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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 00:01:33,359 --> 00:01:39,809 ♪ 40 00:01:39,833 --> 00:01:42,611 Jane Kamensky, voice-over: I think to believe in America 41 00:01:42,635 --> 00:01:45,247 rooted in the American Revolution 42 00:01:45,271 --> 00:01:49,518 is to believe in possibility. 43 00:01:49,542 --> 00:01:53,022 That, to me, is the extraordinary thing 44 00:01:53,046 --> 00:01:57,250 about the Patriot side of the fight. 45 00:01:58,218 --> 00:02:01,163 I think everybody on every side, including people 46 00:02:01,187 --> 00:02:04,834 who were denied even the ownership of themselves, 47 00:02:04,858 --> 00:02:09,371 had the sense of possibility worth fighting for. 48 00:02:09,395 --> 00:02:12,208 ♪ 49 00:02:12,232 --> 00:02:14,677 The American Revolution changed the world. 50 00:02:14,701 --> 00:02:17,680 It's not just about the birth of the United States. 51 00:02:17,704 --> 00:02:22,017 It has ramifications across the globe, 52 00:02:22,041 --> 00:02:24,053 so studying the American Revolution, 53 00:02:24,077 --> 00:02:25,588 understanding it, 54 00:02:25,612 --> 00:02:28,591 and putting it in a global context, I think, 55 00:02:28,615 --> 00:02:31,260 is vitally important for us to understand 56 00:02:31,284 --> 00:02:33,696 why we are where we are now. 57 00:02:33,720 --> 00:02:35,664 [Gunfire and shouting] 58 00:02:35,688 --> 00:02:40,860 ♪ 59 00:02:41,861 --> 00:02:43,372 Voice: Our country was thrown 60 00:02:43,396 --> 00:02:46,375 into great confusion by the long continuance of the war. 61 00:02:46,399 --> 00:02:47,943 [Church bell ringing] 62 00:02:47,967 --> 00:02:51,547 The churches in Virginia were almost entirely shut up, 63 00:02:51,571 --> 00:02:54,707 and its holy ordinances unobserved. 64 00:02:55,742 --> 00:02:58,754 Most of our men were engaged in the war. 65 00:02:58,778 --> 00:03:02,858 Our town had now become a garrison. 66 00:03:02,882 --> 00:03:05,094 Betsy Ambler. 67 00:03:05,118 --> 00:03:07,496 ♪ 68 00:03:07,520 --> 00:03:10,266 Narrator: Betsy Ambler of Yorktown, Virginia, 69 00:03:10,290 --> 00:03:12,401 had been 10 when the war began. 70 00:03:12,425 --> 00:03:16,839 She was now 15 and had lived most of the intervening years 71 00:03:16,863 --> 00:03:18,874 away from home. 72 00:03:18,898 --> 00:03:20,776 By the spring of 1780, 73 00:03:20,800 --> 00:03:24,246 she was back in Yorktown with her family. 74 00:03:24,270 --> 00:03:26,782 Life there had changed. 75 00:03:26,806 --> 00:03:30,019 The most populated parts of Virginia all lay within reach 76 00:03:30,043 --> 00:03:35,658 of the Royal Navy and any troops the British might land. 77 00:03:35,682 --> 00:03:39,128 Governor Thomas Jefferson and the Virginia Assembly 78 00:03:39,152 --> 00:03:44,033 chose to move the capital from nearby Williamsburg to Richmond, 79 00:03:44,057 --> 00:03:45,734 and, since Betsy Ambler's father 80 00:03:45,758 --> 00:03:47,903 had been appointed to the state government, 81 00:03:47,927 --> 00:03:51,140 her family would have to leave Yorktown again. 82 00:03:51,164 --> 00:03:53,042 ♪ 83 00:03:53,066 --> 00:03:54,877 George Washington had long known 84 00:03:54,901 --> 00:03:57,880 that Yorktown was particularly vulnerable. 85 00:03:57,904 --> 00:04:03,252 As early as 1777, he had warned a Virginia militia commander 86 00:04:03,276 --> 00:04:05,754 against stationing troops there. 87 00:04:05,778 --> 00:04:07,456 ♪ 88 00:04:07,480 --> 00:04:09,225 Voice: I can by no means think 89 00:04:09,249 --> 00:04:10,659 it would be prudent to have 90 00:04:10,683 --> 00:04:13,796 any considerable stationary force at Yorktown. 91 00:04:13,820 --> 00:04:16,398 Being upon a narrow neck of land, 92 00:04:16,422 --> 00:04:19,068 it would be in danger of being cut off. 93 00:04:19,092 --> 00:04:22,304 The enemy might very easily throw up a few ships 94 00:04:22,328 --> 00:04:27,042 and land a body of men there who would oblige them to surrender. [Washington] 95 00:04:27,066 --> 00:04:35,066 ♪ 96 00:04:39,679 --> 00:04:42,024 ♪ 97 00:04:42,048 --> 00:04:44,159 Narrator: In late May of 1780, 98 00:04:44,183 --> 00:04:45,894 shortly after the British capture 99 00:04:45,918 --> 00:04:49,898 of Charles Town, South Carolina, an elite Loyalist group 100 00:04:49,922 --> 00:04:52,668 of green-clad cavalry and mounted infantry 101 00:04:52,692 --> 00:04:55,604 called the British Legion were in hot pursuit 102 00:04:55,628 --> 00:04:58,941 of Continental soldiers fleeing north. 103 00:04:58,965 --> 00:05:02,511 Their commander was a 25-year-old English officer... 104 00:05:02,535 --> 00:05:04,413 Banastre Tarleton, 105 00:05:04,437 --> 00:05:06,849 handsome, rakish, ruthless, 106 00:05:06,873 --> 00:05:10,786 and determined to make himself a celebrated soldier. 107 00:05:10,810 --> 00:05:14,456 "Tarleton," wrote the British chronicler Horace Walpole, 108 00:05:14,480 --> 00:05:17,359 "boasts of having butchered more men 109 00:05:17,383 --> 00:05:22,197 and lain with more women than anybody" in the army. 110 00:05:22,221 --> 00:05:24,033 Tarleton caught up with the rebels 111 00:05:24,057 --> 00:05:28,704 near the North Carolina border, a region called the Waxhaws, 112 00:05:28,728 --> 00:05:31,740 and demanded they surrender. 113 00:05:31,764 --> 00:05:34,476 Voice: You will order every person under your command 114 00:05:34,500 --> 00:05:37,513 to pile his arms in one hour. 115 00:05:37,537 --> 00:05:40,582 If you are rash enough to reject these terms, 116 00:05:40,606 --> 00:05:43,609 the blood be upon your head. [Tarleton] 117 00:05:45,011 --> 00:05:46,055 [Gunfire] 118 00:05:46,079 --> 00:05:48,457 The Patriots chose to fight. 119 00:05:48,481 --> 00:05:51,627 Tarleton's men quickly overwhelmed them. 120 00:05:51,651 --> 00:05:54,897 Some who dropped their weapons and asked for quarter 121 00:05:54,921 --> 00:05:57,333 received none. 122 00:05:57,357 --> 00:06:00,035 "They refused my terms," Tarleton wrote. 123 00:06:00,059 --> 00:06:04,740 "I have cut 170 officers and men to pieces." 124 00:06:04,764 --> 00:06:07,409 ♪ 125 00:06:07,433 --> 00:06:09,945 He may have destroyed the last Continental force 126 00:06:09,969 --> 00:06:13,382 in South Carolina, but he had also helped inspire 127 00:06:13,406 --> 00:06:17,119 local Patriots to oppose British occupation. 128 00:06:17,143 --> 00:06:20,089 When they went into battle over the coming months, 129 00:06:20,113 --> 00:06:22,391 many would be eager to deal out 130 00:06:22,415 --> 00:06:24,927 what they called "Tarleton's Quarter" 131 00:06:24,951 --> 00:06:29,898 to any Loyalist unlucky enough to fall into their hands. 132 00:06:29,922 --> 00:06:31,500 ♪ 133 00:06:31,524 --> 00:06:33,736 Vincent Brown: That war in South Carolina is bloody. 134 00:06:33,760 --> 00:06:36,538 It's a guerrilla conflict. 135 00:06:36,562 --> 00:06:38,607 It's sometimes brother against brother 136 00:06:38,631 --> 00:06:40,642 in this backwoods warfare. 137 00:06:40,666 --> 00:06:42,678 ♪ 138 00:06:42,702 --> 00:06:44,947 It's an ugly, ugly, ugly conflict, 139 00:06:44,971 --> 00:06:47,583 and if one wants a national origin story 140 00:06:47,607 --> 00:06:49,852 that's clean and neat 141 00:06:49,876 --> 00:06:52,588 and tells you very clearly who the good guys are 142 00:06:52,612 --> 00:06:54,890 and who the bad guys are, the American Revolution 143 00:06:54,914 --> 00:06:57,126 in South Carolina is not that story. 144 00:06:57,150 --> 00:07:00,062 [Brass band playing "The British Grenadiers"] 145 00:07:00,086 --> 00:07:02,131 ♪ 146 00:07:02,155 --> 00:07:04,299 Christopher Brown: The British government was very good 147 00:07:04,323 --> 00:07:08,137 at seizing and occupying cities. 148 00:07:08,161 --> 00:07:12,708 Newport, Philadelphia, New York, Charles Town, Savannah... 149 00:07:12,732 --> 00:07:14,710 These are the kind of main ports 150 00:07:14,734 --> 00:07:18,714 that throughout the war Britain could secure, 151 00:07:18,738 --> 00:07:22,317 but holding those places were not holding America. 152 00:07:22,341 --> 00:07:26,622 Pacifying an entire countryside is an entirely different task 153 00:07:26,646 --> 00:07:29,858 than seizing strategic positions. 154 00:07:29,882 --> 00:07:31,794 Narrator: General Charles Cornwallis 155 00:07:31,818 --> 00:07:34,863 had been left in charge in the South with clear orders 156 00:07:34,887 --> 00:07:38,033 from General Henry Clinton back in New York. 157 00:07:38,057 --> 00:07:41,870 He was not to move on to North Carolina and Virginia 158 00:07:41,894 --> 00:07:45,908 until South Carolina was completely pacified. 159 00:07:45,932 --> 00:07:49,845 It was to be the first full-scale military occupation 160 00:07:49,869 --> 00:07:52,848 of an entire colony in North America. 161 00:07:52,872 --> 00:07:54,950 ♪ 162 00:07:54,974 --> 00:07:57,019 From Charles Town, British troops 163 00:07:57,043 --> 00:07:59,888 quickly occupied posts in a great arc 164 00:07:59,912 --> 00:08:02,791 from Savannah and Augusta in Georgia 165 00:08:02,815 --> 00:08:05,928 through the village called Ninety Six to Camden 166 00:08:05,952 --> 00:08:11,233 and then to Georgetown, 60 miles up the coast from Charles Town. 167 00:08:11,257 --> 00:08:14,036 When the British take the decision to move the war 168 00:08:14,060 --> 00:08:15,604 decisively to the South, 169 00:08:15,628 --> 00:08:17,172 I think they're trying to exploit the fact that 170 00:08:17,196 --> 00:08:20,209 there are smaller numbers of White colonists 171 00:08:20,233 --> 00:08:23,011 and larger numbers of slaves in those territories 172 00:08:23,035 --> 00:08:26,381 and the colonists will be more vulnerable. 173 00:08:26,405 --> 00:08:28,684 Voice: Their property, slaves, 174 00:08:28,708 --> 00:08:30,552 we need not seek. 175 00:08:30,576 --> 00:08:33,655 It flies to us, and famine follows. 176 00:08:33,679 --> 00:08:36,358 Their trade we can annihilate, 177 00:08:36,382 --> 00:08:38,927 and when an army cannot find subsistence, 178 00:08:38,951 --> 00:08:42,431 on what hope shall a people resist? 179 00:08:42,455 --> 00:08:45,367 Major John Andre. 180 00:08:45,391 --> 00:08:47,169 ♪ 181 00:08:47,193 --> 00:08:49,338 Voice: I determined to go to Charles Town 182 00:08:49,362 --> 00:08:52,574 and throw myself into the hands of the English. 183 00:08:52,598 --> 00:08:54,910 They received me readily, 184 00:08:54,934 --> 00:08:57,679 and I began to feel the happiness of liberty, 185 00:08:57,703 --> 00:09:01,149 of which I knew nothing before. 186 00:09:01,173 --> 00:09:03,585 Boston King. 187 00:09:03,609 --> 00:09:05,354 Voice: I have been robbed 188 00:09:05,378 --> 00:09:07,189 and deserted by my slaves. 189 00:09:07,213 --> 00:09:10,058 I would sell some of my Negroes, but the slaves in this country 190 00:09:10,082 --> 00:09:13,161 in general have behaved so infamously, 191 00:09:13,185 --> 00:09:14,830 their value is so trifling 192 00:09:14,854 --> 00:09:18,467 that it must be absolute ruin to sell at this time. 193 00:09:18,491 --> 00:09:21,670 Eliza Lucas Pinckney. 194 00:09:21,694 --> 00:09:23,572 Narrator: At his headquarters in New York, 195 00:09:23,596 --> 00:09:25,574 General Clinton continued to believe 196 00:09:25,598 --> 00:09:28,477 most South Carolinians were Loyalists. 197 00:09:28,501 --> 00:09:32,648 He had insisted that Patriots swear allegiance to the Crown 198 00:09:32,672 --> 00:09:37,486 or be considered as enemies and treated accordingly. 199 00:09:37,510 --> 00:09:41,089 Those who did swear allegiance were swiftly disillusioned 200 00:09:41,113 --> 00:09:45,861 as their Loyalist neighbors began to settle old scores. 201 00:09:45,885 --> 00:09:49,131 Those "insurgents" who refused the oath 202 00:09:49,155 --> 00:09:51,600 and dared to take up arms against the King, 203 00:09:51,624 --> 00:09:53,802 Tarleton told General Cornwallis, 204 00:09:53,826 --> 00:09:55,737 "don't deserve" leniency 205 00:09:55,761 --> 00:09:59,599 and would get none from him or his men. 206 00:10:00,933 --> 00:10:04,046 Conway: The oath of allegiance was really going too far 207 00:10:04,070 --> 00:10:07,516 because it obliged them to publicly identify 208 00:10:07,540 --> 00:10:09,851 as on the British side, 209 00:10:09,875 --> 00:10:13,655 but I think the fundamental problem is that the British 210 00:10:13,679 --> 00:10:18,827 are reluctant to restore civil government 211 00:10:18,851 --> 00:10:20,629 in the territories they occupy. 212 00:10:20,653 --> 00:10:22,898 They maintain military government, 213 00:10:22,922 --> 00:10:26,802 and, of course, that reinforces the American claim 214 00:10:26,826 --> 00:10:29,638 that the British are set on imposing despotism 215 00:10:29,662 --> 00:10:31,206 on the colonies. 216 00:10:31,230 --> 00:10:32,874 [Chickens clucking] 217 00:10:32,898 --> 00:10:35,077 Voice: Times began to be troublesome, 218 00:10:35,101 --> 00:10:37,412 and people began to divide into parties. 219 00:10:37,436 --> 00:10:38,914 ♪ 220 00:10:38,938 --> 00:10:41,416 Those that had been good friends in times past 221 00:10:41,440 --> 00:10:43,685 became enemies. 222 00:10:43,709 --> 00:10:47,055 They began to watch each other with jealous eyes. 223 00:10:47,079 --> 00:10:48,924 James Collins. 224 00:10:48,948 --> 00:10:51,860 Narrator: 16-year-old James Collins lived 225 00:10:51,884 --> 00:10:56,064 on his family's farm just below the North Carolina border. 226 00:10:56,088 --> 00:10:58,667 His father Daniel was an Irish immigrant 227 00:10:58,691 --> 00:11:01,803 who loathed the British and encouraged his son 228 00:11:01,827 --> 00:11:04,306 to become a collector of news, 229 00:11:04,330 --> 00:11:08,276 a spy, reporting on his Loyalist neighbors. 230 00:11:08,300 --> 00:11:09,978 [Horse whinnies] 231 00:11:10,002 --> 00:11:11,947 Christopher Brown: One of the things that happens in wartime 232 00:11:11,971 --> 00:11:14,483 is, people who are really good politicians, 233 00:11:14,507 --> 00:11:16,652 they create binaries. 