572 was like "the mouth of [an]...oven." 923 00:47:12,596 --> 00:47:14,574 [Insect buzzing] 924 00:47:14,598 --> 00:47:16,943 Voice: It was generally understood the battle 925 00:47:16,967 --> 00:47:19,379 was to be renewed at the dawn of day, 926 00:47:19,403 --> 00:47:23,883 but at the dawn of day, I heard the shout of victory... 927 00:47:23,907 --> 00:47:26,486 "The British are gone." 928 00:47:26,510 --> 00:47:28,488 Dr. William Read. 929 00:47:28,512 --> 00:47:30,290 ♪ 930 00:47:30,314 --> 00:47:32,158 Narrator: The Battle of Monmouth had left 931 00:47:32,182 --> 00:47:37,597 some 362 of Washington's men and 411 of Clinton's 932 00:47:37,621 --> 00:47:40,400 dead, wounded, or missing. 933 00:47:40,424 --> 00:47:43,770 Corpses, swollen and blackening in the heat, 934 00:47:43,794 --> 00:47:46,239 sprawled everywhere. 935 00:47:46,263 --> 00:47:49,242 Both sides claimed victory. 936 00:47:49,266 --> 00:47:50,643 ♪ 937 00:47:50,667 --> 00:47:52,846 Clinton's column reached Sandy Hook 938 00:47:52,870 --> 00:47:57,450 without serious interruption and embarked for Staten Island. 939 00:47:57,474 --> 00:48:00,820 His objective was to get his army to New York, 940 00:48:00,844 --> 00:48:02,655 and he had done so... 941 00:48:02,679 --> 00:48:04,457 ♪ 942 00:48:04,481 --> 00:48:09,162 But when the fighting ended, Washington's men held the field. 943 00:48:09,186 --> 00:48:11,931 "It is glorious for America," 944 00:48:11,955 --> 00:48:14,734 a New Jersey colonel wrote his wife. 945 00:48:14,758 --> 00:48:18,938 At least one British officer admitted his army had endured 946 00:48:18,962 --> 00:48:22,242 "a handsome flogging." 947 00:48:22,266 --> 00:48:25,445 Although there would be fierce fighting and many skirmishes 948 00:48:25,469 --> 00:48:28,348 in New England and the Mid-Atlantic states, 949 00:48:28,372 --> 00:48:31,885 Monmouth would be the last major battle fought in the North 950 00:48:31,909 --> 00:48:34,153 during the American Revolution... 951 00:48:34,177 --> 00:48:35,655 ♪ 952 00:48:35,679 --> 00:48:39,225 And it would be more than 3 years before George Washington 953 00:48:39,249 --> 00:48:43,429 would personally lead his troops into battle again. 954 00:48:43,453 --> 00:48:44,797 ♪ 955 00:48:44,821 --> 00:48:48,201 Serena Zabin: What he learns over the course of the war 956 00:48:48,225 --> 00:48:53,606 is that there are other ways to perform his leadership 957 00:48:53,630 --> 00:48:56,109 that's not actually by doing something big and bold 958 00:48:56,133 --> 00:49:01,180 but that waiting and holding back and containment 959 00:49:01,204 --> 00:49:05,051 can also be a way of showing his strength. 960 00:49:05,075 --> 00:49:07,754 [Clock ticking] 961 00:49:07,778 --> 00:49:09,989 Voice: Cruel as this war has been 962 00:49:10,013 --> 00:49:12,292 and separated as I am on account of it 963 00:49:12,316 --> 00:49:14,427 from the dearest connection in life, 964 00:49:14,451 --> 00:49:18,064 I would not exchange my country for the wealth of the Indies, 965 00:49:18,088 --> 00:49:21,367 or be any other than an American. 966 00:49:21,391 --> 00:49:23,202 Abigail Adams. 967 00:49:23,226 --> 00:49:26,639 ♪ 968 00:49:26,663 --> 00:49:29,208 Stacy Schiff: One of the great blessings here is how much time 969 00:49:29,232 --> 00:49:32,111 John spends in Philadelphia with Abigail back in Massachusetts 970 00:49:32,135 --> 00:49:36,182 because from that, we have really the most detailed, 971 00:49:36,206 --> 00:49:39,285 richest correspondence of the Revolutionary years. 972 00:49:39,309 --> 00:49:44,657 Narrator: In the summer of 1778, Abigail and John Adams 973 00:49:44,681 --> 00:49:48,661 were apart, as they almost always were during the war. 974 00:49:48,685 --> 00:49:51,764 She was at their home in Braintree, Massachusetts, 975 00:49:51,788 --> 00:49:53,866 managing the household, 976 00:49:53,890 --> 00:49:57,136 and he was newly arrived in Paris, 977 00:49:57,160 --> 00:50:00,006 sent by Congress to join Benjamin Franklin 978 00:50:00,030 --> 00:50:02,508 and the American delegation to France. 979 00:50:02,532 --> 00:50:04,177 ♪ 980 00:50:04,201 --> 00:50:08,247 There, on the Fourth of July, Adams and Franklin hosted 981 00:50:08,271 --> 00:50:11,851 a modest celebration on the second anniversary 982 00:50:11,875 --> 00:50:14,887 of American independence. 983 00:50:14,911 --> 00:50:17,256 Voice: We had the honor of the company 984 00:50:17,280 --> 00:50:21,160 of all the American gentlemen and ladies in and about Paris 985 00:50:21,184 --> 00:50:24,297 with a few of the French gentlemen in the neighborhood. 986 00:50:24,321 --> 00:50:27,333 They were not ministers of state, nor ambassadors, 987 00:50:27,357 --> 00:50:29,802 nor princes, nor dukes, 988 00:50:29,826 --> 00:50:31,838 nor peers, nor marquises, 989 00:50:31,862 --> 00:50:34,674 nor cardinals, nor archbishops, 990 00:50:34,698 --> 00:50:36,509 nor bishops. 991 00:50:36,533 --> 00:50:38,277 John Adams. 992 00:50:38,301 --> 00:50:41,881 Narrator: Thousands of miles west of Paris in Philadelphia, 993 00:50:41,905 --> 00:50:45,518 where the Continental Congress had just returned from exile, 994 00:50:45,542 --> 00:50:48,554 General Benedict Arnold presided over a feast 995 00:50:48,578 --> 00:50:51,391 and entertainment for the city's political, 996 00:50:51,415 --> 00:50:53,860 military, and merchant leaders. 997 00:50:53,884 --> 00:50:56,929 They were interrupted by what one of them called 998 00:50:56,953 --> 00:50:59,632 "a crowd of the vulgar" outside 999 00:50:59,656 --> 00:51:03,069 mocking the pretensions of the wealthy. 1000 00:51:03,093 --> 00:51:05,304 DuVal: I think the American Revolution 1001 00:51:05,328 --> 00:51:09,976 creates an idea that there is no class in the United States, 1002 00:51:10,000 --> 00:51:14,680 that we, in our founding moment, decided to do away with that. 1003 00:51:14,704 --> 00:51:16,649 It's not true. 1004 00:51:16,673 --> 00:51:21,554 There have always been wide varieties 1005 00:51:21,578 --> 00:51:24,290 in wealth and power in the United States, 1006 00:51:24,314 --> 00:51:28,227 and there were more opportunities 1007 00:51:28,251 --> 00:51:31,264 in the colonies than there were in Europe, 1008 00:51:31,288 --> 00:51:34,300 but some of the opportunity, 1009 00:51:34,324 --> 00:51:37,470 some of the promise of the United States, 1010 00:51:37,494 --> 00:51:40,873 is built on slavery and taking Native land. 1011 00:51:40,897 --> 00:51:43,276 ♪ 1012 00:51:43,300 --> 00:51:45,678 Narrator: Late the same evening of July 4th, 1013 00:51:45,702 --> 00:51:49,115 in the heart of the continent, Virginia militia 1014 00:51:49,139 --> 00:51:51,951 under Lieutenant Colonel George Rogers Clark 1015 00:51:51,975 --> 00:51:54,587 reached British-held Kaskaskia, 1016 00:51:54,611 --> 00:51:57,857 a mostly French-speaking village on the Mississippi River. 1017 00:51:57,881 --> 00:51:58,925 Man: Ready! 1018 00:51:58,949 --> 00:52:00,226 [Gunshots] 1019 00:52:00,250 --> 00:52:01,761 Narrator: In the dead of night, 1020 00:52:01,785 --> 00:52:04,097 Clark's men overwhelmed the town's defenses. 1021 00:52:04,121 --> 00:52:06,699 Woman: [Vocalizing] 1022 00:52:06,723 --> 00:52:08,434 Narrator: The next morning, he notified 1023 00:52:08,458 --> 00:52:11,904 the terrified townspeople that the King of France 1024 00:52:11,928 --> 00:52:13,840 had joined the Americans. 1025 00:52:13,864 --> 00:52:16,476 Clark guaranteed they would be free to practice 1026 00:52:16,500 --> 00:52:19,212 their Catholic faith, since all religions 1027 00:52:19,236 --> 00:52:21,514 would be tolerated in America, 1028 00:52:21,538 --> 00:52:24,117 provided they agreed to bow 1029 00:52:24,141 --> 00:52:26,752 to the authority of the United States. 1030 00:52:26,776 --> 00:52:30,590 It was a bloodless start to what would become 1031 00:52:30,614 --> 00:52:34,060 Clark's bloody campaign to conquer Indian country 1032 00:52:34,084 --> 00:52:36,395 east of the Mississippi. 1033 00:52:36,419 --> 00:52:38,664 [Snare drum playing] 1034 00:52:38,688 --> 00:52:40,333 [Gulls squawking] 1035 00:52:40,357 --> 00:52:44,237 The French fleet Washington had been waiting for 1036 00:52:44,261 --> 00:52:46,172 finally appeared off New York 1037 00:52:46,196 --> 00:52:48,975 in the week after Independence Day... 1038 00:52:48,999 --> 00:52:52,478 12 ships of the line, 4 frigates, 1039 00:52:52,502 --> 00:52:56,682 and over 4,000 French marines, all commanded 1040 00:52:56,706 --> 00:53:00,653 by Vice Admiral Charles Henri, Comte d'Estaing, 1041 00:53:00,677 --> 00:53:05,258 a veteran of warfare against Britain in India and Sumatra. 1042 00:53:05,282 --> 00:53:08,528 De Rode: D'Estaing is a French aristocrat. 1043 00:53:08,552 --> 00:53:10,663 He considers himself quite superior 1044 00:53:10,687 --> 00:53:13,733 to these American "ragtag" army and is looking at them 1045 00:53:13,757 --> 00:53:16,335 and thinks, "How am I gonna work with these people?" 1046 00:53:16,359 --> 00:53:18,804 Because he thought, "I'm the French admiral. 1047 00:53:18,828 --> 00:53:21,941 I know what to do here, so they better listen to me." 1048 00:53:21,965 --> 00:53:24,911 Narrator: Washington hoped a coordinated attack 1049 00:53:24,935 --> 00:53:27,947 with this new French force could trap Clinton 1050 00:53:27,971 --> 00:53:30,283 in New York, take back the city, 1051 00:53:30,307 --> 00:53:32,785 and, by so doing, persuade Britain 1052 00:53:32,809 --> 00:53:36,856 that further prosecution of the war was hopeless. 1053 00:53:36,880 --> 00:53:39,592 Because d'Estaing had convinced himself 1054 00:53:39,616 --> 00:53:42,261 that his heaviest ships would run aground 1055 00:53:42,285 --> 00:53:45,198 trying to enter New York Harbor, he decided to move 1056 00:53:45,222 --> 00:53:49,502 against the British garrison at Newport, Rhode Island, instead. 1057 00:53:49,526 --> 00:53:52,538 It was to be a coordinated assault 1058 00:53:52,562 --> 00:53:57,310 with American ground forces under General John Sullivan, 1059 00:53:57,334 --> 00:54:00,780 but neither commander spoke the other's language. 1060 00:54:00,804 --> 00:54:03,983 Sullivan, the son of Irish indentured servants, 1061 00:54:04,007 --> 00:54:07,253 loathed aristocrats like the French commander, 1062 00:54:07,277 --> 00:54:12,058 who, in turn, found Sullivan crude and inept. 1063 00:54:12,082 --> 00:54:13,459 [Cannon fire] 1064 00:54:13,483 --> 00:54:15,528 It all went wrong. 1065 00:54:15,552 --> 00:54:18,364 Without informing the French, Sullivan advanced 1066 00:54:18,388 --> 00:54:21,367 a day earlier than had been planned. 1067 00:54:21,391 --> 00:54:24,537 When a British fleet appeared offshore, 1068 00:54:24,561 --> 00:54:27,173 d'Estaing sailed out to do battle... 1069 00:54:27,197 --> 00:54:29,675 [Thunder] 1070 00:54:29,699 --> 00:54:32,144 but a howling storm scattered 1071 00:54:32,168 --> 00:54:35,881 and seriously damaged both fleets. 1072 00:54:35,905 --> 00:54:40,019 De Rode: 18th-century warfare is mainly based on the weather. 1073 00:54:40,043 --> 00:54:41,554 You could have no alternative. 1074 00:54:41,578 --> 00:54:43,389 If there is a big storm coming in, 1075 00:54:43,413 --> 00:54:46,559 you can't do anything besides getting just wiped away. 1076 00:54:46,583 --> 00:54:51,163 Admiral d'Estaing had to go for repairs in Boston. 1077 00:54:51,187 --> 00:54:53,132 [Cannon fire] 1078 00:54:53,156 --> 00:54:54,767 Lengel: The French, in essence, 1079 00:54:54,791 --> 00:54:57,336 leave the Americans in the lurch. 1080 00:54:57,360 --> 00:55:00,573 Sullivan is barely able to extract his forces 1081 00:55:00,597 --> 00:55:02,942 from what could have been a catastrophe. 1082 00:55:02,966 --> 00:55:04,610 ♪ 1083 00:55:04,634 --> 00:55:07,446 Narrator: The first joint French-American operation 1084 00:55:07,470 --> 00:55:08,848 had failed. 