234 00:11:16,676 --> 00:11:19,988 You're either with us or you're against us. 235 00:11:20,012 --> 00:11:21,657 The fact of the matter is, 236 00:11:21,681 --> 00:11:23,625 in real life, that's actually not true. 237 00:11:23,649 --> 00:11:25,794 There's often more than two possibilities. 238 00:11:25,818 --> 00:11:27,362 There were a lot of people in 13 colonies 239 00:11:27,386 --> 00:11:29,264 who actually didn't care that much about the outcome. 240 00:11:29,288 --> 00:11:31,199 They just wanted it over. 241 00:11:31,223 --> 00:11:33,602 Conway: The British are heavily reliant 242 00:11:33,626 --> 00:11:38,206 on recruiting Loyalists as soldiers, 243 00:11:38,230 --> 00:11:41,443 and Loyalists are often very embittered... 244 00:11:41,467 --> 00:11:43,345 ♪ 245 00:11:43,369 --> 00:11:44,813 And, of course, 246 00:11:44,837 --> 00:11:46,848 if you've got soldiers who are keen on revenge, 247 00:11:46,872 --> 00:11:50,619 they're not the ideal instruments of pacification. 248 00:11:50,643 --> 00:11:51,953 ♪ 249 00:11:51,977 --> 00:11:54,523 Narrator: On June 22, 1780, 250 00:11:54,547 --> 00:11:57,325 James Collins' father was among the men gathered 251 00:11:57,349 --> 00:12:00,896 at a tiny settlement called Brown's Crossroads, 252 00:12:00,920 --> 00:12:03,331 summoned there by Captain Christian Huck, 253 00:12:03,355 --> 00:12:07,269 a Loyalist with a well-earned reputation for cruelty. 254 00:12:07,293 --> 00:12:10,739 He was there to administer the Oath of Allegiance. 255 00:12:10,763 --> 00:12:12,340 [Men shouting] 256 00:12:12,364 --> 00:12:15,010 Narrator: Captain Huck stunned the crowd by warning 257 00:12:15,034 --> 00:12:18,480 that "even if the rebels were as thick as the trees 258 00:12:18,504 --> 00:12:21,683 "and Jesus Christ would come down and lead them, 259 00:12:21,707 --> 00:12:24,386 he [would still] defeat them." 260 00:12:24,410 --> 00:12:29,925 His audience, Presbyterians all, considered that blasphemy. 261 00:12:29,949 --> 00:12:33,829 We must fight, James' father said as soon as he got home, 262 00:12:33,853 --> 00:12:36,531 "or submit and be slaves." 263 00:12:36,555 --> 00:12:40,402 He went off to join the Patriot militia the next morning. 264 00:12:40,426 --> 00:12:44,539 James went, too, carrying an ancient shotgun. 265 00:12:44,563 --> 00:12:46,775 ♪ 266 00:12:46,799 --> 00:12:49,444 For the next few weeks, Christian Huck continued 267 00:12:49,468 --> 00:12:54,049 to burn homes, menace women, and murder rebels. 268 00:12:54,073 --> 00:12:58,019 In July, after he took a Patriot family hostage, 269 00:12:58,043 --> 00:13:00,922 the Collinses' militia caught up to him 270 00:13:00,946 --> 00:13:04,593 and killed him along with many of his men. 271 00:13:04,617 --> 00:13:08,797 New volunteers were now swelling Patriot ranks. 272 00:13:08,821 --> 00:13:12,200 By early August, Cornwallis had to admit 273 00:13:12,224 --> 00:13:15,704 that the whole country he had claimed to have pacified 274 00:13:15,728 --> 00:13:18,406 is in an absolute state of rebellion. 275 00:13:18,430 --> 00:13:19,875 [Cannon fires] 276 00:13:19,899 --> 00:13:22,244 Rocky Mount and Hanging Rock, 277 00:13:22,268 --> 00:13:25,781 Blue Savannah and Black Mingo Creek, 278 00:13:25,805 --> 00:13:29,151 Tearcoat Swamp and Halfway Swamp, 279 00:13:29,175 --> 00:13:31,853 Horse Shoe and Quinby Bridge... 280 00:13:31,877 --> 00:13:34,356 The battles and skirmishes that would take place 281 00:13:34,380 --> 00:13:39,127 in South Carolina between 1780 and 1781, 282 00:13:39,151 --> 00:13:41,530 102 of them by one count, 283 00:13:41,554 --> 00:13:45,667 would yield nearly 1/5 of all the battlefield deaths 284 00:13:45,691 --> 00:13:47,969 suffered during the entire war... 285 00:13:47,993 --> 00:13:49,404 [Cannon fires] 286 00:13:49,428 --> 00:13:52,207 and nearly all those American casualties 287 00:13:52,231 --> 00:13:55,577 would come at the hands of other Americans. 288 00:13:55,601 --> 00:13:56,845 [Cannon fires] 289 00:13:56,869 --> 00:13:59,014 Maya Jasanoff: Violence is radicalizing. 290 00:13:59,038 --> 00:14:01,716 It is polarizing, 291 00:14:01,740 --> 00:14:04,352 and it happens in the Revolution 292 00:14:04,376 --> 00:14:07,856 to people on both sides of the equation 293 00:14:07,880 --> 00:14:09,925 that when they are victims of violence, 294 00:14:09,949 --> 00:14:13,853 they will then become perpetrators of violence. 295 00:14:16,088 --> 00:14:17,532 ♪ 296 00:14:17,556 --> 00:14:20,235 Voice: There was no one about in the streets, 297 00:14:20,259 --> 00:14:23,505 only a few sad and frightened faces in the windows. 298 00:14:23,529 --> 00:14:25,907 I talked to some of the principal citizens, 299 00:14:25,931 --> 00:14:28,076 informing them that this was but the vanguard 300 00:14:28,100 --> 00:14:30,412 of a much larger force on the way 301 00:14:30,436 --> 00:14:33,014 and that our King had decided to uphold them 302 00:14:33,038 --> 00:14:35,851 with all his power and strength. 303 00:14:35,875 --> 00:14:38,644 General Rochambeau. 304 00:14:39,745 --> 00:14:41,923 Narrator: On July 11, 1780, 305 00:14:41,947 --> 00:14:45,560 5 French warships and a host of transport vessels 306 00:14:45,584 --> 00:14:48,663 had emerged from the fog that blanketed the harbor 307 00:14:48,687 --> 00:14:50,732 at Newport, Rhode Island, 308 00:14:50,756 --> 00:14:53,902 and some 4,600 officers and men 309 00:14:53,926 --> 00:14:57,706 under the Comte de Rochambeau came ashore. 310 00:14:57,730 --> 00:14:59,674 Rhode Islanders still remembered 311 00:14:59,698 --> 00:15:03,311 that the last French fleet that came had abandoned them, 312 00:15:03,335 --> 00:15:05,647 and Protestant residents weren't sure 313 00:15:05,671 --> 00:15:10,151 if these Catholic foreigners had come to help or conquer them... 314 00:15:10,175 --> 00:15:12,687 ♪ 315 00:15:12,711 --> 00:15:15,523 But when the French commander promised that his men 316 00:15:15,547 --> 00:15:18,793 would pay for everything they needed in silver coin, 317 00:15:18,817 --> 00:15:23,198 not worthless Continental paper, a French officer remembered, 318 00:15:23,222 --> 00:15:25,400 "their countenances brightened... 319 00:15:25,424 --> 00:15:28,403 at this mention of hard money." 320 00:15:28,427 --> 00:15:31,907 The next day, General Rochambeau wrote to Washington, 321 00:15:31,931 --> 00:15:36,177 "Here we are, sir, at your orders." 322 00:15:36,201 --> 00:15:38,413 ♪ 323 00:15:38,437 --> 00:15:42,217 Meanwhile, Congress, without consulting George Washington, 324 00:15:42,241 --> 00:15:45,153 had now appointed General Horatio Gates, 325 00:15:45,177 --> 00:15:47,055 the hero of Saratoga, 326 00:15:47,079 --> 00:15:50,425 commander of the whole Southern Department. 327 00:15:50,449 --> 00:15:54,262 In late July, he and several aides rode into a camp 328 00:15:54,286 --> 00:15:58,099 of 1,200 Continentals from Maryland and Delaware 329 00:15:58,123 --> 00:16:00,235 that stretched along the deep river 330 00:16:00,259 --> 00:16:03,471 at Cox's Mill in North Carolina. 331 00:16:03,495 --> 00:16:07,309 Gates' objective was Camden, South Carolina, 332 00:16:07,333 --> 00:16:10,078 a British outpost and supply depot 333 00:16:10,102 --> 00:16:12,414 in the center of the state. 334 00:16:12,438 --> 00:16:16,952 When he reached Rugeley's Mill, 12 miles north of Camden, 335 00:16:16,976 --> 00:16:18,887 Gates had convinced himself 336 00:16:18,911 --> 00:16:22,223 that he had 7,000 soldiers at his disposal. 337 00:16:22,247 --> 00:16:23,358 ♪ 338 00:16:23,382 --> 00:16:26,828 In fact, he had just over 3,000 men, 339 00:16:26,852 --> 00:16:29,130 Continentals and militia, 340 00:16:29,154 --> 00:16:31,900 and by then, Cornwallis had reached Camden 341 00:16:31,924 --> 00:16:34,569 with reinforcements. 342 00:16:34,593 --> 00:16:38,873 At 10 P.M. on the night of August 15, 1780, 343 00:16:38,897 --> 00:16:42,043 Gates started south toward Camden. 344 00:16:42,067 --> 00:16:44,646 By sheer coincidence, Cornwallis chose 345 00:16:44,670 --> 00:16:48,249 to lead his men north on the same sandy road 346 00:16:48,273 --> 00:16:51,553 that evening, hoping to surprise Gates. 347 00:16:51,577 --> 00:16:53,822 [Shouting and gunfire] 348 00:16:53,846 --> 00:16:56,324 At about 2 A.M. on August 16, 349 00:16:56,348 --> 00:17:00,128 mounted scouts from the two armies collided. 350 00:17:00,152 --> 00:17:02,864 There was a brief exchange of fire. 351 00:17:02,888 --> 00:17:05,633 They separated and prepared for battle. 352 00:17:05,657 --> 00:17:07,602 [Gunfire ends] 353 00:17:07,626 --> 00:17:10,538 At dawn, Cornwallis followed the British custom 354 00:17:10,562 --> 00:17:14,209 of placing his best troops on his right. 355 00:17:14,233 --> 00:17:15,877 Gates, who was himself 356 00:17:15,901 --> 00:17:17,178 an ex-British officer 357 00:17:17,202 --> 00:17:18,847 and should have known better, 358 00:17:18,871 --> 00:17:20,081 unaccountably assigned 359 00:17:20,105 --> 00:17:21,950 his least experienced men 360 00:17:21,974 --> 00:17:23,718 to face them... 361 00:17:23,742 --> 00:17:25,387 Militiamen, many of whom 362 00:17:25,411 --> 00:17:28,423 had never been in combat. 363 00:17:28,447 --> 00:17:31,593 As the Patriots tried to form their lines, 364 00:17:31,617 --> 00:17:35,030 a long, red wall of chanting British regulars 365 00:17:35,054 --> 00:17:37,399 began storming toward them. 366 00:17:37,423 --> 00:17:39,701 The militia broke and ran. 367 00:17:39,725 --> 00:17:41,369 [Shouting and gunfire] 368 00:17:41,393 --> 00:17:44,139 Voice: I confess I was among the first that fled. 369 00:17:44,163 --> 00:17:46,341 The cause of that I cannot tell 370 00:17:46,365 --> 00:17:49,310 except that everyone I saw was about to do the same. 371 00:17:49,334 --> 00:17:51,980 I threw away my gun. 372 00:17:52,004 --> 00:17:54,015 Private Garrett Watts. 373 00:17:54,039 --> 00:17:55,617 [Cannon fires] 374 00:17:55,641 --> 00:17:58,620 Narrator: Continentals on the right did hold for a time. 375 00:17:58,644 --> 00:18:02,424 Gates' second in command, General Johann de Kalb, 376 00:18:02,448 --> 00:18:04,893 a Bavarian-born volunteer, 377 00:18:04,917 --> 00:18:08,797 was shot, slashed, and bayoneted again and again 378 00:18:08,821 --> 00:18:12,567 but managed to order one counterattack after another 379 00:18:12,591 --> 00:18:16,938 until he was finally knocked to the ground, mortally wounded. 380 00:18:16,962 --> 00:18:19,808 His men too began to run. 381 00:18:19,832 --> 00:18:21,643 ♪ 382 00:18:21,667 --> 00:18:24,379 General Gates witnessed none of this. 383 00:18:24,403 --> 00:18:26,548 Shortly after the shooting began, 384 00:18:26,572 --> 00:18:29,350 he had fled the battlefield on horseback 385 00:18:29,374 --> 00:18:31,853 and stayed on the run until he reached 386 00:18:31,877 --> 00:18:36,624 Hillsborough, North Carolina, 180 miles away. 387 00:18:36,648 --> 00:18:38,726 ♪ 388 00:18:38,750 --> 00:18:42,430 The defeat at Camden and the story of Gates' flight 389 00:18:42,454 --> 00:18:44,532 ruined his reputation. 390 00:18:44,556 --> 00:18:46,734 When it came time to name a successor, 391 00:18:46,758 --> 00:18:49,971 Congress would defer to George Washington. 392 00:18:49,995 --> 00:18:51,306 ♪ 393 00:18:51,330 --> 00:18:53,875 Although South Carolina was not pacified, 394 00:18:53,899 --> 00:18:57,879 General Cornwallis was impatient to invade North Carolina, 395 00:18:57,903 --> 00:19:02,450 the next step on the road to the biggest prize... Virginia 396 00:19:02,474 --> 00:19:05,453 and what he hoped would be the total subjugation 397 00:19:05,477 --> 00:19:07,288 of the Southern states. 398 00:19:07,312 --> 00:19:10,182 [Horse whinnies] 399 00:19:11,383 --> 00:19:12,827 [Fife and drums playing] 400 00:19:12,851 --> 00:19:14,229 Iris de Rode: Washington's reputation in France 401 00:19:14,253 --> 00:19:15,563 is an interesting one. 402 00:19:15,587 --> 00:19:18,099 In France, he is revered. He is admired. 403 00:19:18,123 --> 00:19:19,801 People love George Washington 404 00:19:19,825 --> 00:19:23,338 in ways that sometimes seems exaggerated, but it's true. 405 00:19:23,362 --> 00:19:26,207 They admire him not just because he's a general 406 00:19:26,231 --> 00:19:28,676 and they respect the military side, 407 00:19:28,700 --> 00:19:32,180 but it's more that he's a symbol for a Republican leader. 408 00:19:32,204 --> 00:19:34,482 For the French, Washington became a symbol 409 00:19:34,506 --> 00:19:37,285 of what was possible in an egalitarian world 410 00:19:37,309 --> 00:19:40,054 where even a farmer could become a general, 411 00:19:40,078 --> 00:19:43,024 so they admire him for that military talent that he had, 412 00:19:43,048 --> 00:19:46,461 which was not based on aristocracy, titles, or money. 413 00:19:46,485 --> 00:19:49,464 He was there because of his talent. 414 00:19:49,488 --> 00:19:53,034 Narrator: On September 21, 1780, 415 00:19:53,058 --> 00:19:55,603 Washington and 4 of his closest aides 416 00:19:55,627 --> 00:19:57,739 met in Hartford, Connecticut, 417 00:19:57,763 --> 00:20:00,642 with General Rochambeau and his entourage. 418 00:20:00,666 --> 00:20:03,244 The French army remained in Newport. 419 00:20:03,268 --> 00:20:06,948 Washington's army was arrayed around New York. 420 00:20:06,972 --> 00:20:09,918 For two days, the allied commanders discussed 421 00:20:09,942 --> 00:20:13,555 what steps they might take together to defeat the British. 422 00:20:13,579 --> 00:20:15,223 ♪ 423 00:20:15,247 --> 00:20:17,325 Washington and Rochambeau agreed 424 00:20:17,349 --> 00:20:19,294 that the most important objective 425 00:20:19,318 --> 00:20:21,596 was still New York City, 426 00:20:21,620 --> 00:20:24,199 but before an assault could take place, 427 00:20:24,223 --> 00:20:27,335 they would need to have naval superiority 428 00:20:27,359 --> 00:20:30,205 and a far larger combined army. 429 00:20:30,229 --> 00:20:34,609 Washington begged Rochambeau to ask his king for more help. 430 00:20:34,633 --> 00:20:37,712 Rochambeau said he would try. 431 00:20:37,736 --> 00:20:39,247 [Bird screeches] 432 00:20:39,271 --> 00:20:40,615 Voice: I have observed in this war 433 00:20:40,639 --> 00:20:42,317 we have sometimes been in the south 434 00:20:42,341 --> 00:20:44,285 when we should have been in the north 435 00:20:44,309 --> 00:20:45,787 and oftener in the north 436 00:20:45,811 --> 00:20:47,855 when we should have been in the south, 437 00:20:47,879 --> 00:20:50,758 but should we ever possess the Hudson River, 438 00:20:50,782 --> 00:20:53,928 we can reduce the northern provinces. 439 00:20:53,952 --> 00:20:55,964 General Henry Clinton. 440 00:20:55,988 --> 00:20:57,565 ♪ 441 00:20:57,589 --> 00:21:00,902 Narrator: On September 25, Washington and his staff 442 00:21:00,926 --> 00:21:05,540 inspected the fortifications at West Point on the Hudson. 443 00:21:05,564 --> 00:21:07,976 They were scheduled to dine with the general 444 00:21:08,000 --> 00:21:11,446 whom Washington had just appointed commander of the fort, 445 00:21:11,470 --> 00:21:14,916 one of his best soldiers... Benedict Arnold. 446 00:21:14,940 --> 00:21:16,251 ♪ 447 00:21:16,275 --> 00:21:17,986 Washington had been startled 448 00:21:18,010 --> 00:21:21,022 by what poor condition the fortifications were in 449 00:21:21,046 --> 00:21:24,692 and concerned that Arnold had not been there to greet him. 450 00:21:24,716 --> 00:21:27,161 He was not at his headquarters, either, 451 00:21:27,185 --> 00:21:29,998 when his commander arrived for dinner. 452 00:21:30,022 --> 00:21:32,300 Voice: No one could give me any information 453 00:21:32,324 --> 00:21:34,168 where he was. 454 00:21:34,192 --> 00:21:36,004 The impropriety of his conduct 455 00:21:36,028 --> 00:21:39,907 when he knew I was to be there struck me very forcibly. 456 00:21:39,931 --> 00:21:43,077 I had not the least idea of the real cause. [Washington] 457 00:21:43,101 --> 00:21:44,712 ♪ 458 00:21:44,736 --> 00:21:47,048 Narrator: That evening, when his trusted aide 459 00:21:47,072 --> 00:21:50,718 Alexander Hamilton brought him a bundle of papers, 460 00:21:50,742 --> 00:21:54,622 Washington discovered the real cause. 461 00:21:54,646 --> 00:21:58,559 Benedict Arnold... The commander of West Point, 462 00:21:58,583 --> 00:22:00,762 the place Washington considered 463 00:22:00,786 --> 00:22:03,464 the most important post in America... 464 00:22:03,488 --> 00:22:07,535 Had deserted and fled to the British that morning. 465 00:22:07,559 --> 00:22:11,539 Worse still, he had planned to surrender the fort 466 00:22:11,563 --> 00:22:15,576 and all the men stationed in it to the enemy. 467 00:22:15,600 --> 00:22:19,881 Few soldiers had contributed more to the Revolutionary cause 468 00:22:19,905 --> 00:22:22,050 than Benedict Arnold. 469 00:22:22,074 --> 00:22:25,420 Time and again, he had exhibited extraordinary initiative 470 00:22:25,444 --> 00:22:27,755 and bravery on the battlefield 471 00:22:27,779 --> 00:22:32,694 and was severely wounded twice... At Quebec and Saratoga. 472 00:22:32,718 --> 00:22:34,996 Nathaniel Philbrick: He had done all these miracles 473 00:22:35,020 --> 00:22:37,532 on the battlefield, but he was not seeing 474 00:22:37,556 --> 00:22:42,103 any of the recognition he believed he deserved. 475 00:22:42,127 --> 00:22:44,906 "Why am I doing this? I've lost my personal finances. 476 00:22:44,930 --> 00:22:49,711 I've destroyed my body. For what?" 477 00:22:49,735 --> 00:22:52,213 Narrator: Two years earlier, Washington had made Arnold 478 00:22:52,237 --> 00:22:54,582 military commander in Philadelphia. 479 00:22:54,606 --> 00:22:57,385 It had not gone well. 480 00:22:57,409 --> 00:22:59,053 He used his position to profit 481 00:22:59,077 --> 00:23:02,590 from the sale of confiscated Loyalist property. 482 00:23:02,614 --> 00:23:05,526 He had also settled into the same mansion 483 00:23:05,550 --> 00:23:07,895 the British commander had occupied 484 00:23:07,919 --> 00:23:10,598 and was accused of being far too close 485 00:23:10,622 --> 00:23:15,303 to wealthy merchants suspected of Loyalist sympathies. 486 00:23:15,327 --> 00:23:18,439 ♪ 487 00:23:18,463 --> 00:23:20,041 Philbrick: While Arnold is in the midst 488 00:23:20,065 --> 00:23:23,311 of this terrible frustration in Philadelphia, 489 00:23:23,335 --> 00:23:26,948 he falls in love with a young woman named Peggy Shippen, 490 00:23:26,972 --> 00:23:30,651 whose family is of Loyalist sympathies, 491 00:23:30,675 --> 00:23:33,287 who had gotten to know the British officers 492 00:23:33,311 --> 00:23:36,891 during the British occupation of Philadelphia quite well, 493 00:23:36,915 --> 00:23:40,128 and one of them was a Major Andre, 494 00:23:40,152 --> 00:23:41,963 who, just as it so happened, 495 00:23:41,987 --> 00:23:45,767 would become the head of the British spy network, 496 00:23:45,791 --> 00:23:48,336 and whether or not Peggy was the one 497 00:23:48,360 --> 00:23:51,839 who made this all happen, 498 00:23:51,863 --> 00:23:55,009 soon after the two of them are married, 499 00:23:55,033 --> 00:23:58,813 Arnold begins to make overtures to the British. 500 00:23:58,837 --> 00:24:00,915 Narrator: In the strictest secrecy, 501 00:24:00,939 --> 00:24:04,419 he began to communicate through Major John Andre 502 00:24:04,443 --> 00:24:06,888 that he'd gone to war only to redress 503 00:24:06,912 --> 00:24:11,125 legitimate American grievances, not independence, 504 00:24:11,149 --> 00:24:14,328 and had been appalled when Congress allied itself 505 00:24:14,352 --> 00:24:16,631 with Catholic France, which he believed 506 00:24:16,655 --> 00:24:20,601 was the enemy of liberty and Protestantism. 507 00:24:20,625 --> 00:24:24,505 He now volunteered to enlist in the King's service, 508 00:24:24,529 --> 00:24:26,841 either as an officer in the British Army 509 00:24:26,865 --> 00:24:30,478 or by cooperating on some concerted plan 510 00:24:30,502 --> 00:24:33,948 to sabotage the Revolutionary cause. 511 00:24:33,972 --> 00:24:38,853 For 17 months, coded messages had gone back and forth 512 00:24:38,877 --> 00:24:41,956 before a concrete plan could be agreed upon. 513 00:24:41,980 --> 00:24:46,294 ♪ 514 00:24:46,318 --> 00:24:48,362 Arnold was to persuade Washington 515 00:24:48,386 --> 00:24:50,665 to give him command of West Point 516 00:24:50,689 --> 00:24:53,468 and all the American outposts on the Hudson 517 00:24:53,492 --> 00:24:57,605 and then weaken their defenses so that General Clinton's forces 518 00:24:57,629 --> 00:25:01,209 could sail up the river and take them all. 519 00:25:01,233 --> 00:25:04,378 In exchange, Arnold was to be made a general 520 00:25:04,402 --> 00:25:08,683 in the British service, and paid 20,000 British pounds 521 00:25:08,707 --> 00:25:12,987 plus £500 a year for the rest of his life. 522 00:25:13,011 --> 00:25:16,958 Clinton's forces were poised to move up the Hudson. 523 00:25:16,982 --> 00:25:20,094 All that then remained was for Andre and Arnold 524 00:25:20,118 --> 00:25:24,332 to meet and work out a few final details. 525 00:25:24,356 --> 00:25:26,901 Andre had explicit orders. 526 00:25:26,925 --> 00:25:29,971 He was not to cross into rebel territory, 527 00:25:29,995 --> 00:25:34,108 dress as a civilian, or carry any papers. 528 00:25:34,132 --> 00:25:36,477 He disobeyed all 3, 529 00:25:36,501 --> 00:25:38,713 and on his way back to the British lines, 530 00:25:38,737 --> 00:25:41,916 Andre was captured by 3 New York militiamen 531 00:25:41,940 --> 00:25:45,720 with incriminating documents hidden in his stockings 532 00:25:45,744 --> 00:25:48,322 in Benedict Arnold's handwriting. 533 00:25:48,346 --> 00:25:50,124 ♪ 534 00:25:50,148 --> 00:25:53,694 Philbrick: This came as a devastating blow to Washington, 535 00:25:53,718 --> 00:25:56,364 and it was a blow to the American people 536 00:25:56,388 --> 00:25:58,833 to realize that one of their own, 537 00:25:58,857 --> 00:26:01,836 one of their own that had been a great hero, 538 00:26:01,860 --> 00:26:05,730 could make this decision to turn on all of them. 539 00:26:06,865 --> 00:26:09,877 He was the last person Washington ever thought 540 00:26:09,901 --> 00:26:12,013 would have betrayed him. 541 00:26:12,037 --> 00:26:14,615 Narrator: Because Major Andre had been captured 542 00:26:14,639 --> 00:26:18,753 in civilian clothes, he was hanged as a spy. 543 00:26:18,777 --> 00:26:22,757 Arnold, who managed to escape, got his commission 544 00:26:22,781 --> 00:26:25,326 and was given command of a regiment made up 545 00:26:25,350 --> 00:26:28,896 of Loyalists and deserters from the Continental Army 546 00:26:28,920 --> 00:26:31,799 called the American Legion. 547 00:26:31,823 --> 00:26:33,100 ♪ 548 00:26:33,124 --> 00:26:35,570 Voice: Since the fall of Lucifer, 549 00:26:35,594 --> 00:26:38,372 nothing has equaled the fall of Arnold. 550 00:26:38,396 --> 00:26:42,143 He will now sink as low as he had been high before, 551 00:26:42,167 --> 00:26:45,913 and as the devil made war upon heaven after his fall, 552 00:26:45,937 --> 00:26:49,450 so I expect Arnold will upon America. 553 00:26:49,474 --> 00:26:52,420 Should he ever fall into our hands, 554 00:26:52,444 --> 00:26:55,256 he will be a sweet sacrifice. 555 00:26:55,280 --> 00:26:57,124 General Nathanael Greene. 556 00:26:57,148 --> 00:27:01,620 ♪ 557 00:27:02,554 --> 00:27:04,665 ♪ 558 00:27:04,689 --> 00:27:06,834 Narrator: General Cornwallis' planned invasion 559 00:27:06,858 --> 00:27:10,371 of North Carolina would be a 3-pronged assault. 560 00:27:10,395 --> 00:27:14,675 On the right, a column would seize the port of Wilmington, 561 00:27:14,699 --> 00:27:18,212 ensuring that supplies could flow smoothly inland 562 00:27:18,236 --> 00:27:20,214 from the coast. 563 00:27:20,238 --> 00:27:22,817 In the center, Cornwallis would himself lead 564 00:27:22,841 --> 00:27:26,654 the bulk of his army toward the tiny town of Charlotte, 565 00:27:26,678 --> 00:27:29,924 then just a crossroads and a courthouse. 566 00:27:29,948 --> 00:27:33,127 On the left, Major Patrick Ferguson 567 00:27:33,151 --> 00:27:36,731 and perhaps a thousand Loyalists were to guard his flank 568 00:27:36,755 --> 00:27:39,567 and try to rally more men from the backcountry. 569 00:27:39,591 --> 00:27:41,068 ♪ 570 00:27:41,092 --> 00:27:44,372 Ferguson, a Scottish-born career soldier 571 00:27:44,396 --> 00:27:47,908 who directed his men in battle with a silver whistle, 572 00:27:47,932 --> 00:27:50,778 led his Loyalist force across the border 573 00:27:50,802 --> 00:27:53,314 into western North Carolina. 574 00:27:53,338 --> 00:27:56,384 He released rebel prisoners and sent them 575 00:27:56,408 --> 00:27:58,919 over the Blue Ridge Mountains with a message 576 00:27:58,943 --> 00:28:03,157 for those Patriots who called themselves the Overmountain Men, 577 00:28:03,181 --> 00:28:07,662 the settlers who had defied the 1763 proclamation 578 00:28:07,686 --> 00:28:10,765 forbidding them to occupy Indian lands. 579 00:28:10,789 --> 00:28:13,234 A British victory was inevitable, 580 00:28:13,258 --> 00:28:14,669 Ferguson told them, 581 00:28:14,693 --> 00:28:17,038 and every man who laid down his arms 582 00:28:17,062 --> 00:28:19,707 would be treated gently and justly... 583 00:28:19,731 --> 00:28:21,142 [Splashing] 584 00:28:21,166 --> 00:28:23,477 but the frontiersmen did not believe him. 585 00:28:23,501 --> 00:28:28,916 News of Tarleton's cruelty and Loyalist abuses was still fresh. 586 00:28:28,940 --> 00:28:30,985 Instead of surrendering, 587 00:28:31,009 --> 00:28:34,255 they came swarming over the mountains after Ferguson, 588 00:28:34,279 --> 00:28:38,092 who realized he was in trouble, changed course, 589 00:28:38,116 --> 00:28:40,961 and moved towards Charlotte. 590 00:28:40,985 --> 00:28:44,031 Along the way, he issued a proclamation 591 00:28:44,055 --> 00:28:47,168 meant to rally Loyalists. 592 00:28:47,192 --> 00:28:50,171 Voice: Gentlemen, if you choose to be pissed upon 593 00:28:50,195 --> 00:28:54,275 forever and ever by a set of mongrels, say so at once 594 00:28:54,299 --> 00:28:57,011 and let your women turn their backs upon you 595 00:28:57,035 --> 00:28:59,480 and look out for real men to protect them. 596 00:28:59,504 --> 00:29:03,284 If you wish or deserve to live and bear the name of man, 597 00:29:03,308 --> 00:29:06,554 grasp your arms in a moment and run to camp. 598 00:29:06,578 --> 00:29:09,957 The Backwater-men have crossed the mountains. [Ferguson] 599 00:29:09,981 --> 00:29:12,059 ♪ 600 00:29:12,083 --> 00:29:14,061 Edward Lengel: That's the wrong tone to take 601 00:29:14,085 --> 00:29:16,464 when you're communicating 602 00:29:16,488 --> 00:29:19,867 with these backcountry over-the-mountain men, 603 00:29:19,891 --> 00:29:22,603 these Scots-Irish settlers. 604 00:29:22,627 --> 00:29:24,004 ♪ 605 00:29:24,028 --> 00:29:25,940 Narrator: Just inside South Carolina, 606 00:29:25,964 --> 00:29:29,043 Ferguson unaccountably decided to make a stand 607 00:29:29,067 --> 00:29:33,147 on a hill grandly named King's Mountain. 608 00:29:33,171 --> 00:29:35,683 Nearly a thousand Patriot militia... 609 00:29:35,707 --> 00:29:37,318 Half Overmountain Men 610 00:29:37,342 --> 00:29:40,921 and half from the Virginia and Carolina backcountry, 611 00:29:40,945 --> 00:29:44,492 including James Collins... Were right behind him. 612 00:29:44,516 --> 00:29:46,060 ♪ 613 00:29:46,084 --> 00:29:47,728 Voice: Each leader made a short speech 614 00:29:47,752 --> 00:29:49,230 in his own way to his men, 615 00:29:49,254 --> 00:29:51,665 desiring every coward to be off immediately. 