1085 00:55:08,872 --> 00:55:11,484 Once the repairs were finished in Boston, 1086 00:55:11,508 --> 00:55:14,754 d'Estaing would set sail for the French West Indies 1087 00:55:14,778 --> 00:55:18,457 without even bothering to tell Washington he was leaving. 1088 00:55:18,481 --> 00:55:21,627 French ships would be available to the Americans 1089 00:55:21,651 --> 00:55:24,630 only during the late summer and early fall, 1090 00:55:24,654 --> 00:55:27,867 when hurricanes threatened the Caribbean. 1091 00:55:27,891 --> 00:55:31,103 The American Revolution was important to France 1092 00:55:31,127 --> 00:55:35,207 only when its successes deepened Britain's failures 1093 00:55:35,231 --> 00:55:37,910 and Washington knew he could not win 1094 00:55:37,934 --> 00:55:41,147 the decisive battle without French help. 1095 00:55:41,171 --> 00:55:46,752 Lengel: Anti-French feeling runs so high after this 1096 00:55:46,776 --> 00:55:50,589 that Lafayette said he never at any point in the war 1097 00:55:50,613 --> 00:55:53,392 felt that his life was at so much risk 1098 00:55:53,416 --> 00:55:56,796 as it was when he walked down the streets of Boston 1099 00:55:56,820 --> 00:55:59,765 after this catastrophe at Rhode Island. 1100 00:55:59,789 --> 00:56:02,735 He thought he was gonna be strung up. 1101 00:56:02,759 --> 00:56:05,271 [Man shouts] 1102 00:56:05,295 --> 00:56:08,374 ♪ 1103 00:56:08,398 --> 00:56:10,009 Voice: I, with some of my comrades 1104 00:56:10,033 --> 00:56:13,346 who were in the Battle of White Plains in the year '76, 1105 00:56:13,370 --> 00:56:17,650 saw a number of the graves of those who fell in that battle. 1106 00:56:17,674 --> 00:56:21,120 Some of the bodies had been so slightly buried 1107 00:56:21,144 --> 00:56:25,424 that the dogs or hogs or both had dug them out of the ground. 1108 00:56:25,448 --> 00:56:28,127 Here were Hessian skulls. 1109 00:56:28,151 --> 00:56:29,929 Poor fellows! 1110 00:56:29,953 --> 00:56:33,699 They were left unburied in a foreign land. 1111 00:56:33,723 --> 00:56:36,035 They had perhaps as near and dear friends 1112 00:56:36,059 --> 00:56:37,770 to lament their sad destiny 1113 00:56:37,794 --> 00:56:41,407 as the Americans who laid buried near them. 1114 00:56:41,431 --> 00:56:44,310 They should have kept at home. 1115 00:56:44,334 --> 00:56:46,312 Joseph Plumb Martin. 1116 00:56:46,336 --> 00:56:49,682 ♪ 1117 00:56:49,706 --> 00:56:52,051 Narrator: By the fall of 1778, 1118 00:56:52,075 --> 00:56:54,787 Washington's army was arrayed in an arc 1119 00:56:54,811 --> 00:56:58,157 from Middlebrook, New Jersey, to Danbury, Connecticut. 1120 00:56:58,181 --> 00:57:02,395 He would remain within striking distance of New York City, 1121 00:57:02,419 --> 00:57:04,697 determined to recapture the place 1122 00:57:04,721 --> 00:57:08,234 he had been forced to abandon in 1776. 1123 00:57:08,258 --> 00:57:09,969 [Shouting and gunfire] 1124 00:57:09,993 --> 00:57:12,671 For months, his and Clinton's armies 1125 00:57:12,695 --> 00:57:15,007 had probed one another's lines. 1126 00:57:15,031 --> 00:57:17,877 On a single summer afternoon near Kingsbridge, 1127 00:57:17,901 --> 00:57:21,580 a Maryland patrol ambushed a German unit, 1128 00:57:21,604 --> 00:57:24,750 killing 6 and wounding 6 more, 1129 00:57:24,774 --> 00:57:28,487 and Loyalist cavalry ambushed and hacked to death 1130 00:57:28,511 --> 00:57:30,923 most of the Stockbridge Indians who had been 1131 00:57:30,947 --> 00:57:35,194 with Washington's army since 1775. 1132 00:57:35,218 --> 00:57:39,598 They "have fought and bled by our side," Washington said. 1133 00:57:39,622 --> 00:57:43,903 "We consider them as our friends and brothers." 1134 00:57:43,927 --> 00:57:46,372 ♪ 1135 00:57:46,396 --> 00:57:47,773 Voice: On the great road 1136 00:57:47,797 --> 00:57:49,475 from New York to Boston, 1137 00:57:49,499 --> 00:57:51,844 not a single solitary traveler was visible 1138 00:57:51,868 --> 00:57:55,414 from week to week or from month to month. 1139 00:57:55,438 --> 00:57:59,285 The world was motionless and silent. 1140 00:57:59,309 --> 00:58:01,320 Chaplain Timothy Dwight. 1141 00:58:01,344 --> 00:58:03,189 ♪ 1142 00:58:03,213 --> 00:58:06,792 Narrator: Before the Revolution, Westchester County in New York 1143 00:58:06,816 --> 00:58:09,628 had been one of the wealthiest in the colonies, 1144 00:58:09,652 --> 00:58:12,565 but for nearly two years now, it had been 1145 00:58:12,589 --> 00:58:15,601 a part of what was called the "Neutral Ground," 1146 00:58:15,625 --> 00:58:17,870 uncontrolled by either army 1147 00:58:17,894 --> 00:58:21,207 but plundered by both again and again. 1148 00:58:21,231 --> 00:58:23,075 ♪ 1149 00:58:23,099 --> 00:58:26,679 Roving bands of lawless raiders prowled the countryside 1150 00:58:26,703 --> 00:58:29,748 rustling livestock, extorting cash, 1151 00:58:29,772 --> 00:58:34,320 looting and burning homes, raping women. 1152 00:58:34,344 --> 00:58:38,824 Voice: This year has not been a very glorious one to America. 1153 00:58:38,848 --> 00:58:41,827 Our enemies, however, have nothing to boast of 1154 00:58:41,851 --> 00:58:44,797 since they have not gained one inch of territory more 1155 00:58:44,821 --> 00:58:46,565 than they possessed a year ago 1156 00:58:46,589 --> 00:58:50,102 and are at least Philadelphia out of pocket. 1157 00:58:50,126 --> 00:58:53,372 What the winter may produce I know not. 1158 00:58:53,396 --> 00:58:58,410 I wish it would give us peace but do not expect it. 1159 00:58:58,434 --> 00:59:00,770 Abigail Adams. 1160 00:59:04,274 --> 00:59:09,388 Women: ♪ Sit down, servant, sit down... ♪ 1161 00:59:09,412 --> 00:59:11,524 Taylor: It's pretty clear the British 1162 00:59:11,548 --> 00:59:13,292 are not gonna win the war in New England. 1163 00:59:13,316 --> 00:59:16,295 They're not gonna get enough popular support, 1164 00:59:16,319 --> 00:59:18,831 probably not gonna win the war 1165 00:59:18,855 --> 00:59:21,300 in the Middle Atlantic region either. 1166 00:59:21,324 --> 00:59:23,369 Woman: ♪ I know you tired... ♪ 1167 00:59:23,393 --> 00:59:25,237 Taylor: The great potential place 1168 00:59:25,261 --> 00:59:28,607 where their relatively more reduced forces 1169 00:59:28,631 --> 00:59:32,011 can have more leverage is the South, 1170 00:59:32,035 --> 00:59:36,282 so the goal is just see what you can retain. 1171 00:59:36,306 --> 00:59:39,418 You probably can't keep all of these 13 colonies. 1172 00:59:39,442 --> 00:59:43,956 Maybe you can keep the most valuable of these colonies. 1173 00:59:43,980 --> 00:59:46,025 Woman: ♪ I know you're mighty tired... ♪ 1174 00:59:46,049 --> 00:59:49,828 Conway: The Southern Colonies are seen as an integrated part 1175 00:59:49,852 --> 00:59:52,598 of an economic system that generates 1176 00:59:52,622 --> 00:59:55,467 great power and wealth for Britain, 1177 00:59:55,491 --> 00:59:58,337 so keeping the Southern Colonies 1178 00:59:58,361 --> 01:00:01,740 with their ability to provision the West Indian islands, 1179 01:00:01,764 --> 01:00:03,976 and particularly their plantation economies, 1180 01:00:04,000 --> 01:00:06,946 is seen as a vital British interest, 1181 01:00:06,970 --> 01:00:08,614 and that, more than anything else, 1182 01:00:08,638 --> 01:00:12,284 is why the war shifts to the South from 1778. 1183 01:00:12,308 --> 01:00:14,019 Woman: ♪ Sit down ♪ 1184 01:00:14,043 --> 01:00:16,522 Narrator: After General Clinton learned the French fleet 1185 01:00:16,546 --> 01:00:20,192 had sailed away from Boston, he prepared for the invasion 1186 01:00:20,216 --> 01:00:23,929 of the South that London had ordered him to undertake. 1187 01:00:23,953 --> 01:00:26,098 ♪ 1188 01:00:26,122 --> 01:00:29,001 Jasanoff: Another reason that the British pursue 1189 01:00:29,025 --> 01:00:33,072 a Southern strategy after Saratoga is that 1190 01:00:33,096 --> 01:00:35,874 they assume that there are many more Loyalists in the South 1191 01:00:35,898 --> 01:00:38,310 who will come to their aid. 1192 01:00:38,334 --> 01:00:39,945 There was also, of course, 1193 01:00:39,969 --> 01:00:43,182 the question of the enslaved population. 1194 01:00:43,206 --> 01:00:45,351 Voice: A great majority of the inhabitants 1195 01:00:45,375 --> 01:00:49,455 of North and South Carolina are loyal subjects. 1196 01:00:49,479 --> 01:00:52,925 It is also well known that the principal resources 1197 01:00:52,949 --> 01:00:56,562 for carrying on the rebellion are drawn from the labor 1198 01:00:56,586 --> 01:00:59,298 of an incredible multitude of Negroes 1199 01:00:59,322 --> 01:01:02,001 in the Southern Colonies. 1200 01:01:02,025 --> 01:01:05,738 But the instant that the King's troops are put in motion 1201 01:01:05,762 --> 01:01:08,874 in those colonies, these poor slaves 1202 01:01:08,898 --> 01:01:13,178 would be ready to rise upon their rebel masters. 1203 01:01:13,202 --> 01:01:16,582 Moses Kirkland. 1204 01:01:16,606 --> 01:01:18,951 So the Southern Strategy was to recapture 1205 01:01:18,975 --> 01:01:21,120 the Southern Colonies one by one, 1206 01:01:21,144 --> 01:01:24,256 starting with Georgia, and move up the coast, 1207 01:01:24,280 --> 01:01:28,293 and in each place, they hoped to put Loyalists in charge, 1208 01:01:28,317 --> 01:01:33,098 and that way, the British Army could continue moving north. 1209 01:01:33,122 --> 01:01:36,101 Narrator: from New York, General Clinton sent 1210 01:01:36,125 --> 01:01:38,871 a squadron south to try to capture Savannah, 1211 01:01:38,895 --> 01:01:43,275 the capital of Georgia and its only city of any size. 1212 01:01:43,299 --> 01:01:44,710 ♪ 1213 01:01:44,734 --> 01:01:46,245 With the help 1214 01:01:46,269 --> 01:01:49,148 of an African American river pilot named Sampson, 1215 01:01:49,172 --> 01:01:51,817 the British fleet sailed up the Savannah River 1216 01:01:51,841 --> 01:01:54,586 and began disembarking below the city 1217 01:01:54,610 --> 01:01:58,624 at dawn on December 29, 1778. 1218 01:01:58,648 --> 01:02:00,359 ♪ 1219 01:02:00,383 --> 01:02:05,964 Some 700 Continental troops and 150 local militia were waiting. 1220 01:02:05,988 --> 01:02:08,400 The British commander saw 1221 01:02:08,424 --> 01:02:10,035 that a direct assault 1222 01:02:10,059 --> 01:02:12,104 was certain to be bloody. 1223 01:02:12,128 --> 01:02:13,739 ♪ 1224 01:02:13,763 --> 01:02:17,409 Then Quamino Dolly, an elderly enslaved man, 1225 01:02:17,433 --> 01:02:20,412 led part of the British force through a swamp 1226 01:02:20,436 --> 01:02:23,482 that allowed them to get behind the startled Americans 1227 01:02:23,506 --> 01:02:25,250 and open fire. 1228 01:02:25,274 --> 01:02:26,952 [Gunfire] 1229 01:02:26,976 --> 01:02:28,854 The Patriots panicked. 1230 01:02:28,878 --> 01:02:31,690 British troops chased them through the town. 1231 01:02:31,714 --> 01:02:35,661 83 Americans were killed and 30 more drowned 1232 01:02:35,685 --> 01:02:39,231 trying to swim across the Yamacraw Creek. 1233 01:02:39,255 --> 01:02:42,968 453 surrendered. 1234 01:02:42,992 --> 01:02:46,138 The British lost just 7 dead. 1235 01:02:46,162 --> 01:02:48,073 ♪ 1236 01:02:48,097 --> 01:02:51,910 Over the weeks that followed, The British captured Augusta 1237 01:02:51,934 --> 01:02:55,514 and reimposed royal rule in Georgia. 1238 01:02:55,538 --> 01:02:57,583 "I have," their commander boasted, 1239 01:02:57,607 --> 01:03:03,789 "ripped one star and one stripe from the rebel flag." 1240 01:03:03,813 --> 01:03:05,891 [Bird squawks] 1241 01:03:05,915 --> 01:03:08,327 Voice: My disposition always active, 1242 01:03:08,351 --> 01:03:10,596 I could not content myself at home 1243 01:03:10,620 --> 01:03:12,331 while my fellow countrymen 1244 01:03:12,355 --> 01:03:14,833 were fighting the battles of my country. 1245 01:03:14,857 --> 01:03:16,635 John Greenwood. 