616 00:29:51,689 --> 00:29:57,004 Here, I confess, I would have willingly been excused. [Collins] 617 00:29:57,028 --> 00:29:59,673 Narrator: On October 7, 1780, 618 00:29:59,697 --> 00:30:03,144 as they waited for the signal to start up the hillside, 619 00:30:03,168 --> 00:30:07,314 Collins recalled, each man threw 4 or 5 musket balls 620 00:30:07,338 --> 00:30:11,585 into his mouth to stave off thirst and speed reloading. 621 00:30:11,609 --> 00:30:13,020 [Gunfire] 622 00:30:13,044 --> 00:30:16,891 The Patriots attacked with terrifying ferocity. 623 00:30:16,915 --> 00:30:18,692 [Whooping and gunfire] 624 00:30:18,716 --> 00:30:20,828 Voice: They appeared like so many devils 625 00:30:20,852 --> 00:30:22,830 from the infernal regions. 626 00:30:22,854 --> 00:30:25,032 They were the most powerful-looking men 627 00:30:25,056 --> 00:30:28,869 ever beheld... Tall, raw-boned, and sinewy 628 00:30:28,893 --> 00:30:30,638 with long, matted hair, 629 00:30:30,662 --> 00:30:35,442 such men as were never before seen in the Carolinas. 630 00:30:35,466 --> 00:30:37,344 Drury Mathis. 631 00:30:37,368 --> 00:30:38,579 [Whistle blowing] 632 00:30:38,603 --> 00:30:40,848 Narrator: As the Patriots closed in on the summit, 633 00:30:40,872 --> 00:30:44,084 Ferguson continued to ride from point to point, 634 00:30:44,108 --> 00:30:47,021 waving his saber, blowing his whistle, 635 00:30:47,045 --> 00:30:50,858 trying to get his Loyalists to hold on. 636 00:30:50,882 --> 00:30:53,561 Several balls slammed into him at once. 637 00:30:53,585 --> 00:30:58,065 He tumbled from his saddle, his foot caught in the stirrup, 638 00:30:58,089 --> 00:31:00,968 and he was dragged back and forth along the ground 639 00:31:00,992 --> 00:31:03,337 until his men could grab the reins. 640 00:31:03,361 --> 00:31:04,839 [Horse whinnies] 641 00:31:04,863 --> 00:31:07,508 Ferguson had been the only British soldier 642 00:31:07,532 --> 00:31:09,276 in the battle that day. 643 00:31:09,300 --> 00:31:13,948 Everyone else on both sides was an American. 644 00:31:13,972 --> 00:31:16,217 [Shouting and gunfire] 645 00:31:16,241 --> 00:31:19,520 The Loyalists surrendered. 646 00:31:19,544 --> 00:31:21,522 ♪ 647 00:31:21,546 --> 00:31:23,624 Voice: The dead lay in heaps on all sides 648 00:31:23,648 --> 00:31:27,595 while the groans of the wounded were heard in every direction. 649 00:31:27,619 --> 00:31:30,030 "Great God," said I, 650 00:31:30,054 --> 00:31:32,099 "Is this the fate of mortals? 651 00:31:32,123 --> 00:31:35,269 Was it for this cause that man was brought into the world?" 652 00:31:35,293 --> 00:31:37,471 ♪ 653 00:31:37,495 --> 00:31:41,208 We proceeded to bury the dead, but it was badly done. 654 00:31:41,232 --> 00:31:43,677 The hogs in the neighborhood gathered into the place 655 00:31:43,701 --> 00:31:47,615 to devour the flesh of men, and the wolves became so plenty 656 00:31:47,639 --> 00:31:51,685 that it was dangerous for anyone to be out at night. 657 00:31:51,709 --> 00:31:53,211 Private James Collins. 658 00:31:54,145 --> 00:31:56,557 Lengel: After Kings Mountain, 659 00:31:56,581 --> 00:32:00,928 Patriots murder many of their captives. 660 00:32:00,952 --> 00:32:03,898 If they see somebody among the captives 661 00:32:03,922 --> 00:32:06,967 who gives them a dirty look, they'll say, 662 00:32:06,991 --> 00:32:08,469 "Oh, I know that guy. 663 00:32:08,493 --> 00:32:11,171 "He burned a farm just over the next hill, 664 00:32:11,195 --> 00:32:13,140 "and he killed somebody's family. 665 00:32:13,164 --> 00:32:15,175 Let's string him up," 666 00:32:15,199 --> 00:32:18,345 and so all kinds of atrocities take place. 667 00:32:18,369 --> 00:32:20,214 Man: Fight back! 668 00:32:20,238 --> 00:32:22,383 Narrator: When Cornwallis learned that the Patriots 669 00:32:22,407 --> 00:32:26,153 had annihilated a thousand-man Loyalist force, 670 00:32:26,177 --> 00:32:28,389 he pulled his army out of Charlotte 671 00:32:28,413 --> 00:32:30,891 and headed back into South Carolina. 672 00:32:30,915 --> 00:32:32,726 [Horse whinnies] 673 00:32:32,750 --> 00:32:35,596 ♪ 674 00:32:35,620 --> 00:32:37,298 Voice: The women of America, 675 00:32:37,322 --> 00:32:40,100 animated by the purest patriotism, 676 00:32:40,124 --> 00:32:43,070 are sensible of sorrow at this day 677 00:32:43,094 --> 00:32:45,606 in not offering more than barren wishes 678 00:32:45,630 --> 00:32:49,576 for the success of so glorious a Revolution. 679 00:32:49,600 --> 00:32:54,148 If opinion and manners did not forbid us to march to glory 680 00:32:54,172 --> 00:32:58,352 by the same paths as the men, we should at least equal 681 00:32:58,376 --> 00:33:03,590 and sometimes surpass them in our love for the public good. 682 00:33:03,614 --> 00:33:05,459 Esther Reed. 683 00:33:05,483 --> 00:33:07,461 ♪ 684 00:33:07,485 --> 00:33:09,964 Narrator: In Philadelphia, a prominent woman 685 00:33:09,988 --> 00:33:13,067 named Esther Reed had published a pamphlet 686 00:33:13,091 --> 00:33:16,270 which called upon all women to forego luxuries 687 00:33:16,294 --> 00:33:20,240 and instead raise funds to help the soldiers. 688 00:33:20,264 --> 00:33:22,276 ♪ 689 00:33:22,300 --> 00:33:25,879 They collected 300,000 Continental dollars, 690 00:33:25,903 --> 00:33:29,116 hoping to split it among the troops. 691 00:33:29,140 --> 00:33:32,119 George Washington vetoed that idea. 692 00:33:32,143 --> 00:33:34,755 They would just buy rum, he said. 693 00:33:34,779 --> 00:33:38,158 What they needed were shirts. 694 00:33:38,182 --> 00:33:42,429 The women would make more than 2,000 of them. 695 00:33:42,453 --> 00:33:44,865 Voice: And see the spirit catching 696 00:33:44,889 --> 00:33:47,267 from state to state. 697 00:33:47,291 --> 00:33:49,570 America will not wear chains 698 00:33:49,594 --> 00:33:52,639 while her daughters are virtuous. 699 00:33:52,663 --> 00:33:55,175 Abigail Adams. 700 00:33:55,199 --> 00:33:58,145 [Wind blowing] 701 00:33:58,169 --> 00:34:00,347 Rick Atkinson: It's quite primitive, 702 00:34:00,371 --> 00:34:03,217 the conditions their soldiers are living in. 703 00:34:03,241 --> 00:34:04,852 A belief in the cause 704 00:34:04,876 --> 00:34:07,921 keeps you putting one foot in front of the other, 705 00:34:07,945 --> 00:34:09,590 but that does not keep you warm. 706 00:34:09,614 --> 00:34:11,325 It does not cool you down in the summer. 707 00:34:11,349 --> 00:34:15,496 It does not feed you, so it's a constant struggle 708 00:34:15,520 --> 00:34:20,191 just day to day exclusive of battle. 709 00:34:21,426 --> 00:34:24,505 Voice: We never stood upon such perilous ground. 710 00:34:24,529 --> 00:34:29,576 Our troops are poorly clothed, badly fed, and worse paid. 711 00:34:29,600 --> 00:34:32,312 They have not seen a paper dollar 712 00:34:32,336 --> 00:34:36,016 in the way of pay for nearly 12 months. 713 00:34:36,040 --> 00:34:38,585 General Anthony Wayne. 714 00:34:38,609 --> 00:34:41,055 ♪ 715 00:34:41,079 --> 00:34:43,657 Narrator: On New Year's Day 1781, 716 00:34:43,681 --> 00:34:47,161 fueled by rum and righteous indignation, 717 00:34:47,185 --> 00:34:51,131 some 1,500 Pennsylvania Continentals encamped 718 00:34:51,155 --> 00:34:54,568 near Morristown, New Jersey, mutinied. 719 00:34:54,592 --> 00:34:57,971 They killed two officers who tried to stop them, 720 00:34:57,995 --> 00:35:00,207 seized 6 cannon, 721 00:35:00,231 --> 00:35:02,609 and began marching toward Philadelphia 722 00:35:02,633 --> 00:35:06,280 to confront Congress with their grievances, 723 00:35:06,304 --> 00:35:09,249 but before the mutineers could get there, 724 00:35:09,273 --> 00:35:12,252 the Pennsylvania legislature intervened 725 00:35:12,276 --> 00:35:14,955 and agreed to most of their demands, 726 00:35:14,979 --> 00:35:17,791 including the promise of full back pay 727 00:35:17,815 --> 00:35:21,728 and the choice of leaving the army or re-enlisting. 728 00:35:21,752 --> 00:35:25,365 No one was to be punished. 729 00:35:25,389 --> 00:35:27,935 Half the men left the army. 730 00:35:27,959 --> 00:35:30,838 The rest re-enlisted. 731 00:35:30,862 --> 00:35:35,676 3 weeks later, when 3 New Jersey regiments also mutinied, 732 00:35:35,700 --> 00:35:40,414 Washington ordered New England troops to surround them. 733 00:35:40,438 --> 00:35:43,784 The men were assembled and made to look on 734 00:35:43,808 --> 00:35:47,221 as a firing squad of their fellow mutineers 735 00:35:47,245 --> 00:35:51,325 was forced to execute two of the ringleaders. 736 00:35:51,349 --> 00:35:54,194 Philbrick: Washington realized the only thing he could do 737 00:35:54,218 --> 00:35:57,531 was to take them down with terrible brutality. 738 00:35:57,555 --> 00:35:58,899 ♪ 739 00:35:58,923 --> 00:36:01,835 This was Washington's moment of having to end this 740 00:36:01,859 --> 00:36:03,537 in a very summary fashion. 741 00:36:03,561 --> 00:36:06,006 [Gunshot] 742 00:36:06,030 --> 00:36:08,008 Narrator: "Every thing is now quiet," 743 00:36:08,032 --> 00:36:09,743 Washington wrote afterwards, 744 00:36:09,767 --> 00:36:12,346 but he feared that unless some way were found 745 00:36:12,370 --> 00:36:15,649 to pay and clothe and supply his men, 746 00:36:15,673 --> 00:36:18,652 there would be still more mutinies. 747 00:36:18,676 --> 00:36:20,354 [Wind blowing] 748 00:36:20,378 --> 00:36:22,489 Voice: Be assured that day does not follow night 749 00:36:22,513 --> 00:36:26,026 more certainly than it brings with it some additional proof 750 00:36:26,050 --> 00:36:30,597 of the impracticality of carrying on the war without aid. 751 00:36:30,621 --> 00:36:33,467 We are at the end of our tether. 752 00:36:33,491 --> 00:36:37,070 Now or never, deliverance must come. [Washington] 753 00:36:37,094 --> 00:36:40,331 [Wind blowing] 754 00:36:41,732 --> 00:36:46,146 ♪ 755 00:36:46,170 --> 00:36:48,482 Voice: Richmond, Virginia. 756 00:36:48,506 --> 00:36:53,253 War in itself, however distant, is indeed terrible, 757 00:36:53,277 --> 00:36:55,489 but when brought to our very doors, 758 00:36:55,513 --> 00:36:58,659 the reflection is indeed overwhelming. 759 00:36:58,683 --> 00:37:02,462 What a gloomy time do I look forward to. 760 00:37:02,486 --> 00:37:04,932 Already our gentlemen begin to apprehend 761 00:37:04,956 --> 00:37:07,601 that the enemy will advance into the country. 762 00:37:07,625 --> 00:37:08,969 ♪ 763 00:37:08,993 --> 00:37:13,106 If they do, God knows what will become of us. 764 00:37:13,130 --> 00:37:15,809 Betsy Ambler. 765 00:37:15,833 --> 00:37:18,312 Narrator: Virginia's Patriots weren't ready 766 00:37:18,336 --> 00:37:20,480 to resist an invasion. 767 00:37:20,504 --> 00:37:22,983 Men were refusing conscription. 768 00:37:23,007 --> 00:37:26,687 Wealthy planters had exempted themselves, their sons, 769 00:37:26,711 --> 00:37:29,823 and overseers from serving because, they claimed, 770 00:37:29,847 --> 00:37:34,294 they needed to stay home to keep their slaves in line. 771 00:37:34,318 --> 00:37:36,964 "The Rich wanted the Poor to fight for them," 772 00:37:36,988 --> 00:37:38,432 one farmer recalled, 773 00:37:38,456 --> 00:37:40,300 "to defend their property 774 00:37:40,324 --> 00:37:43,837 [while] they refused to fight for themselves." 775 00:37:43,861 --> 00:37:47,140 Then, in January of 1781, 776 00:37:47,164 --> 00:37:49,476 Loyalist troops, British regulars, 777 00:37:49,500 --> 00:37:53,180 and German soldiers sailed into Chesapeake Bay 778 00:37:53,204 --> 00:37:55,115 and up the James River. 779 00:37:55,139 --> 00:37:57,918 Their commander was Benedict Arnold, 780 00:37:57,942 --> 00:38:01,054 now a brigadier general in the British Army 781 00:38:01,078 --> 00:38:05,659 and eager to demonstrate his newfound devotion to the Crown. 782 00:38:05,683 --> 00:38:07,227 ♪ 783 00:38:07,251 --> 00:38:10,464 He and half his men marched toward Richmond, 784 00:38:10,488 --> 00:38:12,566 the new state capital. 785 00:38:12,590 --> 00:38:14,801 At the sight of Arnold's men, 786 00:38:14,825 --> 00:38:19,072 Virginia militiamen, many without arms, melted away. 787 00:38:19,096 --> 00:38:20,841 ♪ 788 00:38:20,865 --> 00:38:23,477 Many years later, an enslaved member 789 00:38:23,501 --> 00:38:26,146 of Governor Jefferson's household remembered 790 00:38:26,170 --> 00:38:31,785 that "in 10 minutes, not a White man was to be seen in Richmond." 791 00:38:31,809 --> 00:38:34,021 Voice: My mother was so scared, 792 00:38:34,045 --> 00:38:36,823 she didn't know whether to stay indoors or out. 793 00:38:36,847 --> 00:38:40,627 The British formed in line and marched up with drums beating. 794 00:38:40,651 --> 00:38:42,729 It was an awful sight. 795 00:38:42,753 --> 00:38:45,332 Seemed like the day of judgment was come. 796 00:38:45,356 --> 00:38:47,100 Isaac Granger. 797 00:38:47,124 --> 00:38:48,735 ♪ 798 00:38:48,759 --> 00:38:50,771 Narrator: Arnold's men burned warehouses 799 00:38:50,795 --> 00:38:55,842 filled with salt and tobacco and seized 2,200 small arms, 800 00:38:55,866 --> 00:39:01,081 nearly 40 cannon, and 503 hogsheads of rum. 801 00:39:01,105 --> 00:39:04,651 Even printing presses were, in Arnold's words, 802 00:39:04,675 --> 00:39:06,987 "purified by the flames." 803 00:39:07,011 --> 00:39:10,057 ♪ 804 00:39:10,081 --> 00:39:13,393 He and his men then moved back down the James, 805 00:39:13,417 --> 00:39:15,062 pillaging as they went, 806 00:39:15,086 --> 00:39:18,265 and settled in for the rest of the winter at Portsmouth, 807 00:39:18,289 --> 00:39:20,400 near the mouth of the Chesapeake, 808 00:39:20,424 --> 00:39:23,627 where they could be supported by the Royal Navy. 809 00:39:24,729 --> 00:39:26,940 Philbrick: To send Benedict Arnold to Virginia 810 00:39:26,964 --> 00:39:33,013 was sending the man Washington most despised to his home state, 811 00:39:33,037 --> 00:39:36,783 and what Washington did was send the officer 812 00:39:36,807 --> 00:39:40,854 that he trusted, in many ways, the most, Lafayette, 813 00:39:40,878 --> 00:39:45,792 to contain this treasonous dog. 814 00:39:45,816 --> 00:39:48,295 Narrator: "Should [Arnold] fall into your hands," 815 00:39:48,319 --> 00:39:50,697 Washington told the Marquis de Lafayette 816 00:39:50,721 --> 00:39:53,633 when he ordered him south to protect Virginia, 817 00:39:53,657 --> 00:39:55,969 "you will execute... the punishment due 818 00:39:55,993 --> 00:40:00,040 [for] his treason... in the most summary way." 819 00:40:00,064 --> 00:40:02,075 ♪ 820 00:40:02,099 --> 00:40:03,844 Voice: South Carolina. 821 00:40:03,868 --> 00:40:06,813 When I left the Northern Army, I expected to find 822 00:40:06,837 --> 00:40:09,850 in this Southern Department a thousand difficulties 823 00:40:09,874 --> 00:40:13,487 to which I was a stranger, but the embarrassments 824 00:40:13,511 --> 00:40:17,491 far exceed my utmost apprehension. 825 00:40:17,515 --> 00:40:20,260 I have but a shadow of an army. 826 00:40:20,284 --> 00:40:23,463 Nathanael Greene. 827 00:40:23,487 --> 00:40:26,333 I think Nathanael Greene is the unsung hero 828 00:40:26,357 --> 00:40:29,236 of the American Revolution. 829 00:40:29,260 --> 00:40:32,806 Without Nathanael Greene in the South grinding it out 830 00:40:32,830 --> 00:40:35,842 battle after battle in the war-torn South, 831 00:40:35,866 --> 00:40:38,879 the Revolution could have easily been lost. 832 00:40:38,903 --> 00:40:40,580 ♪ 833 00:40:40,604 --> 00:40:42,682 Narrator: After the disaster at Camden, 834 00:40:42,706 --> 00:40:45,018 George Washington had sent Nathanael Greene 835 00:40:45,042 --> 00:40:47,888 to replace the disgraced Horatio Gates 836 00:40:47,912 --> 00:40:51,591 as commander of what was left of the southern army. 837 00:40:51,615 --> 00:40:53,927 "I think I am giving you a General," 838 00:40:53,951 --> 00:40:56,997 Washington told a South Carolina congressman, 839 00:40:57,021 --> 00:40:59,866 "but what can a General do without men, 840 00:40:59,890 --> 00:41:04,371 without arms, without clothing, without provisions?" 841 00:41:04,395 --> 00:41:06,039 ♪ 842 00:41:06,063 --> 00:41:10,043 Greene's forces were outnumbered by more than two to one. 843 00:41:10,067 --> 00:41:14,915 Nonetheless, he decided to divide his small army. 844 00:41:14,939 --> 00:41:18,652 "It makes the most of my inferior force," he explained, 845 00:41:18,676 --> 00:41:22,322 "for it compels my adversary to divide his." 846 00:41:22,346 --> 00:41:24,191 ♪ 847 00:41:24,215 --> 00:41:28,528 Greene himself and most of his men marched into South Carolina 848 00:41:28,552 --> 00:41:31,932 to a camp near Cheraw on the Pee Dee River. 849 00:41:31,956 --> 00:41:35,202 Meanwhile, Daniel Morgan led what Greene called 850 00:41:35,226 --> 00:41:39,339 his "Flying Army" west "to annoy the enemy in that quarter" 851 00:41:39,363 --> 00:41:41,274 and "spirit up the people." 852 00:41:41,298 --> 00:41:43,176 ♪ 853 00:41:43,200 --> 00:41:44,644 [Horse whinnies] 854 00:41:44,668 --> 00:41:48,014 In response, Cornwallis sent Banastre Tarleton 855 00:41:48,038 --> 00:41:50,617 after Daniel Morgan. 856 00:41:50,641 --> 00:41:53,820 Morgan had hoped to get his men safely back 857 00:41:53,844 --> 00:41:57,524 across the broad river before facing his pursuer, 858 00:41:57,548 --> 00:42:00,827 but Tarleton was soon within 5 miles. 859 00:42:00,851 --> 00:42:02,963 ♪ 860 00:42:02,987 --> 00:42:06,066 Morgan chose to make a stand at the Cowpens, 861 00:42:06,090 --> 00:42:10,403 a rolling meadow 500 yards long and almost as wide 862 00:42:10,427 --> 00:42:14,274 on which herdsmen grazed their cattle on the way to market. 863 00:42:14,298 --> 00:42:18,812 He expected Tarleton to lead a headlong charge into his ranks 864 00:42:18,836 --> 00:42:23,550 and planned to take advantage of his rash opponent. 865 00:42:23,574 --> 00:42:26,386 Daniel Morgan was a master tactician. 866 00:42:26,410 --> 00:42:29,256 His planning for the Battle of Cowpens 867 00:42:29,280 --> 00:42:33,193 is really brilliant in the way that he draws Tarleton 868 00:42:33,217 --> 00:42:36,029 into a trap. 869 00:42:36,053 --> 00:42:39,032 Narrator: Morgan knew that his less-reliable militia, 870 00:42:39,056 --> 00:42:43,236 faced with an onrushing enemy, would likely break and run, 871 00:42:43,260 --> 00:42:47,007 so he would try to turn that weakness into a strength. 872 00:42:47,031 --> 00:42:50,410 For the next day's battle, he would arrange his men 873 00:42:50,434 --> 00:42:53,780 in 3 lines 150 yards apart. 874 00:42:53,804 --> 00:42:56,917 Militiamen would man the first two. 875 00:42:56,941 --> 00:43:00,554 Morgan ordered them to fire just two volleys each 876 00:43:00,578 --> 00:43:05,325 into the oncoming enemy and then retreat behind the third line, 877 00:43:05,349 --> 00:43:08,662 manned by seasoned Continentals. 878 00:43:08,686 --> 00:43:11,464 He hoped the enemy, convinced the militia 879 00:43:11,488 --> 00:43:14,167 were running away again, would charge 880 00:43:14,191 --> 00:43:17,671 and suddenly find themselves under deadly fire 881 00:43:17,695 --> 00:43:20,240 from his most experienced fighters 882 00:43:20,264 --> 00:43:22,208 hidden behind a rise. 883 00:43:22,232 --> 00:43:26,146 ♪ 884 00:43:26,170 --> 00:43:29,082 Morgan spent the night before the battle 885 00:43:29,106 --> 00:43:31,918 building the militia's confidence. 886 00:43:31,942 --> 00:43:34,988 Voice: He went among the volunteers, 887 00:43:35,012 --> 00:43:37,290 told them to keep in good spirits 888 00:43:37,314 --> 00:43:39,359 and the day would be ours. 889 00:43:39,383 --> 00:43:41,127 "Just hold up your head, boys. 890 00:43:41,151 --> 00:43:44,764 Two fires," he would say, "and you're free, 891 00:43:44,788 --> 00:43:47,133 "and then when you return to your homes, 892 00:43:47,157 --> 00:43:49,669 "how the old folks will bless you 893 00:43:49,693 --> 00:43:53,740 and the girls kiss you for your gallant conduct." 894 00:43:53,764 --> 00:43:56,276 Major Thomas Young. 895 00:43:56,300 --> 00:43:58,845 ♪ 896 00:43:58,869 --> 00:44:01,815 Lengel: Morgan's recognition of them and their recognition 897 00:44:01,839 --> 00:44:05,619 of Morgan as this crusty backwoodsman 898 00:44:05,643 --> 00:44:07,554 who's just like them 899 00:44:07,578 --> 00:44:11,391 gives them a confidence and an ability to think clearly 900 00:44:11,415 --> 00:44:13,460 and to follow orders in a way 901 00:44:13,484 --> 00:44:17,697 that they would not have done this for anybody else. 902 00:44:17,721 --> 00:44:19,699 [Rooster crows] 903 00:44:19,723 --> 00:44:22,902 Voice: About sunrise on the 17th of January 1781, 904 00:44:22,926 --> 00:44:25,372 the enemy came in full view. 905 00:44:25,396 --> 00:44:29,376 The sight... to me, at least... Seemed somewhat imposing. 906 00:44:29,400 --> 00:44:31,277 They halted for a short time 907 00:44:31,301 --> 00:44:35,348 and then advanced rapidly, as if certain of victory. 908 00:44:35,372 --> 00:44:37,217 Private James Collins. 909 00:44:37,241 --> 00:44:39,853 [Shouting and gunfire] 910 00:44:39,877 --> 00:44:42,222 Narrator: The first line of militia managed to pick off 911 00:44:42,246 --> 00:44:46,926 a few regulars and then, following orders, fell back. 912 00:44:46,950 --> 00:44:48,294 ♪ 913 00:44:48,318 --> 00:44:52,098 When the enemy came within 50 yards of the second line, 914 00:44:52,122 --> 00:44:54,601 the militia fired two volleys into them, 915 00:44:54,625 --> 00:44:56,770 a "heavy & galling fire," 916 00:44:56,794 --> 00:44:58,271 Morgan remembered, 917 00:44:58,295 --> 00:44:59,739 that felled 2/3 918 00:44:59,763 --> 00:45:01,841 of Tarleton's infantry officers, 919 00:45:01,865 --> 00:45:03,743 but, just as Tarleton 920 00:45:03,767 --> 00:45:05,345 had assumed it would, 921 00:45:05,369 --> 00:45:06,479 the second line 922 00:45:06,503 --> 00:45:08,948 appeared to fall apart, too. 923 00:45:08,972 --> 00:45:11,584 The British stepped up their pace, 924 00:45:11,608 --> 00:45:13,920 eager to catch the fleeing militia. 925 00:45:13,944 --> 00:45:16,056 Surely, Tarleton thought, 926 00:45:16,080 --> 00:45:19,159 the battle was nearly won. 927 00:45:19,183 --> 00:45:22,896 His men raced up a slope and at its crest 928 00:45:22,920 --> 00:45:25,565 suddenly found themselves face to face 929 00:45:25,589 --> 00:45:27,133 with the third line 930 00:45:27,157 --> 00:45:29,969 and under what a Continental officer remembered 931 00:45:29,993 --> 00:45:34,474 as a "very destructive fire which they little expected." 932 00:45:34,498 --> 00:45:36,176 [Cannon fires] 933 00:45:36,200 --> 00:45:39,713 This time, it was the Patriots who charged with bayonets, 934 00:45:39,737 --> 00:45:41,981 emitting a blood-curdling war cry 935 00:45:42,005 --> 00:45:44,884 they had adapted from Native warriors, 936 00:45:44,908 --> 00:45:46,886 a yell that would reverberate 937 00:45:46,910 --> 00:45:49,689 on Southern battlefields for decades. 938 00:45:49,713 --> 00:45:51,758 [Men whooping] 939 00:45:51,782 --> 00:45:53,526 Voice: Morgan rode up in front 940 00:45:53,550 --> 00:45:55,161 and, waving his sword, cried out, 941 00:45:55,185 --> 00:45:57,897 "Give them one more fire, and the day is ours." 942 00:45:57,921 --> 00:45:59,299 [Sword clangs] 943 00:45:59,323 --> 00:46:01,000 We then advance briskly. 944 00:46:01,024 --> 00:46:03,970 They began to throw down their arms and surrender themselves. 945 00:46:03,994 --> 00:46:06,306 Private James Collins. 946 00:46:06,330 --> 00:46:09,042 Narrator: Meanwhile, American cavalry 947 00:46:09,066 --> 00:46:12,512 attacked the enemy's rear, "shouting and charging," 948 00:46:12,536 --> 00:46:15,482 one Patriot said, "like madmen." 949 00:46:15,506 --> 00:46:18,651 The British line broke. 950 00:46:18,675 --> 00:46:22,021 It was all over in 35 minutes. 951 00:46:22,045 --> 00:46:25,925 The British lost 300 men killed or wounded. 952 00:46:25,949 --> 00:46:30,063 525 more were taken prisoners. 953 00:46:30,087 --> 00:46:35,268 Tarleton managed to get away, but Daniel Morgan was exultant. 954 00:46:35,292 --> 00:46:39,172 "I have Given him," he said, "a devil of a whipping." 955 00:46:39,196 --> 00:46:41,241 ♪ 956 00:46:41,265 --> 00:46:45,378 News of Tarleton's defeat stunned General Cornwallis. 957 00:46:45,402 --> 00:46:48,681 Nearly a third of his army was now lost. 958 00:46:48,705 --> 00:46:52,585 He set out to catch the rebel force. 959 00:46:52,609 --> 00:46:54,154 Two months later, 960 00:46:54,178 --> 00:46:57,290 at the Battle of Guilford Courthouse in North Carolina, 961 00:46:57,314 --> 00:47:01,060 Nathanael Greene tried the same tactics against Cornwallis 962 00:47:01,084 --> 00:47:03,596 that Morgan had used against Tarleton. 963 00:47:03,620 --> 00:47:05,231 [Gunfire] 964 00:47:05,255 --> 00:47:07,767 At first, the strategy seemed to work. 965 00:47:07,791 --> 00:47:10,370 Cornwallis' left began to buckle. 966 00:47:10,394 --> 00:47:14,674 If Greene had had reserves, he might have prevailed. 967 00:47:14,698 --> 00:47:18,211 He had no reserves. 968 00:47:18,235 --> 00:47:23,616 Cornwallis won the battle, but he had lost another 500 men. 969 00:47:23,640 --> 00:47:25,885 [Gunshot] 970 00:47:25,909 --> 00:47:28,721 When the news eventually reached Britain, 971 00:47:28,745 --> 00:47:32,725 the leader of the opposition in Parliament was unimpressed. 972 00:47:32,749 --> 00:47:35,228 "Another such victory," he said, 973 00:47:35,252 --> 00:47:38,231 "would destroy the British army." 974 00:47:38,255 --> 00:47:42,969 Cornwallis and his exhausted men staggered east to Wilmington. 975 00:47:42,993 --> 00:47:46,339 He had had enough of the Carolinas. 976 00:47:46,363 --> 00:47:50,877 Cornwallis decided to defy his orders from General Clinton 977 00:47:50,901 --> 00:47:53,446 and lead his army north to link up 978 00:47:53,470 --> 00:47:58,117 with British and Loyalist forces already in Virginia. 979 00:47:58,141 --> 00:48:00,286 Voice: I cannot help expressing my wishes 980 00:48:00,310 --> 00:48:02,722 that the Chesapeake may become the seat of war, 981 00:48:02,746 --> 00:48:04,757 even, if necessary, 982 00:48:04,781 --> 00:48:07,184 at the expense of abandoning New York. 983 00:48:08,185 --> 00:48:10,430 Until Virginia is in a manner subdued, 984 00:48:10,454 --> 00:48:12,832 our hold of the Carolinas must be difficult, 985 00:48:12,856 --> 00:48:14,968 if not precarious. 986 00:48:14,992 --> 00:48:17,937 Lord Cornwallis. 987 00:48:17,961 --> 00:48:20,907 Narrator: On April 25, 1781, 988 00:48:20,931 --> 00:48:24,310 Cornwallis began his northward march. 989 00:48:24,334 --> 00:48:27,146 Word of his disobedience would not reach 990 00:48:27,170 --> 00:48:31,017 Clinton's headquarters in New York for more than a month. 991 00:48:31,041 --> 00:48:34,187 "My wonder at this move... will never cease," 992 00:48:34,211 --> 00:48:36,656 Clinton wrote when he heard the news, 993 00:48:36,680 --> 00:48:38,591 "but [Cornwallis] has made it. 994 00:48:38,615 --> 00:48:42,762 And we shall say no more but to make the best of it." 995 00:48:42,786 --> 00:48:49,769 ♪ 996 00:48:49,793 --> 00:48:51,337 Voice: The seat of war is chiefly 997 00:48:51,361 --> 00:48:54,240 in the southern states, and there our enemies 998 00:48:54,264 --> 00:48:57,777 by victories and defeats are wasting daily. 999 00:48:57,801 --> 00:48:59,279 ♪ 1000 00:48:59,303 --> 00:49:03,249 Our own American affairs wear a more pleasing aspect. 1001 00:49:03,273 --> 00:49:05,551 Maryland has acceded to the Confederation 1002 00:49:05,575 --> 00:49:08,154 at the very time when Britain is deluding herself 1003 00:49:08,178 --> 00:49:11,624 with the idea that we are crumbling to pieces. 1004 00:49:11,648 --> 00:49:14,193 Abigail Adams. 1005 00:49:14,217 --> 00:49:19,065 Narrator: In early 1781, Maryland became the last state 1006 00:49:19,089 --> 00:49:21,768 to ratify the Articles of Confederation. 