1246 01:03:16,659 --> 01:03:18,137 ♪ 1247 01:03:18,161 --> 01:03:20,773 Narrator: In January of 1779, 1248 01:03:20,797 --> 01:03:23,208 the teenaged fifer John Greenwood 1249 01:03:23,232 --> 01:03:25,377 decided to try something new. 1250 01:03:25,401 --> 01:03:28,380 He would sign onto a Boston privateer, 1251 01:03:28,404 --> 01:03:31,817 hoping both to strike more blows at the British 1252 01:03:31,841 --> 01:03:34,987 and to make a fortune for himself. 1253 01:03:35,011 --> 01:03:39,124 He chose the 18-gun, 130-man "Cumberland" 1254 01:03:39,148 --> 01:03:42,060 because its commander was Captain John Manley, 1255 01:03:42,084 --> 01:03:44,663 who had been the most successful sea raider 1256 01:03:44,687 --> 01:03:46,965 in the Continental Navy for years 1257 01:03:46,989 --> 01:03:50,169 and who was now a civilian only because there were 1258 01:03:50,193 --> 01:03:54,873 too few naval vessels for him to have one to command. 1259 01:03:54,897 --> 01:03:57,409 Atkinson: The Americans have no navy to speak of. 1260 01:03:57,433 --> 01:04:01,880 Congress asks that 13 frigates be built. 1261 01:04:01,904 --> 01:04:04,817 None of those frigates really get into action 1262 01:04:04,841 --> 01:04:07,119 in a meaningful way. 1263 01:04:07,143 --> 01:04:10,055 The British have 400 warships. 1264 01:04:10,079 --> 01:04:13,425 What the Americans do have are privateers. 1265 01:04:13,449 --> 01:04:19,097 Philbrick: Privateers made warfare a for-profit endeavor, 1266 01:04:19,121 --> 01:04:22,234 and so you had countless sailors in New England 1267 01:04:22,258 --> 01:04:24,303 and up and down the coast, volunteering 1268 01:04:24,327 --> 01:04:28,140 to go out in privateers, take British vessels, 1269 01:04:28,164 --> 01:04:31,577 and make them money from what they got from them. 1270 01:04:31,601 --> 01:04:34,880 Narrator: Profits from privateering attracted 1271 01:04:34,904 --> 01:04:37,015 a host of Revolutionary leaders, 1272 01:04:37,039 --> 01:04:39,852 including Generals Nathanael Greene, 1273 01:04:39,876 --> 01:04:43,322 Henry Knox, and George Washington himself. 1274 01:04:43,346 --> 01:04:47,292 Investors shared the profits from the sale of captured cargo 1275 01:04:47,316 --> 01:04:49,895 with the officers and men who took them, 1276 01:04:49,919 --> 01:04:51,930 like the crew of the "Cumberland," 1277 01:04:51,954 --> 01:04:53,899 John Greenwood's ship. 1278 01:04:53,923 --> 01:04:56,668 Voice: Every ship had the right or took it 1279 01:04:56,692 --> 01:05:00,072 to wear what kind of fancy flag the captain pleased. 1280 01:05:00,096 --> 01:05:03,041 Captain Manley's flag was a very singular one, 1281 01:05:03,065 --> 01:05:06,712 with a pine tree painted green and under the tree 1282 01:05:06,736 --> 01:05:10,582 the representation of a large rattlesnake cut into 13 pieces, 1283 01:05:10,606 --> 01:05:15,621 then in large black letters, "Join or Die." 1284 01:05:15,645 --> 01:05:17,389 John Greenwood. 1285 01:05:17,413 --> 01:05:18,590 [Cannon fire] 1286 01:05:18,614 --> 01:05:20,325 Narrator: Over the course of the Revolution, 1287 01:05:20,349 --> 01:05:23,161 some 1,700 American privateers 1288 01:05:23,185 --> 01:05:25,430 are thought to have prowled the seas, 1289 01:05:25,454 --> 01:05:30,068 capturing nearly 2,000 British vessels. 1290 01:05:30,092 --> 01:05:33,138 John Greenwood and the "Cumberland" set out 1291 01:05:33,162 --> 01:05:36,408 for the Caribbean, the most profitable hunting ground. 1292 01:05:36,432 --> 01:05:40,946 Americans had already seized so many British merchant ships 1293 01:05:40,970 --> 01:05:44,316 that they had reduced the sugar trade by 2/3. 1294 01:05:44,340 --> 01:05:46,385 ♪ 1295 01:05:46,409 --> 01:05:49,321 The "Cumberland's" voyage went smoothly at first. 1296 01:05:49,345 --> 01:05:51,957 They easily commandeered a British ship 1297 01:05:51,981 --> 01:05:54,960 loaded with soldiers and wine. 1298 01:05:54,984 --> 01:05:57,362 A few days later, they came within sight 1299 01:05:57,386 --> 01:06:01,967 of the port of Bridgetown on the island of Barbados... 1300 01:06:01,991 --> 01:06:06,772 but the next morning, a British Navy frigate called the "Pomona" 1301 01:06:06,796 --> 01:06:11,710 bore down on them with 36 guns and a crew of 300. 1302 01:06:11,734 --> 01:06:13,545 [Cannon fire] 1303 01:06:13,569 --> 01:06:15,314 British cannonballs 1304 01:06:15,338 --> 01:06:17,516 tore through the "Cumberland's" sails and rigging. 1305 01:06:17,540 --> 01:06:20,285 One shot went "through and through" the hull, 1306 01:06:20,309 --> 01:06:23,956 Greenwood remembered, causing the whole ship to shudder. 1307 01:06:23,980 --> 01:06:27,492 There was nothing else to do but surrender. 1308 01:06:27,516 --> 01:06:29,394 ♪ 1309 01:06:29,418 --> 01:06:31,596 The Americans spent 5 grim months 1310 01:06:31,620 --> 01:06:35,367 in the Bridgetown jail before they were exchanged. 1311 01:06:35,391 --> 01:06:36,902 ♪ 1312 01:06:36,926 --> 01:06:40,973 John Greenwood would serve on at least 4 more privateers 1313 01:06:40,997 --> 01:06:43,141 before the Revolution ended. 1314 01:06:43,165 --> 01:06:46,912 He was captured and imprisoned 3 more times 1315 01:06:46,936 --> 01:06:49,648 and somehow survived it all. 1316 01:06:49,672 --> 01:06:52,017 ♪ 1317 01:06:52,041 --> 01:06:54,286 After the war, John Greenwood 1318 01:06:54,310 --> 01:06:57,155 would become a prominent Manhattan dentist. 1319 01:06:57,179 --> 01:07:00,459 His most celebrated patient was his old commander, 1320 01:07:00,483 --> 01:07:04,196 George Washington, for whom he fashioned dentures 1321 01:07:04,220 --> 01:07:10,459 of human and horse's teeth and ivory from a hippopotamus. 1322 01:07:12,061 --> 01:07:13,839 [Bird squawks] 1323 01:07:13,863 --> 01:07:15,374 Voice: You ask me, 1324 01:07:15,398 --> 01:07:18,343 "Can the enemy continue to prosecute the war?" 1325 01:07:18,367 --> 01:07:22,180 I answer, "Can we carry on the war much longer?" 1326 01:07:22,204 --> 01:07:24,583 Certainly, no. 1327 01:07:24,607 --> 01:07:27,285 The true point of light, then, in which to place 1328 01:07:27,309 --> 01:07:29,354 and consider this matter is 1329 01:07:29,378 --> 01:07:32,324 not simply whether Great Britain can carry on the war, 1330 01:07:32,348 --> 01:07:36,361 but whose finances... Theirs or ours... 1331 01:07:36,385 --> 01:07:38,797 Is most likely to fail. 1332 01:07:38,821 --> 01:07:40,832 George Washington. 1333 01:07:40,856 --> 01:07:45,337 Narrator: General Washington spent the first 5 weeks of 1779 1334 01:07:45,361 --> 01:07:48,707 in Philadelphia, summoned there by Congress. 1335 01:07:48,731 --> 01:07:51,643 It was not a happy visit. 1336 01:07:51,667 --> 01:07:55,080 "I never was much... afraid of the enemy's arms," 1337 01:07:55,104 --> 01:07:57,282 Washington wrote a friend, 1338 01:07:57,306 --> 01:08:00,786 but he did fear that people were wearying of the war 1339 01:08:00,810 --> 01:08:05,123 that had gone on for 4 years and still had no end in sight, 1340 01:08:05,147 --> 01:08:07,759 and Congress seemed mired, he said, 1341 01:08:07,783 --> 01:08:12,097 in "party disputes and personal quarrels." 1342 01:08:12,121 --> 01:08:15,467 The value of Continental currency was melting 1343 01:08:15,491 --> 01:08:18,470 "like snow before a hot sun," he complained, 1344 01:08:18,494 --> 01:08:22,340 so that "a wagon load of money will scarcely purchase 1345 01:08:22,364 --> 01:08:25,777 a wagon load of provisions." 1346 01:08:25,801 --> 01:08:28,547 Christopher Brown: On both the North American side 1347 01:08:28,571 --> 01:08:31,583 and on the British side, there is an exhaustion 1348 01:08:31,607 --> 01:08:35,654 that is settling in and an economic reality for both... 1349 01:08:35,678 --> 01:08:38,023 The American side, the question of coming up 1350 01:08:38,047 --> 01:08:41,326 with the resources every year to be able to fight the war... 1351 01:08:41,350 --> 01:08:44,463 Uniforms, guns, paying the men, 1352 01:08:44,487 --> 01:08:47,332 replacing the ones who die, replacing the ones who desert. 1353 01:08:47,356 --> 01:08:49,768 Britain has the money, 1354 01:08:49,792 --> 01:08:54,005 but it starts to look a little bit like a sunk-cost problem. 1355 01:08:54,029 --> 01:08:57,309 "Are we going to continue to pour money 1356 01:08:57,333 --> 01:09:00,045 into an effort when there's no end in view?" 1357 01:09:00,069 --> 01:09:02,380 ♪ 1358 01:09:02,404 --> 01:09:04,282 Hogeland: One of the critical ways by which 1359 01:09:04,306 --> 01:09:08,320 the Revolutionary War was funded was debt. 1360 01:09:08,344 --> 01:09:10,956 There were a number of ways to raise money, 1361 01:09:10,980 --> 01:09:12,858 but the best ways were to borrow, 1362 01:09:12,882 --> 01:09:16,194 so you had to go to lenders, largely a merchant class, 1363 01:09:16,218 --> 01:09:19,097 but also planters and even some prosperous farmers. 1364 01:09:19,121 --> 01:09:21,766 It was a bit of a risky speculation 1365 01:09:21,790 --> 01:09:24,436 because getting paid back and getting your interest paid 1366 01:09:24,460 --> 01:09:28,273 would depend upon winning this extremely unlikely war. 1367 01:09:28,297 --> 01:09:31,042 Nonetheless, that was a pretty good way 1368 01:09:31,066 --> 01:09:32,911 of raising money to fight the Revolution, 1369 01:09:32,935 --> 01:09:37,716 and it created an entire class of American lenders 1370 01:09:37,740 --> 01:09:40,285 with strong interests in creating 1371 01:09:40,309 --> 01:09:44,022 a very strong government because that was the only way 1372 01:09:44,046 --> 01:09:47,692 they could see themselves getting paid their interest. 1373 01:09:47,716 --> 01:09:49,294 ♪ 1374 01:09:49,318 --> 01:09:51,229 Voice: Shall we at last become the victims 1375 01:09:51,253 --> 01:09:54,266 of our own abominable lust of gain? 1376 01:09:54,290 --> 01:09:57,169 Forbid it, heaven. Forbid it all. 1377 01:09:57,193 --> 01:10:00,038 Our cause is noble. 1378 01:10:00,062 --> 01:10:02,641 It is the cause of mankind, 1379 01:10:02,665 --> 01:10:06,344 and the danger to it springs from ourselves. 1380 01:10:06,368 --> 01:10:08,637 George Washington. 1381 01:10:10,472 --> 01:10:13,084 ♪ 1382 01:10:13,108 --> 01:10:15,287 Voice: When we took up the hatchet 1383 01:10:15,311 --> 01:10:17,389 and struck the Virginians, 1384 01:10:17,413 --> 01:10:20,525 our nation was alone and surrounded by them, 1385 01:10:20,549 --> 01:10:23,495 and after we had lost some of our best warriors, 1386 01:10:23,519 --> 01:10:25,664 we were forced to leave our towns, 1387 01:10:25,688 --> 01:10:29,167 and now we live in the grass as you see us, 1388 01:10:29,191 --> 01:10:32,003 but we are not yet conquered. 1389 01:10:32,027 --> 01:10:34,472 Dragging Canoe. 1390 01:10:34,496 --> 01:10:36,841 ♪ 1391 01:10:36,865 --> 01:10:41,046 Colin Calloway: Indian Country is a mosaic 1392 01:10:41,070 --> 01:10:44,382 of multiple Indigenous nations, 1393 01:10:44,406 --> 01:10:46,384 each one of whom 1394 01:10:46,408 --> 01:10:49,354 is pursuing its own interests 1395 01:10:49,378 --> 01:10:52,457 and its own foreign policy. 1396 01:10:52,481 --> 01:10:54,626 Woman: [Singing in Native language] 1397 01:10:54,650 --> 01:10:56,695 Narrator: In the Ohio River Valley, 1398 01:10:56,719 --> 01:10:59,231 the Delawares and their Shawnee allies 1399 01:10:59,255 --> 01:11:01,266 had a long, contentious history 1400 01:11:01,290 --> 01:11:03,935 with their expansionist neighbors. 1401 01:11:03,959 --> 01:11:05,837 When the Revolution began, 1402 01:11:05,861 --> 01:11:08,673 both nations struggled to stay out of it, 1403 01:11:08,697 --> 01:11:12,143 but after Virginia militiamen violated a truce, 1404 01:11:12,167 --> 01:11:15,714 most Shawnees sided with the British. 1405 01:11:15,738 --> 01:11:20,485 In 1778, White Eyes, a Delaware war chief 1406 01:11:20,509 --> 01:11:23,455 who leaned toward supporting the United States, 1407 01:11:23,479 --> 01:11:26,992 went to Pittsburgh to negotiate with the Americans. 1408 01:11:27,016 --> 01:11:28,360 ♪ 1409 01:11:28,384 --> 01:11:30,695 The resulting Treaty of Fort Pitt 1410 01:11:30,719 --> 01:11:33,665 seemed like a landmark agreement. 1411 01:11:33,689 --> 01:11:35,533 Philip Deloria: The Fort Pitt Treaty 1412 01:11:35,557 --> 01:11:38,870 is a really formal, legalistic document. 1413 01:11:38,894 --> 01:11:41,940 An article near the end of the treaty says, 1414 01:11:41,964 --> 01:11:44,576 "Oh, and by the way, when this is all over, 1415 01:11:44,600 --> 01:11:48,813 "Indians can have a state like other states, 1416 01:11:48,837 --> 01:11:50,782 and the Delaware"... this is the treaty with the Delaware... 1417 01:11:50,806 --> 01:11:53,018 "the Delaware will be the head of the state," 1418 01:11:53,042 --> 01:11:56,921 and so it's making this very interesting promise 1419 01:11:56,945 --> 01:12:00,058 of the possibility that Indian people could be 1420 01:12:00,082 --> 01:12:02,060 part of the American republic. 1421 01:12:02,084 --> 01:12:03,828 Narrator: White Eyes was made 1422 01:12:03,852 --> 01:12:06,197 a colonel in the Continental Army 1423 01:12:06,221 --> 01:12:08,833 and accompanied an American expedition 1424 01:12:08,857 --> 01:12:11,369 against the British at Fort Detroit... 1425 01:12:11,393 --> 01:12:13,071 [Gunfire] 1426 01:12:13,095 --> 01:12:17,876 but somewhere along the way, Patriot militiamen killed him. 1427 01:12:17,900 --> 01:12:22,314 With his death, the Americans had lost their best Indian ally 1428 01:12:22,338 --> 01:12:24,449 in the Ohio Country, 1429 01:12:24,473 --> 01:12:27,085 and the promise of the treaty was forgotten. 1430 01:12:27,109 --> 01:12:28,787 [Horse neighs] 1431 01:12:28,811 --> 01:12:32,524 In a council at Detroit, a delegation of Shawnees 1432 01:12:32,548 --> 01:12:35,293 and Delawares promised the British that they 1433 01:12:35,317 --> 01:12:37,896 would take up the tomahawk, "sharpen" it, 1434 01:12:37,920 --> 01:12:41,266 "and strike against our Common Enemy." 1435 01:12:41,290 --> 01:12:43,902 Calloway: The British have been telling them all along, 1436 01:12:43,926 --> 01:12:47,005 "Don't trust the Americans because the Americans 1437 01:12:47,029 --> 01:12:49,341 are out to take your land and to kill you." 1438 01:12:49,365 --> 01:12:53,445 Voice: I always knew they were for open war 1439 01:12:53,469 --> 01:12:55,480 but never before could get 1440 01:12:55,504 --> 01:12:58,249 a proper excuse for exterminating them. 1441 01:12:58,273 --> 01:13:02,253 To excel them in barbarity is the only way to make war 1442 01:13:02,277 --> 01:13:05,156 and gain a name among the Indians. 1443 01:13:05,180 --> 01:13:09,260 The cries of the widows and the fatherless on the frontiers 1444 01:13:09,284 --> 01:13:12,497 required their blood from my hands. 1445 01:13:12,521 --> 01:13:14,833 George Rogers Clark. 1446 01:13:14,857 --> 01:13:16,801 ♪ 1447 01:13:16,825 --> 01:13:18,770 Michael Witgen: George Rogers Clark is 1448 01:13:18,794 --> 01:13:21,473 an Indian fighter and an Indian hater. 1449 01:13:21,497 --> 01:13:24,409 He imagines himself as sort of seeking justice 1450 01:13:24,433 --> 01:13:27,479 for white settlers who've died on the frontier 1451 01:13:27,503 --> 01:13:29,714 at the hands of Native people, 1452 01:13:29,738 --> 01:13:31,583 and he imagines himself 1453 01:13:31,607 --> 01:13:33,985 as sort of the avenging angel of these communities. 1454 01:13:34,009 --> 01:13:37,455 There is, to be sure, lots of violence in this backcountry, 1455 01:13:37,479 --> 01:13:39,391 in part because white settlers are squatting 1456 01:13:39,415 --> 01:13:41,059 on Native territory. 1457 01:13:41,083 --> 01:13:42,560 ♪ 1458 01:13:42,584 --> 01:13:45,230 Narrator: In February of 1779, 1459 01:13:45,254 --> 01:13:48,633 Clark led his Virginians east from the Mississippi 1460 01:13:48,657 --> 01:13:52,804 to take British outposts and destroy any Indians 1461 01:13:52,828 --> 01:13:55,273 who dared support the enemy. 1462 01:13:55,297 --> 01:13:58,410 His first target was Fort Vincennes 1463 01:13:58,434 --> 01:14:02,614 on the Wabash River in what is now Indiana. 1464 01:14:02,638 --> 01:14:07,786 There, he had 4 bound Indian captives lined up 1465 01:14:07,810 --> 01:14:11,756 in full view of the fort and then hacked to death. 1466 01:14:11,780 --> 01:14:15,493 Clark warned that if Vincennes did not surrender, 1467 01:14:15,517 --> 01:14:19,464 all its defenders would suffer the same fate. 1468 01:14:19,488 --> 01:14:22,867 The British commander gave up. 1469 01:14:22,891 --> 01:14:26,805 Then Clark sent an ultimatum to any Indians 1470 01:14:26,829 --> 01:14:30,308 tempted to make war on American settlers. 1471 01:14:30,332 --> 01:14:32,477 Voice: I don't care whether you are 1472 01:14:32,501 --> 01:14:36,047 for peace or war, as I glory in war. 1473 01:14:36,071 --> 01:14:39,451 This is the last speech you may ever expect. 1474 01:14:39,475 --> 01:14:42,320 The next thing will be the tomahawk, 1475 01:14:42,344 --> 01:14:46,524 and you may expect in 4 moons to see your women and children 1476 01:14:46,548 --> 01:14:48,660 given to the dogs to eat 1477 01:14:48,684 --> 01:14:51,429 while those nations that have kept their words with me 1478 01:14:51,453 --> 01:14:53,131 will flourish and grow 1479 01:14:53,155 --> 01:14:55,333 like the willow trees on the riverbanks. 1480 01:14:55,357 --> 01:14:57,035 George Rogers Clark. 1481 01:14:57,059 --> 01:14:59,771 Narrator: Your "Name Strikes Terror to both English 1482 01:14:59,795 --> 01:15:02,941 and Indians," one of Clark's captains told him, 1483 01:15:02,965 --> 01:15:06,611 but "if there's not a stop put to Killing Indian friends, 1484 01:15:06,635 --> 01:15:09,747 we must Expect to have all foes." 1485 01:15:09,771 --> 01:15:12,750 Clark would not listen. 1486 01:15:12,774 --> 01:15:15,620 Native people from the Smoky Mountains 1487 01:15:15,644 --> 01:15:18,556 to the Great Lakes were now coming together 1488 01:15:18,580 --> 01:15:20,525 to forget former quarrels 1489 01:15:20,549 --> 01:15:24,863 and unite against the United States. 1490 01:15:24,887 --> 01:15:28,800 Calloway: Most Native Americans recognize that 1491 01:15:28,824 --> 01:15:32,670 the new United States represents 1492 01:15:32,694 --> 01:15:35,106 an existential threat to them, 1493 01:15:35,130 --> 01:15:38,776 their way of life, and their sovereignty, 1494 01:15:38,800 --> 01:15:41,246 so it makes sense for Indian people... 1495 01:15:41,270 --> 01:15:44,949 For most Indian people... To side with the British 1496 01:15:44,973 --> 01:15:49,454 as the best bet to preserve their own independence 1497 01:15:49,478 --> 01:15:52,156 and protect their land. 1498 01:15:52,180 --> 01:15:56,227 Narrator: By the spring of 1779, hundreds of people, 1499 01:15:56,251 --> 01:16:00,465 Indians and settlers, had been killed in the West. 1500 01:16:00,489 --> 01:16:02,166 ♪ 1501 01:16:02,190 --> 01:16:05,637 Deloria: There's a randomness to this, as well. 1502 01:16:05,661 --> 01:16:07,539 "Those Indians killed some people over there, 1503 01:16:07,563 --> 01:16:09,274 so we're gonna kill these Indians," 1504 01:16:09,298 --> 01:16:12,143 but they didn't have anything to do with it, 1505 01:16:12,167 --> 01:16:14,746 so you never quite know who's gonna come after you, 1506 01:16:14,770 --> 01:16:16,247 and you never know what the logic is, 1507 01:16:16,271 --> 01:16:18,283 and there's, most of the time, not a logic about 1508 01:16:18,307 --> 01:16:20,552 why kill that person and not kill this person, 1509 01:16:20,576 --> 01:16:22,887 so it's very uncertain kind of terrain, 1510 01:16:22,911 --> 01:16:24,889 and I think it breeds 1511 01:16:24,913 --> 01:16:28,226 an intense kind of violence that happens here. 1512 01:16:28,250 --> 01:16:30,495 ♪ 1513 01:16:30,519 --> 01:16:33,298 Narrator: A Shawnee boy named Tecumseh, 1514 01:16:33,322 --> 01:16:35,867 one of the war's many refugees, 1515 01:16:35,891 --> 01:16:38,169 would never forget the devastation 1516 01:16:38,193 --> 01:16:42,307 that the American Revolution had brought to his country, 1517 01:16:42,331 --> 01:16:44,742 but for him and his people, 1518 01:16:44,766 --> 01:16:47,645 the Revolution was just one chapter 1519 01:16:47,669 --> 01:16:50,481 in their struggle for independence. 1520 01:16:50,505 --> 01:16:54,319 That war would rage on for decades. 1521 01:16:54,343 --> 01:16:56,354 ♪ 1522 01:16:56,378 --> 01:16:58,990 [Gulls squawking] 1523 01:16:59,014 --> 01:17:01,092 Voice: If the enemy have it in their power 1524 01:17:01,116 --> 01:17:03,261 to press us hard this campaign, 1525 01:17:03,285 --> 01:17:05,430 I know not what may be the consequence. 1526 01:17:05,454 --> 01:17:06,965 George Washington. 1527 01:17:06,989 --> 01:17:08,366 Narrator: Like Washington, 1528 01:17:08,390 --> 01:17:11,069 British General Clinton was stretched thin, too, 1529 01:17:11,093 --> 01:17:13,638 and could only take small-scale actions. 1530 01:17:13,662 --> 01:17:15,573 [Cannon fire] 1531 01:17:15,597 --> 01:17:18,810 In May of 1779, he ordered raids 1532 01:17:18,834 --> 01:17:22,513 in the Chesapeake Bay to destroy Virginia shipyards, 1533 01:17:22,537 --> 01:17:25,850 dry docks, and tobacco warehouses. 1534 01:17:25,874 --> 01:17:31,756 17 ships were needed just to carry the loot back to New York. 1535 01:17:31,780 --> 01:17:34,258 A few weeks later, he dispatched ships 1536 01:17:34,282 --> 01:17:37,629 to sail up the Hudson and capture two forts... 1537 01:17:37,653 --> 01:17:41,466 At Stony Point and Verplanck's Point. 1538 01:17:41,490 --> 01:17:43,935 The ease with which those forts fell 1539 01:17:43,959 --> 01:17:47,438 convinced Washington to strengthen fortifications 1540 01:17:47,462 --> 01:17:49,340 10 miles to the north 1541 01:17:49,364 --> 01:17:52,944 at a narrow curve in the river called West Point. 1542 01:17:52,968 --> 01:17:55,546 Washington believed West Point 1543 01:17:55,570 --> 01:17:58,816 "the most important post in America." 1544 01:17:58,840 --> 01:18:03,121 The Polish engineer Colonel Tadeusz Kosciuszko 1545 01:18:03,145 --> 01:18:05,556 was given the task of designing a series 1546 01:18:05,580 --> 01:18:10,628 of interlocking fortifications on both sides of the river. 1547 01:18:10,652 --> 01:18:14,932 An enormous chain weighing 65 tons 1548 01:18:14,956 --> 01:18:17,802 and covered by gun batteries at both ends 1549 01:18:17,826 --> 01:18:21,039 had been installed to block hostile passage. 1550 01:18:21,063 --> 01:18:23,007 ♪ 1551 01:18:23,031 --> 01:18:26,511 In early July, Clinton ordered another expedition 1552 01:18:26,535 --> 01:18:28,312 against the Patriot privateering 1553 01:18:28,336 --> 01:18:31,349 that had taken such a toll on British shipping, 1554 01:18:31,373 --> 01:18:35,319 burning Norwalk, Fairfield, and New Haven. 1555 01:18:35,343 --> 01:18:37,188 ♪ 1556 01:18:37,212 --> 01:18:40,792 It had been more than a year since the Battle of Monmouth. 1557 01:18:40,816 --> 01:18:43,828 Washington remained eager to take back New York, 1558 01:18:43,852 --> 01:18:47,031 but he didn't have the men or the ships. 1559 01:18:47,055 --> 01:18:49,701 Still, he understood it would be damaging 1560 01:18:49,725 --> 01:18:54,572 to his army's reputation if he did not strike back somewhere, 1561 01:18:54,596 --> 01:18:59,577 so on the night of July 15th, he ordered General Anthony Wayne 1562 01:18:59,601 --> 01:19:03,247 and a hand-picked force of 1,350 men 1563 01:19:03,271 --> 01:19:06,417 to attack Stony Point on the Hudson. 1564 01:19:06,441 --> 01:19:09,821 Under the cover of darkness, they took it. 1565 01:19:09,845 --> 01:19:12,023 [Musket fire] 1566 01:19:12,047 --> 01:19:13,758 [Sword is drawn from scabbard] 1567 01:19:13,782 --> 01:19:16,894 "The fort & garrison are ours," Wayne reported 1568 01:19:16,918 --> 01:19:19,630 back to Washington at 2:00 in the morning. 