1007 00:49:21,792 --> 00:49:25,772 Almost 5 years after declaring their independence, 1008 00:49:25,796 --> 00:49:29,876 the United States finally had the kind of confederation 1009 00:49:29,900 --> 00:49:31,778 they thought they wanted, 1010 00:49:31,802 --> 00:49:35,882 but it was just an alliance, not a central government. 1011 00:49:35,906 --> 00:49:37,317 ♪ 1012 00:49:37,341 --> 00:49:40,787 All laws were left to the individual states, 1013 00:49:40,811 --> 00:49:43,423 including those governing slavery, 1014 00:49:43,447 --> 00:49:45,758 which was still legal everywhere... 1015 00:49:45,782 --> 00:49:47,293 ♪ 1016 00:49:47,317 --> 00:49:50,763 But now there were people in all parts of America 1017 00:49:50,787 --> 00:49:52,765 looking to abolish it. 1018 00:49:52,789 --> 00:49:55,902 They would have their first successes in the North. 1019 00:49:55,926 --> 00:49:57,503 ♪ 1020 00:49:57,527 --> 00:49:59,706 Christopher Brown: It's in this moment that the first 1021 00:49:59,730 --> 00:50:04,177 antislavery organizations begin to take shape, 1022 00:50:04,201 --> 00:50:05,912 especially in those places where slavery 1023 00:50:05,936 --> 00:50:09,482 is not terribly important to the social and economic order... 1024 00:50:09,506 --> 00:50:11,150 Pennsylvania, 1025 00:50:11,174 --> 00:50:12,885 Massachusetts, 1026 00:50:12,909 --> 00:50:15,054 Connecticut. 1027 00:50:15,078 --> 00:50:16,389 Annette Gordon-Reed: It's easier in the North, 1028 00:50:16,413 --> 00:50:19,726 where there are fewer Black people. 1029 00:50:19,750 --> 00:50:22,161 The sort of traditional things to say is that 1030 00:50:22,185 --> 00:50:25,131 the South was a slave society 1031 00:50:25,155 --> 00:50:28,401 and the North was a society with slaves. 1032 00:50:28,425 --> 00:50:30,436 Bernard Bailyn: Before the Revolution, 1033 00:50:30,460 --> 00:50:34,731 slavery was never a major public issue. 1034 00:50:35,799 --> 00:50:37,143 There were people 1035 00:50:37,167 --> 00:50:38,811 who spoke against it 1036 00:50:38,835 --> 00:50:40,113 and gave good reasons 1037 00:50:40,137 --> 00:50:41,914 to what evil it was, 1038 00:50:41,938 --> 00:50:43,349 but it was not 1039 00:50:43,373 --> 00:50:46,586 a major public issue. 1040 00:50:46,610 --> 00:50:48,321 After the Revolution, 1041 00:50:48,345 --> 00:50:51,858 there never was a time when it wasn't. 1042 00:50:51,882 --> 00:50:54,360 Narrator: In 1780, 1043 00:50:54,384 --> 00:50:57,130 Pennsylvania's Gradual Emancipation Act 1044 00:50:57,154 --> 00:51:00,867 had said that anyone born into slavery in that state 1045 00:51:00,891 --> 00:51:02,869 after the act's adoption 1046 00:51:02,893 --> 00:51:05,972 automatically became free at 28, 1047 00:51:05,996 --> 00:51:08,441 but any man, woman, or child 1048 00:51:08,465 --> 00:51:10,843 enslaved before its passage 1049 00:51:10,867 --> 00:51:12,378 remained enslaved 1050 00:51:12,402 --> 00:51:14,013 to the end of their lives 1051 00:51:14,037 --> 00:51:15,648 unless they bought 1052 00:51:15,672 --> 00:51:16,949 their freedom or had 1053 00:51:16,973 --> 00:51:18,918 their owner grant it to them. 1054 00:51:18,942 --> 00:51:21,154 ♪ 1055 00:51:21,178 --> 00:51:23,089 Voice: Any time, 1056 00:51:23,113 --> 00:51:25,358 any time while I was a slave, 1057 00:51:25,382 --> 00:51:28,561 if one minute's freedom had been offered to me 1058 00:51:28,585 --> 00:51:32,298 and I'd been told I must die at the end of that minute, 1059 00:51:32,322 --> 00:51:35,234 I would have taken it 1060 00:51:35,258 --> 00:51:40,239 just to stand one minute on God's earth a free woman. 1061 00:51:40,263 --> 00:51:42,942 I would. [Elizabeth Freeman (Mumbet)] 1062 00:51:42,966 --> 00:51:46,479 Narrator: When an enslaved woman in Western Massachusetts 1063 00:51:46,503 --> 00:51:50,750 called Mumbet was struck by her mistress with a kitchen shovel, 1064 00:51:50,774 --> 00:51:54,387 she had stalked from the house and refused to return. 1065 00:51:54,411 --> 00:51:58,091 Her owner went to court to get her back. 1066 00:51:58,115 --> 00:52:01,294 Mumbet's lawyer convinced an all-White jury 1067 00:52:01,318 --> 00:52:03,096 that since the preamble 1068 00:52:03,120 --> 00:52:05,832 to the new Massachusetts state constitution 1069 00:52:05,856 --> 00:52:08,401 declared all men "free and equal" 1070 00:52:08,425 --> 00:52:11,304 and since his client was a human being, 1071 00:52:11,328 --> 00:52:14,006 she should be free. 1072 00:52:14,030 --> 00:52:17,577 The Massachusetts Supreme Court agreed. 1073 00:52:17,601 --> 00:52:21,514 Mumbet changed her name to Elizabeth Freeman 1074 00:52:21,538 --> 00:52:24,717 and lived nearly 50 years in Stockbridge, 1075 00:52:24,741 --> 00:52:29,589 serving her neighbors as a healer, nurse, and midwife. 1076 00:52:29,613 --> 00:52:33,693 Her gravestone in a Stockbridge cemetery reads, 1077 00:52:33,717 --> 00:52:35,895 "She was born a slave... 1078 00:52:35,919 --> 00:52:41,467 yet in her own sphere she had no superior nor equal." 1079 00:52:41,491 --> 00:52:42,969 ♪ 1080 00:52:42,993 --> 00:52:44,737 By the time of her death 1081 00:52:44,761 --> 00:52:46,172 in 1829, 1082 00:52:46,196 --> 00:52:48,241 all the states from New Jersey 1083 00:52:48,265 --> 00:52:50,276 north to New England had called 1084 00:52:50,300 --> 00:52:53,312 for the abolition of slavery, 1085 00:52:53,336 --> 00:52:56,449 but it would take another generation 1086 00:52:56,473 --> 00:52:59,285 and a still more terrible war 1087 00:52:59,309 --> 00:53:02,822 to end it everywhere in the United States. 1088 00:53:02,846 --> 00:53:06,183 ♪ 1089 00:53:06,950 --> 00:53:09,929 ♪ 1090 00:53:09,953 --> 00:53:12,698 Voice: There are few generals that have run oftener 1091 00:53:12,722 --> 00:53:14,300 than I have done, 1092 00:53:14,324 --> 00:53:17,270 but I have taken care not to run too far 1093 00:53:17,294 --> 00:53:20,640 and commonly have run as fast forward as backward 1094 00:53:20,664 --> 00:53:23,476 to convince our enemy that we were like a crab 1095 00:53:23,500 --> 00:53:25,845 that could run either way. 1096 00:53:25,869 --> 00:53:28,614 Nathanael Greene. 1097 00:53:28,638 --> 00:53:31,784 Narrator: One by one, all across the Lower South, 1098 00:53:31,808 --> 00:53:35,188 British outposts either surrendered to Patriots 1099 00:53:35,212 --> 00:53:37,256 or were abandoned... 1100 00:53:37,280 --> 00:53:39,926 Fort Watson, Camden, 1101 00:53:39,950 --> 00:53:42,295 Orangeburg, Fort Motte, 1102 00:53:42,319 --> 00:53:44,997 Fort Granby, Fort Galphin, 1103 00:53:45,021 --> 00:53:47,366 Georgetown, Augusta. 1104 00:53:47,390 --> 00:53:48,834 [Cannon fires] 1105 00:53:48,858 --> 00:53:51,404 General Greene fought 3 full-scale battles 1106 00:53:51,428 --> 00:53:54,440 with the British... At Hobkirk Hill, 1107 00:53:54,464 --> 00:53:59,312 Ninety Six, and Eutaw Springs... And lost them all, 1108 00:53:59,336 --> 00:54:02,748 but he inflicted such heavy casualties each time 1109 00:54:02,772 --> 00:54:05,451 that the enemy was forced to withdraw 1110 00:54:05,475 --> 00:54:08,287 closer and closer to Charles Town. 1111 00:54:08,311 --> 00:54:10,456 "We fight," Greene said, 1112 00:54:10,480 --> 00:54:13,693 "get beat, rise, and fight again." 1113 00:54:13,717 --> 00:54:15,661 ♪ 1114 00:54:15,685 --> 00:54:19,332 He couldn't have done it without local Patriot militias. 1115 00:54:19,356 --> 00:54:23,236 Francis Marion's outfit eluded British cavalry 1116 00:54:23,260 --> 00:54:26,105 by hiding in the swamp so successfully 1117 00:54:26,129 --> 00:54:28,107 that Banastre Tarleton said, 1118 00:54:28,131 --> 00:54:29,809 "[A]s for this old fox, 1119 00:54:29,833 --> 00:54:32,178 the Devil himself could not catch him." 1120 00:54:32,202 --> 00:54:33,646 ♪ 1121 00:54:33,670 --> 00:54:36,349 As Britain's grip on the region weakened, 1122 00:54:36,373 --> 00:54:39,085 the anarchy that had characterized the backcountry 1123 00:54:39,109 --> 00:54:42,555 for months spiraled into chaos. 1124 00:54:42,579 --> 00:54:45,424 Partisans on both sides seemed bent 1125 00:54:45,448 --> 00:54:49,195 on being more cruel than those on the other. 1126 00:54:49,219 --> 00:54:52,131 They tortured and murdered captives, 1127 00:54:52,155 --> 00:54:55,167 burned homes and flogged their owners, 1128 00:54:55,191 --> 00:54:58,604 raped women and hanged their husbands. 1129 00:54:58,628 --> 00:55:03,676 Gangs of bandits held up travelers and plundered farms. 1130 00:55:03,700 --> 00:55:05,745 Voice: With us in the North, 1131 00:55:05,769 --> 00:55:08,814 the difference is little more than a division of sentiment. 1132 00:55:08,838 --> 00:55:11,117 But here, they prosecute each other 1133 00:55:11,141 --> 00:55:13,386 with little less than savage fury. 1134 00:55:13,410 --> 00:55:16,322 You can have no idea of the distress and misery 1135 00:55:16,346 --> 00:55:18,491 that prevail in this quarter. 1136 00:55:18,515 --> 00:55:20,159 Nathanael Greene. 1137 00:55:20,183 --> 00:55:22,862 ♪ 1138 00:55:22,886 --> 00:55:25,931 Narrator: By the end of the summer of 1781, 1139 00:55:25,955 --> 00:55:29,335 the British would be penned up in just 3 coastal towns 1140 00:55:29,359 --> 00:55:31,704 in the Carolinas and Georgia... 1141 00:55:31,728 --> 00:55:35,508 Wilmington, Charles Town, and Savannah. 1142 00:55:35,532 --> 00:55:39,869 London's Southern strategy was falling apart. 1143 00:55:43,606 --> 00:55:46,152 ♪ 1144 00:55:46,176 --> 00:55:47,887 Voice: The King has decided that 1145 00:55:47,911 --> 00:55:50,089 the principal objective of his arms in America 1146 00:55:50,113 --> 00:55:52,958 during the war with the English is to drive them 1147 00:55:52,982 --> 00:55:56,395 from the Gulf of Mexico and the banks of the Mississippi, 1148 00:55:56,419 --> 00:55:59,031 which should be considered as the bulwark 1149 00:55:59,055 --> 00:56:01,067 of the vast empire of New Spain. [Bernardo de Gálvez] 1150 00:56:01,091 --> 00:56:02,702 ♪ 1151 00:56:02,726 --> 00:56:04,537 Narrator: Bernardo de Gálvez... 1152 00:56:04,561 --> 00:56:07,406 The bold, young governor of Spanish Louisiana... 1153 00:56:07,430 --> 00:56:10,476 Saw an opportunity in the American Revolution 1154 00:56:10,500 --> 00:56:13,679 to take back West Florida for his king, 1155 00:56:13,703 --> 00:56:19,452 even before Spain had entered the war in 1779. 1156 00:56:19,476 --> 00:56:21,220 Kathleen DuVal: Bernardo de Gálvez 1157 00:56:21,244 --> 00:56:22,922 had big ambitions for Spain, 1158 00:56:22,946 --> 00:56:25,725 and he had big ambitions for himself. 1159 00:56:25,749 --> 00:56:29,662 He believed that war against Britain 1160 00:56:29,686 --> 00:56:33,599 would be his chance to push Spanish colonies 1161 00:56:33,623 --> 00:56:37,737 even farther into North America, past Louisiana, 1162 00:56:37,761 --> 00:56:40,973 into the rest of the Gulf Coast, the Appalachians, 1163 00:56:40,997 --> 00:56:44,910 perhaps most of Eastern North America. 1164 00:56:44,934 --> 00:56:46,812 Narrator: As soon as Gálvez heard Spain 1165 00:56:46,836 --> 00:56:50,282 had officially entered the war, he left New Orleans 1166 00:56:50,306 --> 00:56:52,852 and rallied an army that reflected 1167 00:56:52,876 --> 00:56:56,522 the extraordinary diversity of the Gulf Coast... 1168 00:56:56,546 --> 00:57:00,960 Spaniards, Frenchmen, Acadians, Irishmen, 1169 00:57:00,984 --> 00:57:05,398 Black and biracial men from Africa and the Americas, 1170 00:57:05,422 --> 00:57:08,768 Choctaws, Houmas, Alabamas, 1171 00:57:08,792 --> 00:57:13,205 men from Mexico, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Hispaniola, 1172 00:57:13,229 --> 00:57:17,676 and a handful of volunteers from the United States. 1173 00:57:17,700 --> 00:57:18,844 ♪ 1174 00:57:18,868 --> 00:57:22,181 DuVal: Gálvez began to take British posts. 1175 00:57:22,205 --> 00:57:24,850 He took Baton Rouge, Natchez, 1176 00:57:24,874 --> 00:57:27,420 and then sailed with his militia 1177 00:57:27,444 --> 00:57:29,722 and took the post of Mobile. 1178 00:57:29,746 --> 00:57:32,825 Narrator: By the spring of 1781, 1179 00:57:32,849 --> 00:57:36,729 Gálvez's only objective left in British West Florida 1180 00:57:36,753 --> 00:57:40,366 was its capital and stronghold... Pensacola. 1181 00:57:40,390 --> 00:57:42,535 ♪ 1182 00:57:42,559 --> 00:57:46,038 It was defended by local Black and White militiamen; 1183 00:57:46,062 --> 00:57:49,041 British, German, and Loyalist soldiers; 1184 00:57:49,065 --> 00:57:53,345 and hundreds of Choctaws, Chickasaws, and Muscogee Creeks 1185 00:57:53,369 --> 00:57:56,182 who opposed any imperial expansion 1186 00:57:56,206 --> 00:57:59,952 that threatened their lands in the southeastern interior. 1187 00:57:59,976 --> 00:58:01,854 ♪ 1188 00:58:01,878 --> 00:58:05,157 Gálvez landed his army and began a siege. 1189 00:58:05,181 --> 00:58:09,562 For a month and a half, Spanish guns edged closer 1190 00:58:09,586 --> 00:58:13,165 and closer to the heart of the British defenses. 1191 00:58:13,189 --> 00:58:14,533 [Cannon fires] 1192 00:58:14,557 --> 00:58:17,803 Finally, on May 8, 1781, 1193 00:58:17,827 --> 00:58:20,639 a shell hit the British gunpowder magazine. 1194 00:58:20,663 --> 00:58:22,007 [Explosion] 1195 00:58:22,031 --> 00:58:24,543 The explosion killed almost a hundred men, 1196 00:58:24,567 --> 00:58:26,479 mostly Loyalist troops, 1197 00:58:26,503 --> 00:58:30,382 and blew a wide hole in the fort's walls. 1198 00:58:30,406 --> 00:58:33,085 Gálvez's men poured through the gap, 1199 00:58:33,109 --> 00:58:36,689 and within hours, the British commander surrendered. 1200 00:58:36,713 --> 00:58:40,726 Spanish rule was restored in West Florida 1201 00:58:40,750 --> 00:58:44,964 and with it Spanish control of the Gulf of Mexico. 1202 00:58:44,988 --> 00:58:47,099 ♪ 1203 00:58:47,123 --> 00:58:51,237 DuVal: West Florida is the first nonrebelling colony 1204 00:58:51,261 --> 00:58:53,038 that Britain loses. 