1569 01:19:19,654 --> 01:19:22,767 "Our officers & men behaved like men 1570 01:19:22,791 --> 01:19:25,269 who were determined to be free." 1571 01:19:25,293 --> 01:19:28,873 ♪ 1572 01:19:28,897 --> 01:19:31,909 Meanwhile, when enslaved African Americans 1573 01:19:31,933 --> 01:19:34,946 from New England to Georgia learned that summer 1574 01:19:34,970 --> 01:19:37,682 that General Clinton had issued a proclamation 1575 01:19:37,706 --> 01:19:41,519 promising "refuge" within the British Army to "any Negro" 1576 01:19:41,543 --> 01:19:45,456 who was "the property of a Rebel," many of them 1577 01:19:45,480 --> 01:19:49,293 began to see the British flag as a symbol of hope. 1578 01:19:49,317 --> 01:19:50,995 ♪ 1579 01:19:51,019 --> 01:19:55,032 Like Lord Dunmore before him, Clinton was no abolitionist. 1580 01:19:55,056 --> 01:19:58,336 He decreed that any Black man captured while serving 1581 01:19:58,360 --> 01:20:02,039 with the rebel army was to be sold as a slave, 1582 01:20:02,063 --> 01:20:06,043 and the profit divided among his captors. 1583 01:20:06,067 --> 01:20:10,248 The British commander's motives were exclusively military... 1584 01:20:10,272 --> 01:20:13,217 To strip rebels of their human "property" 1585 01:20:13,241 --> 01:20:19,090 and assemble a big workforce to support his army... 1586 01:20:19,114 --> 01:20:23,161 but for many Black Americans, their war was about 1587 01:20:23,185 --> 01:20:26,964 ending slavery for themselves, their children, 1588 01:20:26,988 --> 01:20:30,134 and their children's children. 1589 01:20:30,158 --> 01:20:34,438 Vincent Brown: We know that about 15,000 Black people 1590 01:20:34,462 --> 01:20:37,175 actually joined the British or ran away to the British lines 1591 01:20:37,199 --> 01:20:41,679 versus about 5,000 ultimately entering the Patriot cause, 1592 01:20:41,703 --> 01:20:45,783 and that's because, for many of those enslaved people, 1593 01:20:45,807 --> 01:20:47,785 the British represented freedom. 1594 01:20:47,809 --> 01:20:49,787 The Patriots did not. 1595 01:20:49,811 --> 01:20:52,757 That's a hard story to tell to Americans. 1596 01:20:52,781 --> 01:20:57,595 ♪ 1597 01:20:57,619 --> 01:20:58,863 Man: Fire! 1598 01:20:58,887 --> 01:21:00,464 [Cannon fire] 1599 01:21:00,488 --> 01:21:02,466 [Men shouting] 1600 01:21:02,490 --> 01:21:07,138 Narrator: In June 1779, King Carlos III of Spain 1601 01:21:07,162 --> 01:21:10,274 joined France in the war against England. 1602 01:21:10,298 --> 01:21:13,277 His goal was to recapture for his empire 1603 01:21:13,301 --> 01:21:15,746 everything Spain had lost to Britain 1604 01:21:15,770 --> 01:21:19,951 during the Seven Years' War and to add to it, as well, 1605 01:21:19,975 --> 01:21:24,055 including Gibraltar, the British-held spit of land 1606 01:21:24,079 --> 01:21:27,325 that controlled the narrow entrance to the Mediterranean. 1607 01:21:27,349 --> 01:21:28,993 ♪ 1608 01:21:29,017 --> 01:21:31,729 For the Spanish king, like the French king, 1609 01:21:31,753 --> 01:21:37,902 the American Revolution was useful only to undercut Britain. 1610 01:21:37,926 --> 01:21:39,837 Christopher Brown: This is not about 1611 01:21:39,861 --> 01:21:41,672 securing American independence. 1612 01:21:41,696 --> 01:21:47,044 This is about cutting Britain's economic commercial might 1613 01:21:47,068 --> 01:21:50,214 down to size, but it's risky, though, 1614 01:21:50,238 --> 01:21:54,986 especially for Spain, because Spain has a empire 1615 01:21:55,010 --> 01:21:56,654 in the Americas that looks 1616 01:21:56,678 --> 01:21:59,724 a little bit like Britain's North American empire 1617 01:21:59,748 --> 01:22:06,030 only much larger and many, many, many more people. 1618 01:22:06,054 --> 01:22:10,167 And so you encourage 1619 01:22:10,191 --> 01:22:14,605 a colonial independence movement in the British Empire, 1620 01:22:14,629 --> 01:22:18,276 who's to say your own people won't get the same idea? 1621 01:22:18,300 --> 01:22:21,479 Narrator: Given the sudden widening of the global war, 1622 01:22:21,503 --> 01:22:25,082 the opposition in Parliament called upon King George 1623 01:22:25,106 --> 01:22:28,786 to direct measures for restoring peace to America. 1624 01:22:28,810 --> 01:22:31,989 He would not hear of it. 1625 01:22:32,013 --> 01:22:34,325 Voice: The present contest with America 1626 01:22:34,349 --> 01:22:36,794 I cannot help seeing as the most serious 1627 01:22:36,818 --> 01:22:39,563 in which any country was ever engaged. 1628 01:22:39,587 --> 01:22:44,101 Step by step, the demands of America have risen. 1629 01:22:44,125 --> 01:22:46,938 Independence is their object. 1630 01:22:46,962 --> 01:22:52,209 Should America succeed in that, the West Indies must follow. 1631 01:22:52,233 --> 01:22:55,346 Ireland must soon be a separate state. 1632 01:22:55,370 --> 01:22:59,083 Then this island would be reduced to itself 1633 01:22:59,107 --> 01:23:03,054 and soon would be a poor island indeed. 1634 01:23:03,078 --> 01:23:04,789 King George III. 1635 01:23:04,813 --> 01:23:07,258 [Gull squawking] 1636 01:23:07,282 --> 01:23:09,627 Voice: "London Morning Post." 1637 01:23:09,651 --> 01:23:12,663 John Paul Jones resembles a Jack o' Lantern 1638 01:23:12,687 --> 01:23:17,134 to mislead our mariners and terrify our coasts. 1639 01:23:17,158 --> 01:23:20,304 He's no sooner seen than lost. 1640 01:23:20,328 --> 01:23:21,839 ♪ 1641 01:23:21,863 --> 01:23:25,376 Narrator: John Paul Jones was now in command of another ship... 1642 01:23:25,400 --> 01:23:28,312 A slow, battered French merchant vessel. 1643 01:23:28,336 --> 01:23:32,650 He fitted it out with 40 old French guns, 1644 01:23:32,674 --> 01:23:37,188 gathered a 320-man crew from 8 different countries, 1645 01:23:37,212 --> 01:23:39,657 and renamed it the "Bonhomme Richard" 1646 01:23:39,681 --> 01:23:43,094 after the French version of Benjamin Franklin's 1647 01:23:43,118 --> 01:23:44,929 "Poor Richard's Almanack." 1648 01:23:44,953 --> 01:23:46,630 ♪ 1649 01:23:46,654 --> 01:23:50,668 In August, the "Richard" and several smaller warships 1650 01:23:50,692 --> 01:23:53,304 sailed all the way around the British Isles 1651 01:23:53,328 --> 01:23:55,506 in search of merchant prizes. 1652 01:23:55,530 --> 01:24:01,345 Jones took 17 ships, captured 100 British sailors, 1653 01:24:01,369 --> 01:24:03,748 and locked them up below his decks. 1654 01:24:03,772 --> 01:24:05,549 ♪ 1655 01:24:05,573 --> 01:24:08,486 Late in the afternoon on September 23rd, 1656 01:24:08,510 --> 01:24:11,422 just off the chalk cliffs of Flamborough Head, 1657 01:24:11,446 --> 01:24:16,527 Jones caught up with a convoy of some 40 British supply ships. 1658 01:24:16,551 --> 01:24:19,830 He signaled his squadron to form a line of battle. 1659 01:24:19,854 --> 01:24:24,235 When they failed to respond, the "Bonhomme Richard" alone 1660 01:24:24,259 --> 01:24:26,037 engaged the "Serapis," 1661 01:24:26,061 --> 01:24:29,774 the larger of the two Royal Navy escort ships. 1662 01:24:29,798 --> 01:24:33,277 Commanded by Richard Pearson, a veteran sailor, 1663 01:24:33,301 --> 01:24:38,082 the British vessel was a fast, new 44-gun frigate. 1664 01:24:38,106 --> 01:24:39,617 [Cannon fire] 1665 01:24:39,641 --> 01:24:42,953 As the battle began, hundreds of English villagers 1666 01:24:42,977 --> 01:24:45,122 lined the cliffs, hoping to see 1667 01:24:45,146 --> 01:24:48,059 a British man-of-war destroy the dreaded rebel 1668 01:24:48,083 --> 01:24:50,895 they called "Pirate Jones." 1669 01:24:50,919 --> 01:24:53,197 [Men shouting] 1670 01:24:53,221 --> 01:24:55,566 Narrator: A British broadside caused cannon 1671 01:24:55,590 --> 01:25:00,304 on the "Richard's" lower gun deck to explode, killing men 1672 01:25:00,328 --> 01:25:03,441 and putting the rest of the battery out of action. 1673 01:25:03,465 --> 01:25:07,578 At one point, the "Serapis" rammed the "Richard." 1674 01:25:07,602 --> 01:25:09,547 Their rigging became entangled, 1675 01:25:09,571 --> 01:25:12,183 and before the British ship could break free, 1676 01:25:12,207 --> 01:25:14,919 Jones ordered his men to throw grappling hooks, 1677 01:25:14,943 --> 01:25:18,856 locking the two ships together gunport to gunport. 1678 01:25:18,880 --> 01:25:20,491 [Cannon fire] 1679 01:25:20,515 --> 01:25:25,296 Their crews fired into each other at point-blank range. 1680 01:25:25,320 --> 01:25:28,532 The "Bonhomme Richard" took the worst of it... 1681 01:25:28,556 --> 01:25:31,068 Half the crew dead or wounded, 1682 01:25:31,092 --> 01:25:33,204 fires raging everywhere, 1683 01:25:33,228 --> 01:25:35,039 decks slippery with blood, 1684 01:25:35,063 --> 01:25:40,411 seawater rushing in through holes blasted in the hull... 1685 01:25:40,435 --> 01:25:43,981 But then a sailor high in the "Richard's" rigging 1686 01:25:44,005 --> 01:25:45,616 managed to lob a grenade 1687 01:25:45,640 --> 01:25:49,186 down the main hatchway of the British ship. 1688 01:25:49,210 --> 01:25:50,821 [Explosions] 1689 01:25:50,845 --> 01:25:52,323 It set off explosions 1690 01:25:52,347 --> 01:25:54,792 from one end of the "Serapis" to the other. 1691 01:25:54,816 --> 01:25:56,427 [Explosions continue] 1692 01:25:56,451 --> 01:26:00,531 Half its crew were dead or wounded. 1693 01:26:00,555 --> 01:26:03,834 Captain Pearson surrendered. 1694 01:26:03,858 --> 01:26:06,804 Jones clambered aboard the British warship 1695 01:26:06,828 --> 01:26:09,807 and sailed it into neutral Dutch waters. 1696 01:26:09,831 --> 01:26:14,512 The "Bonhomme Richard" sank the next day. 1697 01:26:14,536 --> 01:26:18,582 In Paris, John Paul Jones was hailed as a hero. 1698 01:26:18,606 --> 01:26:20,384 He met Louis XVI 1699 01:26:20,408 --> 01:26:22,686 and his queen, Marie Antoinette, 1700 01:26:22,710 --> 01:26:25,389 and when he heard that George III 1701 01:26:25,413 --> 01:26:29,226 had knighted Captain Pearson for fighting so valiantly, 1702 01:26:29,250 --> 01:26:31,695 Jones was unimpressed. 1703 01:26:31,719 --> 01:26:35,199 "Should I have the good fortune to fall in with him again," 1704 01:26:35,223 --> 01:26:38,035 he said, "I'll make him a lord." 1705 01:26:38,059 --> 01:26:40,195 ♪ 1706 01:26:41,262 --> 01:26:45,075 [Rattle and drum playing] 1707 01:26:45,099 --> 01:26:47,211 Voice: We do not mean to let the enemy 1708 01:26:47,235 --> 01:26:50,514 penetrate into our country, for we well know 1709 01:26:50,538 --> 01:26:52,883 that as far as they set their foot, 1710 01:26:52,907 --> 01:26:56,153 they will claim the country is conquered. 1711 01:26:56,177 --> 01:26:57,988 Old Smoke. 1712 01:26:58,012 --> 01:27:00,491 Jennifer Kreisberg: [Singing "Grief" in Native language] 1713 01:27:00,515 --> 01:27:03,594 Narrator: Back in the summer of 1777, 1714 01:27:03,618 --> 01:27:07,531 the British and their Mohawk and Seneca allies had prevailed 1715 01:27:07,555 --> 01:27:12,269 over their enemies in their ambush near Oriskany Creek. 1716 01:27:12,293 --> 01:27:13,837 [Gunfire] 1717 01:27:13,861 --> 01:27:17,241 Over the months that followed, New York and Pennsylvania 1718 01:27:17,265 --> 01:27:21,212 saw raid after raid, skirmish after skirmish. 1719 01:27:21,236 --> 01:27:24,715 Patriots drove Loyalists from their homes. 1720 01:27:24,739 --> 01:27:28,419 Loyalists and their Indian allies burned settlements 1721 01:27:28,443 --> 01:27:32,356 at Cherry Valley and in the Wyoming Valley. 1722 01:27:32,380 --> 01:27:35,726 Hundreds died on both sides. 1723 01:27:35,750 --> 01:27:38,529 Atkinson: It has gotten to the point where Washington 1724 01:27:38,553 --> 01:27:40,698 is under intense pressure from Congress, 1725 01:27:40,722 --> 01:27:43,567 from the state of New York, from the state of Pennsylvania, 1726 01:27:43,591 --> 01:27:45,869 to do something about it, 1727 01:27:45,893 --> 01:27:49,073 and because the war has kind of gone fallow in the North 1728 01:27:49,097 --> 01:27:52,343 after Monmouth, he agrees that he will put together 1729 01:27:52,367 --> 01:27:55,613 a punitive expedition against the Indians 1730 01:27:55,637 --> 01:27:58,315 led by one of his major generals, John Sullivan, 1731 01:27:58,339 --> 01:28:01,652 to drive them away from the frontier. 