1205 00:58:53,062 --> 00:58:55,975 After the Spanish victory at Pensacola, 1206 00:58:55,999 --> 00:59:00,546 many, many people in Britain think it's time 1207 00:59:00,570 --> 00:59:03,115 to stop this war before it gets any worse. 1208 00:59:03,139 --> 00:59:04,583 ♪ 1209 00:59:04,607 --> 00:59:07,353 Narrator: Britain was more alone than ever, 1210 00:59:07,377 --> 00:59:09,054 at war with the Netherlands now 1211 00:59:09,078 --> 00:59:11,423 as well as with France and Spain, 1212 00:59:11,447 --> 00:59:15,427 and its West Indian islands and Gibraltar in the Mediterranean 1213 00:59:15,451 --> 00:59:17,763 were under attack. 1214 00:59:17,787 --> 00:59:21,367 To London, North America mattered less and less, 1215 00:59:21,391 --> 00:59:25,004 and General Clinton in New York could do little more 1216 00:59:25,028 --> 00:59:29,375 than make sure that city remained in British hands. 1217 00:59:29,399 --> 00:59:32,945 De Rode: The British stronghold is in New York. 1218 00:59:32,969 --> 00:59:35,447 It's where they won the battle in 1776 1219 00:59:35,471 --> 00:59:37,983 against George Washington, which is one of the reasons 1220 00:59:38,007 --> 00:59:40,019 George Washington really wants to take New York, 1221 00:59:40,043 --> 00:59:44,323 because he feels very humiliated by that specific battle, 1222 00:59:44,347 --> 00:59:48,294 so for him since that time, it became almost an obsession. 1223 00:59:48,318 --> 00:59:50,963 "If we take New York, we're gonna win this war." 1224 00:59:50,987 --> 00:59:53,132 ♪ 1225 00:59:53,156 --> 00:59:55,367 Narrator: When word came that French warships 1226 00:59:55,391 --> 00:59:58,704 and more French troops would arrive on the East Coast 1227 00:59:58,728 --> 01:00:02,174 sometime that summer, Washington and Rochambeau met again 1228 01:00:02,198 --> 01:00:06,011 in Connecticut to discuss where the fleet might, in fact, 1229 01:00:06,035 --> 01:00:09,882 do the most good... At New York or in Virginia, 1230 01:00:09,906 --> 01:00:12,751 where Cornwallis was now headed. 1231 01:00:12,775 --> 01:00:15,854 Washington still favored New York. 1232 01:00:15,878 --> 01:00:19,825 Rochambeau told him that he preferred to leave the decision 1233 01:00:19,849 --> 01:00:22,962 to the Comte de Grasse, the admiral now commanding 1234 01:00:22,986 --> 01:00:26,065 the French fleet in the Caribbean, 1235 01:00:26,089 --> 01:00:28,367 but in private letters to de Grasse, 1236 01:00:28,391 --> 01:00:31,604 Rochambeau argued that blockading the Chesapeake 1237 01:00:31,628 --> 01:00:33,405 should take precedence. 1238 01:00:33,429 --> 01:00:38,143 In the meantime, Rochambeau marched his more than 4,000 men 1239 01:00:38,167 --> 01:00:40,913 from Newport to join Washington's army 1240 01:00:40,937 --> 01:00:43,749 in Westchester County, New York. 1241 01:00:43,773 --> 01:00:47,553 The French were stunned by what they saw. 1242 01:00:47,577 --> 01:00:49,722 ♪ 1243 01:00:49,746 --> 01:00:51,690 Voice: I cannot too often repeat 1244 01:00:51,714 --> 01:00:55,027 how astonished I have been at the American Army. 1245 01:00:55,051 --> 01:00:58,964 It is inconceivable that troops nearly naked, badly paid, 1246 01:00:58,988 --> 01:01:02,901 and composed of old men, Negroes, and children 1247 01:01:02,925 --> 01:01:05,871 should march so well. [Cromot du Bourg] 1248 01:01:05,895 --> 01:01:07,940 Voice: The Rhode Island Regiment 1249 01:01:07,964 --> 01:01:10,376 includes many Negroes, and that regiment 1250 01:01:10,400 --> 01:01:13,912 is the most neatly dressed, the best under arms, 1251 01:01:13,936 --> 01:01:17,049 and the most precise in its maneuvers. [Ludwig von Closen] 1252 01:01:17,073 --> 01:01:18,517 ♪ 1253 01:01:18,541 --> 01:01:22,254 Narrator: As American and French soldiers probed British defenses 1254 01:01:22,278 --> 01:01:25,958 around New York, Washington waited for Admiral de Grasse 1255 01:01:25,982 --> 01:01:29,595 to pick his target... New York or Virginia. 1256 01:01:29,619 --> 01:01:31,563 ♪ 1257 01:01:31,587 --> 01:01:34,166 On May 20, 1781, 1258 01:01:34,190 --> 01:01:37,569 Lord Cornwallis arrived at Petersburg, Virginia. 1259 01:01:37,593 --> 01:01:43,542 He commanded some 7,000 British, German, and Loyalist troops. 1260 01:01:43,566 --> 01:01:46,512 Benedict Arnold was not among them. 1261 01:01:46,536 --> 01:01:49,882 He had been recalled to New York and would eventually 1262 01:01:49,906 --> 01:01:54,286 sail for England, never to see his country again. 1263 01:01:54,310 --> 01:01:56,622 ♪ 1264 01:01:56,646 --> 01:02:00,192 Cornwallis first tried to hunt down the Marquis de Lafayette, 1265 01:02:00,216 --> 01:02:03,562 who had been harassing British forces in Virginia, 1266 01:02:03,586 --> 01:02:07,700 but Lafayette managed to slip away. 1267 01:02:07,724 --> 01:02:10,769 Voice: You can be entirely calm with regard 1268 01:02:10,793 --> 01:02:13,372 to the rapid marches of Lord Cornwallis. 1269 01:02:13,396 --> 01:02:16,775 Let him march from St. Augustine to Boston. 1270 01:02:16,799 --> 01:02:21,046 What he wins in his front he loses in his rear. 1271 01:02:21,070 --> 01:02:24,049 His army will bury itself 1272 01:02:24,073 --> 01:02:26,585 without requiring us to fight him. [Lafayette] 1273 01:02:26,609 --> 01:02:30,022 ♪ 1274 01:02:30,046 --> 01:02:32,591 Narrator: Cornwallis unleashed two raiding parties 1275 01:02:32,615 --> 01:02:35,027 into the heart of Virginia. 1276 01:02:35,051 --> 01:02:39,131 250 horsemen, commanded by Banastre Tarleton, 1277 01:02:39,155 --> 01:02:42,101 were ordered to try to capture Thomas Jefferson 1278 01:02:42,125 --> 01:02:45,938 and the Virginia Assembly, now meeting at Charlottesville, 1279 01:02:45,962 --> 01:02:49,341 where Tarleton managed to seize several legislators, 1280 01:02:49,365 --> 01:02:53,879 including Daniel Boone from Kentucky County, 1281 01:02:53,903 --> 01:02:56,215 but with only moments to spare, 1282 01:02:56,239 --> 01:03:00,285 Jefferson escaped his would-be captors on horseback. 1283 01:03:00,309 --> 01:03:02,287 ♪ 1284 01:03:02,311 --> 01:03:04,990 Voice: Such terror and confusion. 1285 01:03:05,014 --> 01:03:07,626 What an alarming crisis is this. 1286 01:03:07,650 --> 01:03:09,928 We were off in a twinkling. 1287 01:03:09,952 --> 01:03:12,297 The nearer the mountains, the greater the safety 1288 01:03:12,321 --> 01:03:13,999 was the conclusion, 1289 01:03:14,023 --> 01:03:17,436 so on we traveled through byways and brambles. [Ambler] 1290 01:03:17,460 --> 01:03:19,071 ♪ 1291 01:03:19,095 --> 01:03:21,840 Narrator: Betsy Ambler's family was on the run, too, 1292 01:03:21,864 --> 01:03:24,676 eventually finding temporary sanctuary 1293 01:03:24,700 --> 01:03:27,246 on a friend's backcountry plantation. 1294 01:03:27,270 --> 01:03:29,615 ♪ 1295 01:03:29,639 --> 01:03:32,050 After 3 mostly fruitless weeks 1296 01:03:32,074 --> 01:03:34,286 spent marching through the backcountry, 1297 01:03:34,310 --> 01:03:38,991 Cornwallis and his men started southeast towards Williamsburg. 1298 01:03:39,015 --> 01:03:43,729 Some 4,500 ex-slaves now trailed along behind. 1299 01:03:43,753 --> 01:03:45,297 ♪ 1300 01:03:45,321 --> 01:03:47,933 By bringing the war into Virginia, 1301 01:03:47,957 --> 01:03:50,302 Cornwallis had provided the largest body 1302 01:03:50,326 --> 01:03:55,140 of Black people in North America the possibility of freedom. 1303 01:03:55,164 --> 01:03:58,377 Among those who threw in their lot with the British 1304 01:03:58,401 --> 01:04:01,980 were 23 from Thomas Jefferson's estates 1305 01:04:02,004 --> 01:04:05,951 and 16 from George Washington's Mount Vernon. 1306 01:04:05,975 --> 01:04:07,986 Gordon-Reed: What do you do? 1307 01:04:08,010 --> 01:04:11,924 Do you stay, or do you take a chance at your freedom 1308 01:04:11,948 --> 01:04:13,725 and leave your family? 1309 01:04:13,749 --> 01:04:15,894 How many people can go with you? 1310 01:04:15,918 --> 01:04:18,630 Sometimes whole families left together. 1311 01:04:18,654 --> 01:04:20,365 ♪ 1312 01:04:20,389 --> 01:04:22,100 I would imagine it being frightening 1313 01:04:22,124 --> 01:04:25,804 but also a sense of hope because the system 1314 01:04:25,828 --> 01:04:28,607 that they were in may be destroyed 1315 01:04:28,631 --> 01:04:32,110 and that they may have an opportunity for freedom. 1316 01:04:32,134 --> 01:04:36,381 ♪ 1317 01:04:36,405 --> 01:04:38,750 Voice: Has the God who made the White man 1318 01:04:38,774 --> 01:04:41,186 and the Black left any record 1319 01:04:41,210 --> 01:04:44,990 declaring us a different species? 1320 01:04:45,014 --> 01:04:48,160 Are we not sustained by the same power, 1321 01:04:48,184 --> 01:04:53,832 supported by the same food, hurt by the same wounds, 1322 01:04:53,856 --> 01:04:56,335 pleased with the same delights, 1323 01:04:56,359 --> 01:05:00,072 and propagated by the same means? 1324 01:05:00,096 --> 01:05:03,642 And should we not then enjoy the same liberty 1325 01:05:03,666 --> 01:05:06,612 and be protected by the same laws? 1326 01:05:06,636 --> 01:05:08,714 ♪ 1327 01:05:08,738 --> 01:05:14,019 Some consider us as much property as a house or a ship 1328 01:05:14,043 --> 01:05:17,489 and think how anxious we must be 1329 01:05:17,513 --> 01:05:22,060 to raise ourselves from this degrading state. 1330 01:05:22,084 --> 01:05:24,186 James Forten. 1331 01:05:25,354 --> 01:05:28,901 Narrator: James Forten was born free in Philadelphia. 1332 01:05:28,925 --> 01:05:33,405 At 9, he had been in the crowd at the Pennsylvania State House 1333 01:05:33,429 --> 01:05:36,174 that heard the Declaration of Independence 1334 01:05:36,198 --> 01:05:39,444 read to the public for the very first time. 1335 01:05:39,468 --> 01:05:43,115 Forten took the promise of the Declaration to heart 1336 01:05:43,139 --> 01:05:46,785 and never questioned whether its self-evident truths 1337 01:05:46,809 --> 01:05:50,122 applied to him. 1338 01:05:50,146 --> 01:05:51,790 ♪ 1339 01:05:51,814 --> 01:05:54,760 Now, in the summer of 1781, 1340 01:05:54,784 --> 01:05:59,431 Forten was 14, old enough to fight for his country. 1341 01:05:59,455 --> 01:06:03,268 With his mother's permission, he went down to the docks, 1342 01:06:03,292 --> 01:06:07,406 signed on to a privateer, and set out to sea. 1343 01:06:07,430 --> 01:06:12,511 Forten was one of 20 men and boys of color in a crew of 200. 1344 01:06:12,535 --> 01:06:16,548 For privateers eager to attract volunteers, 1345 01:06:16,572 --> 01:06:18,550 race was no barrier. 1346 01:06:18,574 --> 01:06:20,319 ♪ 1347 01:06:20,343 --> 01:06:23,121 His first voyage was a triumph, 1348 01:06:23,145 --> 01:06:26,224 but the second was a disaster. 1349 01:06:26,248 --> 01:06:30,762 His ship was overtaken and captured by a British warship. 1350 01:06:30,786 --> 01:06:32,397 ♪ 1351 01:06:32,421 --> 01:06:35,534 Once aboard, the captain's son befriended him, 1352 01:06:35,558 --> 01:06:38,136 and the captain offered to release him 1353 01:06:38,160 --> 01:06:41,173 if he were willing to sail with the boy to England. 1354 01:06:41,197 --> 01:06:43,275 Forten refused. 1355 01:06:43,299 --> 01:06:46,144 He could not turn his back on his country. 1356 01:06:46,168 --> 01:06:48,547 [Gulls squawking] 1357 01:06:48,571 --> 01:06:52,050 Instead, he joined hundreds of American prisoners 1358 01:06:52,074 --> 01:06:55,020 huddled below decks aboard the notorious British 1359 01:06:55,044 --> 01:07:00,359 prison ship the "Jersey" moored in the East River off Brooklyn... 1360 01:07:00,383 --> 01:07:04,496 Dark, fetid, rife with disease. 1361 01:07:04,520 --> 01:07:06,798 [Bell rings] 1362 01:07:06,822 --> 01:07:10,102 ♪ 1363 01:07:10,126 --> 01:07:14,039 Meanwhile, starting in June 1781, 1364 01:07:14,063 --> 01:07:15,841 Cornwallis began to receive a series 1365 01:07:15,865 --> 01:07:19,745 of contradictory communications from General Clinton 1366 01:07:19,769 --> 01:07:22,147 back in New York City. 1367 01:07:22,171 --> 01:07:25,450 First, Cornwallis was to send nearly half his forces 1368 01:07:25,474 --> 01:07:29,121 north to New York, which Clinton still believed 1369 01:07:29,145 --> 01:07:32,057 Washington's most likely target. 1370 01:07:32,081 --> 01:07:34,426 Then Clinton changed his mind. 1371 01:07:34,450 --> 01:07:37,462 Cornwallis was now to send those same troops 1372 01:07:37,486 --> 01:07:40,699 to the Delaware Bay, where they might sail north 1373 01:07:40,723 --> 01:07:43,635 and threaten Philadelphia. 1374 01:07:43,659 --> 01:07:46,938 Finally, with his men aboard boats in Portsmouth 1375 01:07:46,962 --> 01:07:48,540 and ready to sail, 1376 01:07:48,564 --> 01:07:51,977 Cornwallis was to forget moving them north at all. 1377 01:07:52,001 --> 01:07:54,579 Instead, he was to locate and fortify 1378 01:07:54,603 --> 01:07:57,816 a deep-water, year-round port in Virginia 1379 01:07:57,840 --> 01:08:01,586 suitable for the Royal Navy's largest warships. 1380 01:08:01,610 --> 01:08:06,525 Cornwallis' engineers recommended Yorktown. 1381 01:08:06,549 --> 01:08:11,329 He arrived there on August 2, 1781. 1382 01:08:11,353 --> 01:08:13,231 ♪ 1383 01:08:13,255 --> 01:08:15,767 On August 14, Washington learned 1384 01:08:15,791 --> 01:08:18,603 that the French fleet under Admiral de Grasse 1385 01:08:18,627 --> 01:08:22,607 was on its way to the Chesapeake, not New York. 1386 01:08:22,631 --> 01:08:24,342 ♪ 1387 01:08:24,366 --> 01:08:26,678 Voice: Matters having now come to a crisis 1388 01:08:26,702 --> 01:08:29,581 and a decisive plan to be determined on, 1389 01:08:29,605 --> 01:08:34,376 I was obliged to give up all idea of attacking New York. [Washington] 1390 01:08:35,611 --> 01:08:38,323 de Rode: George Washington is a realistic military man 1391 01:08:38,347 --> 01:08:40,959 who knows when to not attack, 1392 01:08:40,983 --> 01:08:43,161 and so with the advice of the French 1393 01:08:43,185 --> 01:08:45,297 that had much more experience in warfare, 1394 01:08:45,321 --> 01:08:49,425 he listens to them and decides to march to the South. 