1732 01:28:01,676 --> 01:28:03,487 ♪ 1733 01:28:03,511 --> 01:28:05,856 Calloway: One of the things that I think is always 1734 01:28:05,880 --> 01:28:10,427 on Washington's mind during this war is the end of the war, 1735 01:28:10,451 --> 01:28:14,064 so Washington basically realizes, 1736 01:28:14,088 --> 01:28:17,568 "We're gonna win independence because France is in the war, 1737 01:28:17,592 --> 01:28:21,538 "Spain's in the war, and we need to make sure 1738 01:28:21,562 --> 01:28:24,708 "that we can present a legitimate 1739 01:28:24,732 --> 01:28:28,512 and robust claim to western land." 1740 01:28:28,536 --> 01:28:33,484 One of the foundational truths of American history 1741 01:28:33,508 --> 01:28:39,189 is that this is a nation built on Indian land, 1742 01:28:39,213 --> 01:28:41,625 and Washington would not dispute that, 1743 01:28:41,649 --> 01:28:43,661 I think, for a minute. 1744 01:28:43,685 --> 01:28:46,130 Narrator: Washington's orders to General Sullivan 1745 01:28:46,154 --> 01:28:51,568 in May of 1779 had been clear and uncompromising. 1746 01:28:51,592 --> 01:28:54,238 Voice: The immediate objects 1747 01:28:54,262 --> 01:28:56,240 are the total destruction 1748 01:28:56,264 --> 01:28:58,242 and devastation of their settlements 1749 01:28:58,266 --> 01:29:00,244 and the capture of as many prisoners 1750 01:29:00,268 --> 01:29:02,946 of every age and sex as possible. 1751 01:29:02,970 --> 01:29:07,051 It will be essential to ruin their crops now in the ground 1752 01:29:07,075 --> 01:29:08,919 and prevent their planting more 1753 01:29:08,943 --> 01:29:12,356 that the country may not merely be overrun, 1754 01:29:12,380 --> 01:29:14,825 but destroyed. 1755 01:29:14,849 --> 01:29:19,663 You will not by any means listen to any overture for peace 1756 01:29:19,687 --> 01:29:23,167 before the total ruin of their settlements is affected. 1757 01:29:23,191 --> 01:29:25,536 George Washington. 1758 01:29:25,560 --> 01:29:29,106 Narrator: The Continental Army invaded from 3 sides. 1759 01:29:29,130 --> 01:29:30,774 In early August, 1760 01:29:30,798 --> 01:29:34,411 Colonel Daniel Brodhead led 600 men northward 1761 01:29:34,435 --> 01:29:37,348 from Fort Pitt to destroy the Seneca villages 1762 01:29:37,372 --> 01:29:39,416 along the upper Allegheny River. 1763 01:29:39,440 --> 01:29:43,320 Sullivan and 3 Continental brigades started north 1764 01:29:43,344 --> 01:29:45,055 along the Susquehanna, 1765 01:29:45,079 --> 01:29:46,557 while another moved west 1766 01:29:46,581 --> 01:29:48,525 from the Mohawk Valley. 1767 01:29:48,549 --> 01:29:51,628 At the end of the month their combined forces... 1768 01:29:51,652 --> 01:29:55,299 4,500 men... began marching north. 1769 01:29:55,323 --> 01:29:57,768 ♪ 1770 01:29:57,792 --> 01:29:59,503 Witgen: They don't find destitute villages 1771 01:29:59,527 --> 01:30:01,405 or scattered villages of savage people. 1772 01:30:01,429 --> 01:30:04,041 They find what, to them, are undoubtedly 1773 01:30:04,065 --> 01:30:06,276 easily recognizable prosperous villages. 1774 01:30:06,300 --> 01:30:09,713 They're cedar-planked buildings, multiple-story buildings, 1775 01:30:09,737 --> 01:30:13,350 often with chimneys, often with glass windows. 1776 01:30:13,374 --> 01:30:14,785 [Child speaking] 1777 01:30:14,809 --> 01:30:16,954 Witgen: These people have material wealth 1778 01:30:16,978 --> 01:30:18,956 that they've accumulated over the years, 1779 01:30:18,980 --> 01:30:21,091 and they have houses that look like something 1780 01:30:21,115 --> 01:30:23,327 that people on the Eastern Seaboard would inhabit. 1781 01:30:23,351 --> 01:30:25,262 [Gunfire] 1782 01:30:25,286 --> 01:30:28,665 ♪ 1783 01:30:28,689 --> 01:30:30,567 Narrator: On August 29th, 1784 01:30:30,591 --> 01:30:35,139 some 600 Senecas, Mohawks, Cayugas, Delawares, 1785 01:30:35,163 --> 01:30:39,676 and Loyalists tried to halt the invasion and were defeated. 1786 01:30:39,700 --> 01:30:41,712 ♪ 1787 01:30:41,736 --> 01:30:43,714 Voice: We sent out a small party 1788 01:30:43,738 --> 01:30:45,883 to look for some of the dead Indians. 1789 01:30:45,907 --> 01:30:48,685 They found them and skinned two of them 1790 01:30:48,709 --> 01:30:51,188 from their hips down for boot legs... 1791 01:30:51,212 --> 01:30:55,125 One pair for the major, the other for myself. 1792 01:30:55,149 --> 01:30:57,528 Lieutenant William Barton. 1793 01:30:57,552 --> 01:30:59,830 [Man shouting orders] 1794 01:30:59,854 --> 01:31:01,532 Voice: Our brigade destroyed 1795 01:31:01,556 --> 01:31:05,002 about 150 acres of the best corn that I ever saw... 1796 01:31:05,026 --> 01:31:08,138 Some of the stalks grew 16 feet high... 1797 01:31:08,162 --> 01:31:11,775 Besides great quantities of beans, potatoes, pumpkins, 1798 01:31:11,799 --> 01:31:14,912 cucumbers, squash, and watermelons, 1799 01:31:14,936 --> 01:31:18,315 and the enemy looking at us from the hills. 1800 01:31:18,339 --> 01:31:20,975 Lieutenant Erkuries Beatty. 1801 01:31:22,777 --> 01:31:24,655 Voice: There is something so cruel 1802 01:31:24,679 --> 01:31:27,257 in destroying the habitations of any people, 1803 01:31:27,281 --> 01:31:29,293 however mean they may be, 1804 01:31:29,317 --> 01:31:33,063 that I might say the prospect hurts my feelings. 1805 01:31:33,087 --> 01:31:35,490 Dr. Jabez Campfield. 1806 01:31:37,658 --> 01:31:40,137 Narrator: When some soldiers asked General Sullivan 1807 01:31:40,161 --> 01:31:42,873 if he wouldn't at least spare fruit orchards 1808 01:31:42,897 --> 01:31:46,243 that had taken years to grow, he refused. 1809 01:31:46,267 --> 01:31:50,414 "The Indians," he said, "shall see that there is malice enough 1810 01:31:50,438 --> 01:31:52,850 "in our hearts to destroy everything 1811 01:31:52,874 --> 01:31:55,152 that contributes to their support." 1812 01:31:55,176 --> 01:31:56,954 ♪ 1813 01:31:56,978 --> 01:32:00,824 Deloria: The Sullivan expedition ends up mapping New York 1814 01:32:00,848 --> 01:32:03,627 for future settlement. 1815 01:32:03,651 --> 01:32:05,195 Everybody kind of moves through New York 1816 01:32:05,219 --> 01:32:07,030 and says, "Wow. These apple orchards are so great, 1817 01:32:07,054 --> 01:32:08,966 "these cornfields are so fantastic, 1818 01:32:08,990 --> 01:32:12,102 I'm coming back here at the end of this," right? 1819 01:32:12,126 --> 01:32:16,240 And so in many ways, it is not only a military campaign. 1820 01:32:16,264 --> 01:32:19,309 It's a scouting expedition for future settlement. 1821 01:32:19,333 --> 01:32:22,513 Narrator: The troops torched village after village... 1822 01:32:22,537 --> 01:32:26,183 Catherine's Town, Appletown, 1823 01:32:26,207 --> 01:32:29,486 Cayuga Town, Kanadaseaga, 1824 01:32:29,510 --> 01:32:32,422 Canandaigua, Honeoye. 1825 01:32:32,446 --> 01:32:36,927 By then, Sullivan was within miles of Little Beard's Town, 1826 01:32:36,951 --> 01:32:42,633 which he had been told was the grand capital of Indian Country. 1827 01:32:42,657 --> 01:32:46,169 Little Beard's Town was the home of Mary Jemison, 1828 01:32:46,193 --> 01:32:49,773 who had been adopted years earlier by Senecas 1829 01:32:49,797 --> 01:32:55,012 after her Irish parents had been killed during a raid. 1830 01:32:55,036 --> 01:32:57,447 Voice: He was about to march to our town 1831 01:32:57,471 --> 01:33:01,218 when our Indians resolved to give him battle on the way. 1832 01:33:01,242 --> 01:33:04,588 They sent all the women and children into the woods. 1833 01:33:04,612 --> 01:33:07,324 And then, well-armed, they set out 1834 01:33:07,348 --> 01:33:09,459 to face the conquering enemy. 1835 01:33:09,483 --> 01:33:11,361 Mary Jemison. 1836 01:33:11,385 --> 01:33:12,930 ♪ 1837 01:33:12,954 --> 01:33:16,166 Narrator: A scouting party of 26 Continentals, 1838 01:33:16,190 --> 01:33:18,001 guided by an Oneida scout 1839 01:33:18,025 --> 01:33:20,504 and commanded by Lieutenant Thomas Boyd, 1840 01:33:20,528 --> 01:33:24,875 was advancing ahead of the main column on September 13th, 1841 01:33:24,899 --> 01:33:28,645 when they stumbled into a Seneca and Loyalist ambush. 1842 01:33:28,669 --> 01:33:30,147 [Gunfire] 1843 01:33:30,171 --> 01:33:35,485 16 men were encircled. 14 were killed and scalped. 1844 01:33:35,509 --> 01:33:38,522 Boyd and another man were captured. 1845 01:33:38,546 --> 01:33:41,224 ♪ 1846 01:33:41,248 --> 01:33:42,793 The next day, 1847 01:33:42,817 --> 01:33:47,097 Sullivan's main army reached Little Beard's Town. 1848 01:33:47,121 --> 01:33:49,499 Voice: On entering the town, we found the body 1849 01:33:49,523 --> 01:33:51,902 of Lieutenant Boyd and another rifleman 1850 01:33:51,926 --> 01:33:54,605 in a most terrible, mangled condition. 1851 01:33:54,629 --> 01:33:57,307 They was both stripped naked 1852 01:33:57,331 --> 01:34:00,310 and their heads cut off. 1853 01:34:00,334 --> 01:34:02,346 Erkuries Beatty. 1854 01:34:02,370 --> 01:34:04,114 Narrator: Sullivan's men buried 1855 01:34:04,138 --> 01:34:06,483 what was left of their companions, 1856 01:34:06,507 --> 01:34:09,753 looted and burned all 128 dwellings 1857 01:34:09,777 --> 01:34:11,822 in Little Beard's Town, 1858 01:34:11,846 --> 01:34:15,192 and then spent 8 hours methodically uprooting 1859 01:34:15,216 --> 01:34:18,228 and destroying crops. 1860 01:34:18,252 --> 01:34:21,798 By the end, Sullivan reported to Washington 1861 01:34:21,822 --> 01:34:25,369 that his army had burned a total of 40 towns. 1862 01:34:25,393 --> 01:34:27,104 Farther to the west, 1863 01:34:27,128 --> 01:34:30,173 Colonel Brodhead had destroyed 10 more. 1864 01:34:30,197 --> 01:34:32,075 ♪ 1865 01:34:32,099 --> 01:34:35,078 Most of the Seneca refugees made their way 1866 01:34:35,102 --> 01:34:37,347 to Fort Niagara on Lake Ontario, 1867 01:34:37,371 --> 01:34:41,051 where some 5,000 men, women, and children 1868 01:34:41,075 --> 01:34:46,056 belonging to a host of nations huddled together in muddy camps. 1869 01:34:46,080 --> 01:34:49,192 ♪ 1870 01:34:49,216 --> 01:34:51,361 Voice: We of the Six Nations have been 1871 01:34:51,385 --> 01:34:55,365 much cast down by the great loss we have sustained. 1872 01:34:55,389 --> 01:34:58,201 But yet we do not despair. 1873 01:34:58,225 --> 01:35:03,006 We are determined to persevere in the cause we have engaged in. 1874 01:35:03,030 --> 01:35:06,843 We hope to be able to survive the winter, 1875 01:35:06,867 --> 01:35:11,214 and then we mean once more to meet our enemies 1876 01:35:11,238 --> 01:35:15,686 and see whether we are to live or die. 1877 01:35:15,710 --> 01:35:19,022 And if such is the will of the Great Spirit, 1878 01:35:19,046 --> 01:35:20,891 we will leave our bones 1879 01:35:20,915 --> 01:35:23,593 with those of the rest of our brethren, 1880 01:35:23,617 --> 01:35:26,196 rather than evacuate our country 1881 01:35:26,220 --> 01:35:31,868 or give our enemies room to say we fled from them. 1882 01:35:31,892 --> 01:35:34,104 Twethorechte. 1883 01:35:34,128 --> 01:35:38,208 ♪ 1884 01:35:38,232 --> 01:35:42,345 Narrator: The damage Patriot campaigns did to Seneca, Cayuga, 1885 01:35:42,369 --> 01:35:48,018 Onondaga, and Mohawk homelands was profound and permanent. 1886 01:35:48,042 --> 01:35:52,322 Some Haudenosaunee would come to call George Washington 1887 01:35:52,346 --> 01:35:54,291 "the Town Destroyer" 1888 01:35:54,315 --> 01:35:57,260 and would remember the American Revolution 1889 01:35:57,284 --> 01:35:59,329 as "the Whirlwind." 1890 01:35:59,353 --> 01:36:02,699 ♪ 1891 01:36:02,723 --> 01:36:05,368 [Waves breaking] 1892 01:36:05,392 --> 01:36:10,107 In the late summer of 1779, both George Washington 1893 01:36:10,131 --> 01:36:12,943 and British General Henry Clinton believed 1894 01:36:12,967 --> 01:36:15,912 that the long-awaited all-out American assault 1895 01:36:15,936 --> 01:36:18,482 on British-occupied New York City 1896 01:36:18,506 --> 01:36:21,885 could finally be just weeks away. 1897 01:36:21,909 --> 01:36:24,087 Each had learned that the French fleet 1898 01:36:24,111 --> 01:36:27,324 was sailing back north from the West Indies. 1899 01:36:27,348 --> 01:36:30,527 Neither was sure where it was headed. 1900 01:36:30,551 --> 01:36:34,264 Clinton ordered all British troops to withdraw 1901 01:36:34,288 --> 01:36:38,068 from occupied Newport to strengthen New York's defenses. 1902 01:36:38,092 --> 01:36:41,905 Washington readied plans for a siege of the city 1903 01:36:41,929 --> 01:36:45,041 and called upon 5 neighboring states 1904 01:36:45,065 --> 01:36:47,911 to provide him with more militia, 1905 01:36:47,935 --> 01:36:51,381 but French Admiral d'Estaing never came. 1906 01:36:51,405 --> 01:36:55,218 Instead, he appeared at the mouth of the Savannah River 1907 01:36:55,242 --> 01:37:00,023 with 32 warships to join forces with southern Patriots 1908 01:37:00,047 --> 01:37:02,292 who had already retaken Augusta 1909 01:37:02,316 --> 01:37:05,595 and were eager to recapture the rest of Georgia. 1910 01:37:05,619 --> 01:37:07,497 ♪ 1911 01:37:07,521 --> 01:37:10,634 Aboard were 4,000 French troops, 1912 01:37:10,658 --> 01:37:14,538 including 750 "free men of color," 1913 01:37:14,562 --> 01:37:16,807 Black and mixed-race troops 1914 01:37:16,831 --> 01:37:19,743 from what would one day be called Haiti. 1915 01:37:19,767 --> 01:37:22,112 ♪ 1916 01:37:22,136 --> 01:37:24,681 While d'Estaing waited for his American allies 1917 01:37:24,705 --> 01:37:29,085 to join the siege, he surrounded Savannah with heavy artillery 1918 01:37:29,109 --> 01:37:31,454 and demanded its surrender. 1919 01:37:31,478 --> 01:37:35,025 The outnumbered British refused, stalling for time 1920 01:37:35,049 --> 01:37:38,461 until reinforcements of their own could reach the city. 1921 01:37:38,485 --> 01:37:43,600 As they braced for an attack, redcoats and Loyalist troops 1922 01:37:43,624 --> 01:37:47,437 and scores of Savannah's free and enslaved residents 1923 01:37:47,461 --> 01:37:51,875 had time to complete two defensive lines around the city. 1924 01:37:51,899 --> 01:37:54,377 [Cannon fire] 1925 01:37:54,401 --> 01:37:56,947 After Continentals and Patriot militiamen 1926 01:37:56,971 --> 01:37:58,882 arrived from Charleston, 1927 01:37:58,906 --> 01:38:02,385 d'Estaing led a direct assault on October 9th. 1928 01:38:02,409 --> 01:38:07,090 Some Americans became mired in a rice field. 1929 01:38:07,114 --> 01:38:08,658 [Shouting and gunfire] 1930 01:38:08,682 --> 01:38:12,262 French troops in white uniforms proved easy targets. 1931 01:38:12,286 --> 01:38:17,300 British guns sent grapeshot, nails, and chunks of iron 1932 01:38:17,324 --> 01:38:20,003 tearing through the attackers. 1933 01:38:20,027 --> 01:38:22,639 The ditch, a British officer remembered, 1934 01:38:22,663 --> 01:38:24,674 was chock full of their dead. 1935 01:38:24,698 --> 01:38:27,143 [Gunfire continues] 1936 01:38:27,167 --> 01:38:29,946 De Rode: For the French-American alliance, 1937 01:38:29,970 --> 01:38:32,082 it is quite the defeat. 1938 01:38:32,106 --> 01:38:35,485 People do lose their trust in the availabilities 1939 01:38:35,509 --> 01:38:38,121 of the French to help the Americans. 1940 01:38:38,145 --> 01:38:40,624 They were very happy to have signed an alliance with them, 1941 01:38:40,648 --> 01:38:44,628 but the first campaigns, plural, completely failed. 1942 01:38:44,652 --> 01:38:49,099 Narrator: D'Estaing, who had been wounded twice, 1943 01:38:49,123 --> 01:38:52,035 sailed away to France. 1944 01:38:52,059 --> 01:38:55,372 The American commander General Benjamin Lincoln 1945 01:38:55,396 --> 01:38:59,409 limped back to Patriot-controlled Charleston. 1946 01:38:59,433 --> 01:39:02,212 Voice: You know the importance of Charleston. 1947 01:39:02,236 --> 01:39:04,214 It is the bond that binds 3 states 1948 01:39:04,238 --> 01:39:06,449 to the authority of Congress. 1949 01:39:06,473 --> 01:39:09,185 If the enemy possessed themselves of this town, 1950 01:39:09,209 --> 01:39:12,956 there will be no living for honest Patriots. 1951 01:39:12,980 --> 01:39:15,558 David Ramsay. 1952 01:39:15,582 --> 01:39:19,896 ♪ 1953 01:39:19,920 --> 01:39:22,432 Atkinson: The winter of 1779-1780, 1954 01:39:22,456 --> 01:39:25,068 probably the harshest winter in North America 1955 01:39:25,092 --> 01:39:27,470 in the 18th century. 1956 01:39:27,494 --> 01:39:29,272 ♪ 1957 01:39:29,296 --> 01:39:32,909 New York Harbor froze over solidly. 1958 01:39:32,933 --> 01:39:34,577 You could drag cannon 1959 01:39:34,601 --> 01:39:36,880 from the tip of Manhattan Island to Staten Island. 1960 01:39:36,904 --> 01:39:39,849 You could cross the Hudson River on foot, 1961 01:39:39,873 --> 01:39:41,918 and the winter was all the worse 1962 01:39:41,942 --> 01:39:45,155 in Upstate New York for the Indians. 1963 01:39:45,179 --> 01:39:48,158 Voice: That winter was the most severe 1964 01:39:48,182 --> 01:39:51,161 that I have witnessed since my remembrance. 1965 01:39:51,185 --> 01:39:54,998 The snow fell about 5 feet deep and remained so. 1966 01:39:55,022 --> 01:39:58,134 Almost all the game upon which we depended 1967 01:39:58,158 --> 01:40:02,672 perished and reduced us almost to starvation. 1968 01:40:02,696 --> 01:40:04,641 Mary Jemison. 1969 01:40:04,665 --> 01:40:06,810 ♪ 1970 01:40:06,834 --> 01:40:09,746 Narrator: For General Washington and most of his army 1971 01:40:09,770 --> 01:40:13,316 at winter quarters in and around Morristown, New Jersey, 1972 01:40:13,340 --> 01:40:16,286 the temperature rarely rose above zero. 1973 01:40:16,310 --> 01:40:19,356 It was "cold enough to cut a man in two," 1974 01:40:19,380 --> 01:40:21,791 Joseph Plumb Martin remembered. 1975 01:40:21,815 --> 01:40:23,426 ♪ 1976 01:40:23,450 --> 01:40:26,129 Joseph Ellis: The winter in New Jersey at Morristown 1977 01:40:26,153 --> 01:40:29,232 was worse than Valley Forge. 1978 01:40:29,256 --> 01:40:32,402 The enthusiasm for the war had begun to wane years before, 1979 01:40:32,426 --> 01:40:35,605 and it continued to wane each year. 1980 01:40:35,629 --> 01:40:38,842 Voice: We were absolutely literally starved. 1981 01:40:38,866 --> 01:40:43,146 I did not put a single morsel into my mouth for 4 days 1982 01:40:43,170 --> 01:40:46,306 except a little black birch bark. 1983 01:40:47,641 --> 01:40:51,454 I saw several of the men roast their old shoes and eat them, 1984 01:40:51,478 --> 01:40:54,624 and I was afterwards informed that some of the officers 1985 01:40:54,648 --> 01:40:57,060 killed and ate a favorite little dog 1986 01:40:57,084 --> 01:40:59,295 that belonged to one of them. 1987 01:40:59,319 --> 01:41:01,297 Joseph Plumb Martin. 1988 01:41:01,321 --> 01:41:03,633 Narrator: To add to their misery, 1989 01:41:03,657 --> 01:41:07,070 the men of Joseph Plumb Martin's 8th Connecticut Regiment 1990 01:41:07,094 --> 01:41:09,773 had not been paid for months. 1991 01:41:09,797 --> 01:41:12,709 By spring, they had had enough. 1992 01:41:12,733 --> 01:41:14,611 ♪ 1993 01:41:14,635 --> 01:41:17,113 Voice: The men now saw no other alternative 1994 01:41:17,137 --> 01:41:20,617 but to starve to death or break up the army. 1995 01:41:20,641 --> 01:41:24,854 This was a hard matter for the soldiers to think upon. 1996 01:41:24,878 --> 01:41:27,390 They were truly patriotic. 1997 01:41:27,414 --> 01:41:29,826 They loved their country, 1998 01:41:29,850 --> 01:41:32,829 and they had already suffered everything short of death 1999 01:41:32,853 --> 01:41:34,798 in its cause. 2000 01:41:34,822 --> 01:41:36,733 What was to be done? 2001 01:41:36,757 --> 01:41:38,401 [Joseph Plumb Martin] 2002 01:41:38,425 --> 01:41:40,770 Narrator: The 4th and 8th Connecticut Regiments 2003 01:41:40,794 --> 01:41:42,405 planned to desert. 2004 01:41:42,429 --> 01:41:45,141 When a colonel tried to talk them out of it, 2005 01:41:45,165 --> 01:41:48,411 someone stabbed him with a bayonet. 2006 01:41:48,435 --> 01:41:52,449 A Pennsylvania regiment was rushed in to surround them, 2007 01:41:52,473 --> 01:41:57,287 and its colonel managed to talk the men into staying on. 2008 01:41:57,311 --> 01:42:01,291 In the end, Martin wrote, "We were unwilling to desert 2009 01:42:01,315 --> 01:42:04,260 "the cause of our country when in distress. 2010 01:42:04,284 --> 01:42:07,964 We knew her cause involved our own." 2011 01:42:07,988 --> 01:42:11,267 ♪ 2012 01:42:11,291 --> 01:42:13,136 Voice: This is the most important hour 2013 01:42:13,160 --> 01:42:14,704 Britain ever knew. 2014 01:42:14,728 --> 01:42:16,873 If we lose it, we shall never see such another. 2015 01:42:16,897 --> 01:42:18,374 Henry Clinton. 2016 01:42:18,398 --> 01:42:20,276 Narrator: It had now been 21 months 2017 01:42:20,300 --> 01:42:24,280 since General Clinton was ordered to take the Carolinas. 2018 01:42:24,304 --> 01:42:27,550 On the day after Christmas 1779, 2019 01:42:27,574 --> 01:42:31,321 leaving enough of a force behind to defend New York, 2020 01:42:31,345 --> 01:42:35,625 Clinton finally sailed south for Charleston. 2021 01:42:35,649 --> 01:42:39,896 Atkinson: Every farthing of the wealth in South Carolina 2022 01:42:39,920 --> 01:42:41,798 is built on the back of slavery. 2023 01:42:41,822 --> 01:42:44,601 That's one of the reasons why South Carolina 2024 01:42:44,625 --> 01:42:48,037 and the other Southern states have robust militias. 2025 01:42:48,061 --> 01:42:51,541 It is not to repel foreign invaders. 2026 01:42:51,565 --> 01:42:55,211 It's to suppress potential slave insurrections. 2027 01:42:55,235 --> 01:42:57,480 Narrator: Charleston was one of the largest cities 2028 01:42:57,504 --> 01:43:01,484 in the United States, home to 12,000 people, 2029 01:43:01,508 --> 01:43:03,686 half of them enslaved. 2030 01:43:03,710 --> 01:43:06,456 If it could be captured, the British believed, 2031 01:43:06,480 --> 01:43:09,425 a Loyalist majority in the Carolinas 2032 01:43:09,449 --> 01:43:12,362 would rally to the Crown. 2033 01:43:12,386 --> 01:43:15,765 Lengel: Charleston has resisted British attacks before. 2034 01:43:15,789 --> 01:43:19,135 There's a sense of confidence that it'll be able 2035 01:43:19,159 --> 01:43:22,238 to resist British attacks again. 2036 01:43:22,262 --> 01:43:26,309 Americans are almost delusional about it. 2037 01:43:26,333 --> 01:43:29,345 They don't look the facts in the face 2038 01:43:29,369 --> 01:43:32,582 of how vulnerable Charleston really is. 2039 01:43:32,606 --> 01:43:36,119 The geography is impossible. 2040 01:43:36,143 --> 01:43:38,821 Charleston is really out on a limb. 2041 01:43:38,845 --> 01:43:41,224 The British are gonna cut this place off, 2042 01:43:41,248 --> 01:43:43,626 and they're gonna capture it. 2043 01:43:43,650 --> 01:43:47,997 Congress, instead of recognizing this fact, 2044 01:43:48,021 --> 01:43:51,668 they keep sending more and more men to defend Charleston. 2045 01:43:51,692 --> 01:43:54,070 They send the best that the Continental Army has. 2046 01:43:54,094 --> 01:43:56,139 It's a mistake. 2047 01:43:56,163 --> 01:43:58,641 ♪ 2048 01:43:58,665 --> 01:44:01,444 Narrator: Some 30 miles southwest of the city 2049 01:44:01,468 --> 01:44:08,318 on February 11, 1780, Clinton began landing his troops. 2050 01:44:08,342 --> 01:44:10,987 As the British army marched toward Charleston, 2051 01:44:11,011 --> 01:44:13,556 first hundreds, then thousands 2052 01:44:13,580 --> 01:44:17,093 of enslaved men, women, and children 2053 01:44:17,117 --> 01:44:19,495 fled their plantations to join them. 2054 01:44:19,519 --> 01:44:22,065 ♪ 2055 01:44:22,089 --> 01:44:24,834 It would be more than a month before Clinton's forces 2056 01:44:24,858 --> 01:44:27,837 could form a line a mile and a half north 2057 01:44:27,861 --> 01:44:33,009 of the rebel fortifications and begin a European-style siege. 2058 01:44:33,033 --> 01:44:35,011 ♪ 2059 01:44:35,035 --> 01:44:37,847 More British troops from New York and Savannah 2060 01:44:37,871 --> 01:44:41,551 would swell the British army to more than 10,000, 2061 01:44:41,575 --> 01:44:43,786 roughly twice as large as the force 2062 01:44:43,810 --> 01:44:46,556 with which Patriot General Benjamin Lincoln 2063 01:44:46,580 --> 01:44:50,426 hoped somehow to defend the city. 2064 01:44:50,450 --> 01:44:52,528 Desperate for reinforcements, 2065 01:44:52,552 --> 01:44:57,700 Lincoln suggested arming enslaved men and was told no. 2066 01:44:57,724 --> 01:45:00,837 Whites feared giving weapons to Black people, 2067 01:45:00,861 --> 01:45:04,407 and, besides, slave owners did not want their property 2068 01:45:04,431 --> 01:45:07,744 killed or maimed in battle. 2069 01:45:07,768 --> 01:45:11,147 Militia from the backcountry were also reluctant 2070 01:45:11,171 --> 01:45:13,383 to come to the crowded city. 2071 01:45:13,407 --> 01:45:17,120 They feared smallpox and were unmoved by the plight 2072 01:45:17,144 --> 01:45:21,090 of planters and merchants whose wealth and political power 2073 01:45:21,114 --> 01:45:23,092 they had long resented. 2074 01:45:23,116 --> 01:45:28,331 ♪ 2075 01:45:28,355 --> 01:45:32,702 On April 1, 1780, the British began constructing 2076 01:45:32,726 --> 01:45:35,672 the first of a series of parallels, 2077 01:45:35,696 --> 01:45:39,175 sequential support trenches that would allow them 2078 01:45:39,199 --> 01:45:42,645 to inch closer and closer to the city. 2079 01:45:42,669 --> 01:45:44,914 ♪ 2080 01:45:44,938 --> 01:45:47,950 A week later, British warships forced their way 2081 01:45:47,974 --> 01:45:51,154 into Charleston Harbor and took command of it. 2082 01:45:51,178 --> 01:45:54,991 General Clinton called upon the rebels to surrender 2083 01:45:55,015 --> 01:45:57,960 in order to save the town and its people 2084 01:45:57,984 --> 01:46:01,030 from what he called "havock and desolation." 2085 01:46:01,054 --> 01:46:04,233 General Lincoln refused. 2086 01:46:04,257 --> 01:46:06,235 Man: Fire! 2087 01:46:06,259 --> 01:46:08,104 Narrator: The British opened fire. 2088 01:46:08,128 --> 01:46:09,272 [Cannon fire] 2089 01:46:09,296 --> 01:46:11,240 The Americans fired back. 2090 01:46:11,264 --> 01:46:13,109 Man: Fire! 2091 01:46:13,133 --> 01:46:17,246 Narrator: The guns would continue day and night 2092 01:46:17,270 --> 01:46:19,515 for a month. 2093 01:46:19,539 --> 01:46:21,751 [Men shouting] 2094 01:46:21,775 --> 01:46:27,123 ♪ 2095 01:46:27,147 --> 01:46:28,691 As each blasted at the other, 2096 01:46:28,715 --> 01:46:30,526 the British parallels 2097 01:46:30,550 --> 01:46:33,529 moved closer to the American lines... 2098 01:46:33,553 --> 01:46:35,531 800 yards... 2099 01:46:35,555 --> 01:46:37,834 450 yards... 2100 01:46:37,858 --> 01:46:39,635 250. 2101 01:46:39,659 --> 01:46:41,637 ♪ 2102 01:46:41,661 --> 01:46:44,030 There was no escape. 2103 01:46:49,035 --> 01:46:52,248 General Lincoln asked that his surrendering men 2104 01:46:52,272 --> 01:46:55,251 be granted the usual honors of war, 2105 01:46:55,275 --> 01:46:58,221 but General Clinton refused: 2106 01:46:58,245 --> 01:47:01,290 Rebels deserved no such honors. 2107 01:47:01,314 --> 01:47:03,860 ♪ 2108 01:47:03,884 --> 01:47:06,929 Lengel: When Charleston falls, it's a body blow 2109 01:47:06,953 --> 01:47:09,298 to the Revolution and to the American cause. 2110 01:47:09,322 --> 01:47:14,570 It's a humiliation because we've lost not only Charleston, 2111 01:47:14,594 --> 01:47:18,541 but we've lost some of the best troops that we have, 2112 01:47:18,565 --> 01:47:23,546 and the British in their surrender terms 2113 01:47:23,570 --> 01:47:27,083 really drive home that humiliation. 2114 01:47:27,107 --> 01:47:29,051 ♪ 2115 01:47:29,075 --> 01:47:31,988 Narrator: It was the worst defeat suffered by the Patriots 2116 01:47:32,012 --> 01:47:33,689 during the Revolution. 2117 01:47:33,713 --> 01:47:36,192 An entire army was captured, 2118 01:47:36,216 --> 01:47:40,163 5,618 men by Clinton's count, 2119 01:47:40,187 --> 01:47:44,333 including Benjamin Lincoln and 6 other generals, 2120 01:47:44,357 --> 01:47:47,170 along with more than 300 cannon, 2121 01:47:47,194 --> 01:47:50,406 376 barrels of gunpowder, 2122 01:47:50,430 --> 01:47:54,377 and 5,916 muskets. 2123 01:47:54,401 --> 01:47:56,345 ♪ 2124 01:47:56,369 --> 01:48:00,283 Hundreds of South Carolinians streamed into the occupied city 2125 01:48:00,307 --> 01:48:02,185 from the countryside, 2126 01:48:02,209 --> 01:48:05,855 eager now to swear allegiance to the Crown. 2127 01:48:05,879 --> 01:48:08,558 ♪ 2128 01:48:08,582 --> 01:48:10,259 Voice: To Lord Germain... 2129 01:48:10,283 --> 01:48:12,895 With the greatest pleasure, I report to your Lordship 2130 01:48:12,919 --> 01:48:15,798 that the inhabitants from every quarter declare 2131 01:48:15,822 --> 01:48:19,635 their allegiance to the King, and offer their services in arms 2132 01:48:19,659 --> 01:48:21,704 in support of his government. 2133 01:48:21,728 --> 01:48:23,806 In many instances, they have brought prisoners, 2134 01:48:23,830 --> 01:48:26,042 their former oppressors or leaders, 2135 01:48:26,066 --> 01:48:28,511 and I may venture to assert that there are few men 2136 01:48:28,535 --> 01:48:31,214 in South Carolina who are not either our prisoners 2137 01:48:31,238 --> 01:48:33,516 or in arms with us. 2138 01:48:33,540 --> 01:48:35,918 Henry Clinton. 2139 01:48:35,942 --> 01:48:37,053 [Birds chirping] 2140 01:48:37,077 --> 01:48:39,689 Narrator: General Clinton and 4,000 troops 2141 01:48:39,713 --> 01:48:43,626 returned to New York, leaving General Charles Cornwallis 2142 01:48:43,650 --> 01:48:46,262 in command of the southern theater. 2143 01:48:46,286 --> 01:48:49,899 A few more such victories, British commanders believed, 2144 01:48:49,923 --> 01:48:52,068 and the Loyalty to the Crown 2145 01:48:52,092 --> 01:48:55,972 of all the Southern Colonies would be reconfirmed. 2146 01:48:55,996 --> 01:48:59,408 "The English lion," a German officer wrote, 2147 01:48:59,432 --> 01:49:01,711 "has awakened from his sleep." 2148 01:49:01,735 --> 01:49:04,647 ♪ 2149 01:49:04,671 --> 01:49:07,316 Voice: Unless Congress is vested with powers 2150 01:49:07,340 --> 01:49:12,054 competent to the great purposes of war, our cause is lost. 2151 01:49:12,078 --> 01:49:15,791 We can no longer drudge on in the old way. 2152 01:49:15,815 --> 01:49:19,695 I see one head gradually changing into 13. 2153 01:49:19,719 --> 01:49:23,132 I see one army branching into thirteen... 2154 01:49:23,156 --> 01:49:27,169 And am fearful of the consequences of it. 2155 01:49:27,193 --> 01:49:29,438 George Washington. 2156 01:49:29,462 --> 01:49:33,242 [Wind blowing] 2157 01:49:33,266 --> 01:49:34,266 ♪ 2158 01:50:38,999 --> 01:50:40,042 Announcer: Next time on 2159 01:50:40,066 --> 01:50:41,277 "The American Revolution"... 2160 01:50:41,301 --> 01:50:42,079 The shock of treason. 2161 01:50:42,103 --> 01:50:43,913 Joseph Ellis: He was the last person 2162 01:50:43,937 --> 01:50:46,282 Washington ever thought would have betrayed him. 2163 01:50:46,306 --> 01:50:48,284 Announcer: The South explodes in battle. 2164 01:50:48,308 --> 01:50:50,453 Vincent Brown: It's sometimes brother against brother 2165 01:50:50,477 --> 01:50:52,421 in this backwoods warfare. 2166 01:50:52,445 --> 01:50:53,156 It's an ugly conflict. 2167 01:50:53,180 --> 01:50:55,725 Announcer: And a new nation rises. 2168 01:50:55,749 --> 01:50:56,892 Voice: Who would have thought 2169 01:50:56,916 --> 01:50:59,095 that out of this multitude of rabble 2170 01:50:59,119 --> 01:51:02,298 would arise a people who could defy kings? [Johann Ewald] 2171 01:51:02,322 --> 01:51:03,166 [Men shouting] 2172 01:51:03,190 --> 01:51:05,101 Announcer: Don't miss the conclusion of 2173 01:51:05,125 --> 01:51:07,794 "The American Revolution" next time. 2174 01:51:09,629 --> 01:51:11,407 ♪ 2175 01:51:11,431 --> 01:51:14,110 Announcer: Scan this QR code with your smart device 2176 01:51:14,134 --> 01:51:17,380 to dive deeper into the story of "The American Revolution" 2177 01:51:17,404 --> 01:51:21,484 with interactives, games, classroom materials, and more. 2178 01:51:21,508 --> 01:51:26,079 ♪ 2179 01:51:29,315 --> 01:51:31,827 Announcer: "The American Revolution" DVD and Blu-ray, 2180 01:51:31,851 --> 01:51:33,863 as well as the companion book and soundtrack, 2181 01:51:33,887 --> 01:51:37,700 are available online and in stores. 2182 01:51:37,724 --> 01:51:39,735 The series is also available with PBS Passport 2183 01:51:39,759 --> 01:51:42,829 and on Amazon Prime Video. 2184 01:51:45,165 --> 01:51:53,165 ♪ 2185 01:52:22,202 --> 01:52:24,547 Announcer: The American Revolution caused 2186 01:52:24,571 --> 01:52:26,782 an impact felt around the world. 2187 01:52:26,806 --> 01:52:31,921 The fight would take ingenuity, determination, 2188 01:52:31,945 --> 01:52:34,056 and hope for a new tomorrow 2189 01:52:34,080 --> 01:52:36,258 to turn the tide of history 2190 01:52:36,282 --> 01:52:39,486 and set the American story in motion. 2191 01:52:44,057 --> 01:52:46,902 What would you like the power to do? 2192 01:52:46,926 --> 01:52:48,495 Bank of America. 2193 01:52:51,798 --> 01:52:53,109 Announcer: Major funding 2194 01:52:53,133 --> 01:52:54,210 for "The American Revolution" 2195 01:52:54,234 --> 01:52:55,611 was provided by The Better Angels Society 2196 01:52:55,635 --> 01:52:56,879 and its members 2197 01:52:56,903 --> 01:52:58,114 Jeannie and Jonathan Lavine 2198 01:52:58,138 --> 01:53:00,082 with the Crimson Lion Foundation 2199 01:53:00,106 --> 01:53:02,151 and the Blavatnik Family Foundation. 2200 01:53:02,175 --> 01:53:05,521 Major funding was also provided by David M. Rubenstein, 2201 01:53:05,545 --> 01:53:08,624 the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Family Foundation, 2202 01:53:08,648 --> 01:53:09,959 the Lilly Endowment, 2203 01:53:09,983 --> 01:53:12,128 and by Better Angels Society members: 2204 01:53:12,152 --> 01:53:14,497 Eric and Wendy Schmidt, Stephen A. Schwarzman, 2205 01:53:14,521 --> 01:53:17,199 and Kenneth C. Griffin with Griffin Catalyst. 2206 01:53:17,223 --> 01:53:18,968 Additional support was provided by 2207 01:53:18,992 --> 01:53:21,036 The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, 2208 01:53:21,060 --> 01:53:22,838 the Pew Charitable Trusts, 2209 01:53:22,862 --> 01:53:24,840 Gilbert S. Omenn and Martha A. Darling, 2210 01:53:24,864 --> 01:53:26,242 the Park Foundation, 2211 01:53:26,266 --> 01:53:28,210 and by Better Angels Society members: 2212 01:53:28,234 --> 01:53:31,147 Gilchrist and Amy Berg, Perry and Donna Golkin, 2213 01:53:31,171 --> 01:53:33,682 The Michelson Foundation, Jacqueline B. Mars, 2214 01:53:33,706 --> 01:53:37,186 the Kissick Family Foundation, Diane and Hal Brierley, 2215 01:53:37,210 --> 01:53:39,889 John H.N. Fisher and Jennifer Caldwell, 2216 01:53:39,913 --> 01:53:41,390 John and Catherine Debs, 2217 01:53:41,414 --> 01:53:43,225 The Fullerton Family Charitable Fund, 2218 01:53:43,249 --> 01:53:45,060 and these additional members. 2219 01:53:45,084 --> 01:53:46,695 "The American Revolution" 2220 01:53:46,719 --> 01:53:48,164 was made possible with support 2221 01:53:48,188 --> 01:53:50,599 from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, 2222 01:53:50,623 --> 01:53:51,863 and Viewers Like You. Thank You. 174877

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