1395 01:08:50,459 --> 01:08:52,838 Narrator: Then word arrived from Lafayette 1396 01:08:52,862 --> 01:08:56,808 that Cornwallis was establishing his army at Yorktown. 1397 01:08:56,832 --> 01:09:00,212 If the French Navy could command the Chesapeake 1398 01:09:00,236 --> 01:09:03,248 and keep the British fleet out, Lafayette wrote, 1399 01:09:03,272 --> 01:09:07,452 "the British Army would, I think, be ours." 1400 01:09:07,476 --> 01:09:11,022 But before Washington could move his army south, 1401 01:09:11,046 --> 01:09:14,726 some way had to be found to pay his men. 1402 01:09:14,750 --> 01:09:17,095 Congress was broke. 1403 01:09:17,119 --> 01:09:18,964 [Horse whinnies] 1404 01:09:18,988 --> 01:09:20,699 Voice: My personal credit, 1405 01:09:20,723 --> 01:09:22,300 which, thank heaven, I have preserved 1406 01:09:22,324 --> 01:09:24,503 through all the tempests of the war, 1407 01:09:24,527 --> 01:09:28,340 has been substituted for that which the country has lost. 1408 01:09:28,364 --> 01:09:32,644 I am now striving to transfer that credit to the public. 1409 01:09:32,668 --> 01:09:35,247 Robert Morris. 1410 01:09:35,271 --> 01:09:38,316 Narrator: Washington turned to an old friend, 1411 01:09:38,340 --> 01:09:42,220 the richest man in America... Robert Morris. 1412 01:09:42,244 --> 01:09:45,657 Morris had again and again used his own money 1413 01:09:45,681 --> 01:09:47,792 to supply the Continental Army. 1414 01:09:47,816 --> 01:09:52,164 He had also used public funds for personal speculations 1415 01:09:52,188 --> 01:09:55,634 and made millions in government contracts. 1416 01:09:55,658 --> 01:09:58,637 William Hogeland: Robert Morris was a war profiteer 1417 01:09:58,661 --> 01:10:02,174 and mingled public and private funds with unabashed abandon, 1418 01:10:02,198 --> 01:10:04,442 and without him, it's not clear at all 1419 01:10:04,466 --> 01:10:06,211 that the Revolution would have been won 1420 01:10:06,235 --> 01:10:08,113 or even would have been fought very long because 1421 01:10:08,137 --> 01:10:11,550 he did front his own money to keep the army in the field. 1422 01:10:11,574 --> 01:10:15,187 People said he financed the American Revolution. 1423 01:10:15,211 --> 01:10:17,389 That's largely true. 1424 01:10:17,413 --> 01:10:21,293 Critics of Morris said that the Revolution financed him, 1425 01:10:21,317 --> 01:10:23,728 and that's true, too. 1426 01:10:23,752 --> 01:10:25,597 ♪ 1427 01:10:25,621 --> 01:10:28,667 Narrator: Now Morris combined his own funds 1428 01:10:28,691 --> 01:10:33,629 with borrowed Spanish gold and silver to pay the men. 1429 01:10:34,930 --> 01:10:36,107 Voice: Each of us received 1430 01:10:36,131 --> 01:10:37,609 a month's pay. 1431 01:10:37,633 --> 01:10:39,711 This was the first that could be called money 1432 01:10:39,735 --> 01:10:43,815 which we had received as wages since the year '76. 1433 01:10:43,839 --> 01:10:45,750 Joseph Plumb Martin. 1434 01:10:45,774 --> 01:10:47,652 [People cheering] 1435 01:10:47,676 --> 01:10:50,689 Narrator: Leaving 4,000 Continentals behind, 1436 01:10:50,713 --> 01:10:54,659 the French and American armies began to make their way south 1437 01:10:54,683 --> 01:10:58,630 in 3 great columns on August 18. 1438 01:10:58,654 --> 01:11:00,232 ♪ 1439 01:11:00,256 --> 01:11:04,769 The campaign was an enormous undertaking and a great gamble. 1440 01:11:04,793 --> 01:11:06,605 ♪ 1441 01:11:06,629 --> 01:11:10,308 In order to keep Cornwallis from escaping by sea, 1442 01:11:10,332 --> 01:11:13,011 French naval forces from both the Caribbean 1443 01:11:13,035 --> 01:11:15,947 and Newport, Rhode Island, would have to elude 1444 01:11:15,971 --> 01:11:19,417 British warships patrolling the Atlantic coast 1445 01:11:19,441 --> 01:11:22,153 and enter the Chesapeake Bay. 1446 01:11:22,177 --> 01:11:26,858 At the same time, thousands of French and American troops, 1447 01:11:26,882 --> 01:11:29,728 who could not speak one another's language, 1448 01:11:29,752 --> 01:11:32,564 would have to continue to make their way together 1449 01:11:32,588 --> 01:11:36,835 some 450 miles from Westchester County 1450 01:11:36,859 --> 01:11:39,337 to Virginia in the heat of summer. 1451 01:11:39,361 --> 01:11:41,673 [Horse nickers] 1452 01:11:41,697 --> 01:11:43,708 de Rode: It's hot and humid, 1453 01:11:43,732 --> 01:11:45,810 and, as the French write, "infested by mosquitoes," 1454 01:11:45,834 --> 01:11:48,847 and so this is a very complicated march. 1455 01:11:48,871 --> 01:11:51,316 You have to think of thousands of men 1456 01:11:51,340 --> 01:11:53,418 marching through these little roads. 1457 01:11:53,442 --> 01:11:54,853 They have to create bridges. 1458 01:11:54,877 --> 01:11:58,023 They have to get obstacles out of the way, 1459 01:11:58,047 --> 01:12:00,525 and we're not talking just about men marching. 1460 01:12:00,549 --> 01:12:02,527 We have a lot of animals behind them. 1461 01:12:02,551 --> 01:12:04,629 ♪ 1462 01:12:04,653 --> 01:12:06,898 In order to not walk in the middle of the day, 1463 01:12:06,922 --> 01:12:08,900 they start in the middle of the night, 1464 01:12:08,924 --> 01:12:10,535 so it's pitch dark. 1465 01:12:10,559 --> 01:12:12,937 You're walking on little paths, probably quite muddy, 1466 01:12:12,961 --> 01:12:14,673 and you just walk, 1467 01:12:14,697 --> 01:12:16,741 and then for a few hours later, you have to stop 1468 01:12:16,765 --> 01:12:18,810 because you have to create your new encampment. 1469 01:12:18,834 --> 01:12:22,981 You get some food, which often arrived way too late. 1470 01:12:23,005 --> 01:12:25,016 Narrator: To deceive the British into thinking 1471 01:12:25,040 --> 01:12:27,752 that he was planning an amphibious assault 1472 01:12:27,776 --> 01:12:31,756 on Staten Island or Sandy Hook, Washington had made sure 1473 01:12:31,780 --> 01:12:35,994 that false documents suggesting an imminent attack 1474 01:12:36,018 --> 01:12:38,129 fell into British hands. 1475 01:12:38,153 --> 01:12:39,964 ♪ 1476 01:12:39,988 --> 01:12:42,834 Philbrick: Washington is able to convince Clinton 1477 01:12:42,858 --> 01:12:45,937 that he is going to attack New York. 1478 01:12:45,961 --> 01:12:48,606 It's a brilliant series of deceptive maneuvers 1479 01:12:48,630 --> 01:12:51,643 that Washington is able to pull off. 1480 01:12:51,667 --> 01:12:54,079 By the time Clinton realizes that Washington 1481 01:12:54,103 --> 01:12:57,515 is not going after him but is on his way south, 1482 01:12:57,539 --> 01:13:00,385 Washington is in Philadelphia. 1483 01:13:00,409 --> 01:13:02,921 [Gulls squawking] 1484 01:13:02,945 --> 01:13:05,190 Narrator: At Yorktown, Cornwallis hated 1485 01:13:05,214 --> 01:13:08,693 the kind of defensive war he was being asked to oversee 1486 01:13:08,717 --> 01:13:10,528 and considered the port 1487 01:13:10,552 --> 01:13:13,665 and Gloucester across the river "dangerous posts," 1488 01:13:13,689 --> 01:13:17,435 since neither commanded the surrounding countryside. 1489 01:13:17,459 --> 01:13:20,438 He'd started by fortifying Gloucester. 1490 01:13:20,462 --> 01:13:22,974 The work had gone slowly. 1491 01:13:22,998 --> 01:13:26,211 He and his men expected a British fleet to arrive 1492 01:13:26,235 --> 01:13:28,713 in the York River any day, 1493 01:13:28,737 --> 01:13:31,116 but they now heard upsetting rumors 1494 01:13:31,140 --> 01:13:34,586 that a French fleet "had left the West Indies 1495 01:13:34,610 --> 01:13:38,447 and was approaching the coast of North America." 1496 01:13:39,782 --> 01:13:41,893 By late summer, work had begun 1497 01:13:41,917 --> 01:13:45,463 on the fortifications at Yorktown itself. 1498 01:13:45,487 --> 01:13:47,799 Meanwhile, at Portsmouth, 1499 01:13:47,823 --> 01:13:50,435 where some of Cornwallis' men remained, 1500 01:13:50,459 --> 01:13:53,405 smallpox was ravaging the former slaves 1501 01:13:53,429 --> 01:13:56,007 who had followed the British army there. 1502 01:13:56,031 --> 01:13:57,742 What should be done, 1503 01:13:57,766 --> 01:14:00,145 the commander at Portsmouth, wrote Cornwallis, 1504 01:14:00,169 --> 01:14:04,816 "with the hundreds... that are dying by scores every day?" 1505 01:14:04,840 --> 01:14:07,552 Voice: It is shocking to think of the state 1506 01:14:07,576 --> 01:14:10,588 of the Negroes, but we cannot bring a number 1507 01:14:10,612 --> 01:14:13,625 of sick and useless ones to this place. 1508 01:14:13,649 --> 01:14:15,059 ♪ 1509 01:14:15,083 --> 01:14:18,029 I leave it to your humanity to do the best you can for them, 1510 01:14:18,053 --> 01:14:20,932 but on your arrival here, we must adopt some plan 1511 01:14:20,956 --> 01:14:23,968 to prevent an evil which will certainly produce 1512 01:14:23,992 --> 01:14:27,338 some fatal distemper in the army. 1513 01:14:27,362 --> 01:14:28,973 Lord Cornwallis. 1514 01:14:28,997 --> 01:14:31,009 ♪ 1515 01:14:31,033 --> 01:14:33,111 Narrator: Portsmouth was evacuated, 1516 01:14:33,135 --> 01:14:36,981 and the troops joined Cornwallis' army at Yorktown. 1517 01:14:37,005 --> 01:14:39,017 ♪ 1518 01:14:39,041 --> 01:14:42,120 It was from there, on the morning of August 30, 1519 01:14:42,144 --> 01:14:46,791 that Captain Johann Ewald looked out toward the Chesapeake Bay. 1520 01:14:46,815 --> 01:14:50,528 Voice: I could detect 3 heavy vessels in the distance. 1521 01:14:50,552 --> 01:14:52,897 We soon had news that the 3 vessels 1522 01:14:52,921 --> 01:14:56,492 which lay before our noses were French. [Ewald] 1523 01:14:57,693 --> 01:15:00,371 Narrator: Admiral de Grasse was now lying at anchor 1524 01:15:00,395 --> 01:15:04,409 just inside the narrow entrance to the Chesapeake Bay 1525 01:15:04,433 --> 01:15:07,603 between Cape Charles and Cape Henry. 1526 01:15:08,504 --> 01:15:11,483 Philbrick: The Chesapeake is a huge bay, 1527 01:15:11,507 --> 01:15:14,686 but its point of access is the two capes. 1528 01:15:14,710 --> 01:15:18,590 It's very narrow, and anyone who can control that 1529 01:15:18,614 --> 01:15:21,259 controls this huge body of water. 1530 01:15:21,283 --> 01:15:23,061 [Horse whinnies] 1531 01:15:23,085 --> 01:15:25,330 Narrator: On the morning of September 5, 1532 01:15:25,354 --> 01:15:28,366 a dispatch rider caught up with George Washington 1533 01:15:28,390 --> 01:15:30,134 near Head of Elk, Maryland, 1534 01:15:30,158 --> 01:15:34,239 with the good news that the French fleet had arrived. 1535 01:15:34,263 --> 01:15:35,974 ♪ 1536 01:15:35,998 --> 01:15:39,777 That same day, though, sailors aboard de Grasse's flagship 1537 01:15:39,801 --> 01:15:44,115 spotted sails approaching from the north. 1538 01:15:44,139 --> 01:15:47,719 They were 19 British ships sent from New York 1539 01:15:47,743 --> 01:15:51,923 with orders to find and destroy the French fleet. 1540 01:15:51,947 --> 01:15:54,792 De Grasse might have stayed where he was, 1541 01:15:54,816 --> 01:15:58,596 blocking entrance to the bay, but if he had done so, 1542 01:15:58,620 --> 01:16:01,933 the 8 French ships, loaded with heavy siege guns 1543 01:16:01,957 --> 01:16:04,102 that were on their way from Newport, 1544 01:16:04,126 --> 01:16:06,871 would have been kept out of the Chesapeake. 1545 01:16:06,895 --> 01:16:11,342 De Grasse moved out into the open sea to confront his enemy. 1546 01:16:11,366 --> 01:16:12,977 ♪ 1547 01:16:13,001 --> 01:16:16,047 The two fleets maneuvered for 6 hours. 1548 01:16:16,071 --> 01:16:18,816 Commanders scattered sand across their decks 1549 01:16:18,840 --> 01:16:23,087 to absorb the sailors' blood they knew was about to be shed. 1550 01:16:23,111 --> 01:16:24,956 ♪ 1551 01:16:24,980 --> 01:16:28,216 At 4:00 in the afternoon, they opened fire. 1552 01:16:30,652 --> 01:16:34,122 [Cannon fire continues] 1553 01:16:35,524 --> 01:16:38,369 The broadsides continued until dark. 1554 01:16:38,393 --> 01:16:40,438 [Man shouts] 1555 01:16:40,462 --> 01:16:43,041 Narrator: The result was a standoff, 1556 01:16:43,065 --> 01:16:45,843 but the British vessels got the worst of it 1557 01:16:45,867 --> 01:16:48,980 and were forced to limp back to New York. 1558 01:16:49,004 --> 01:16:50,848 ♪ 1559 01:16:50,872 --> 01:16:53,851 Meanwhile, the French squadron from Newport 1560 01:16:53,875 --> 01:16:57,488 carrying the heavy siege guns had slipped unnoticed 1561 01:16:57,512 --> 01:16:58,957 into the bay, 1562 01:16:58,981 --> 01:17:02,293 and, avoiding Cornwallis' defenses at Yorktown, 1563 01:17:02,317 --> 01:17:04,896 sailed up the James River, 1564 01:17:04,920 --> 01:17:07,365 and Washington and Rochambeau's armies 1565 01:17:07,389 --> 01:17:10,201 were arriving at Williamsburg. 1566 01:17:10,225 --> 01:17:13,037 Cornwallis was trapped. 1567 01:17:13,061 --> 01:17:15,974 Lengel: From the very beginning, Washington recognized 1568 01:17:15,998 --> 01:17:21,746 that this war was going to end when the stars aligned. 1569 01:17:21,770 --> 01:17:24,582 He's been waiting for this, 1570 01:17:24,606 --> 01:17:26,484 and he snatches at it. 1571 01:17:26,508 --> 01:17:28,353 Voice: We prepared to move down 1572 01:17:28,377 --> 01:17:31,623 and pay our old acquaintance the British a visit. 1573 01:17:31,647 --> 01:17:33,825 I doubt not that their wish 1574 01:17:33,849 --> 01:17:36,361 was not to have so many of us come at once, 1575 01:17:36,385 --> 01:17:39,697 as their accommodations were rather scanty. 1576 01:17:39,721 --> 01:17:42,000 They thought the fewer, the better. 1577 01:17:42,024 --> 01:17:44,902 We thought the more, the merrier. 1578 01:17:44,926 --> 01:17:46,838 Joseph Plumb Martin. 1579 01:17:46,862 --> 01:17:48,840 ♪ 1580 01:17:48,864 --> 01:17:53,277 Narrator: On September 28, 1781, at 5 A.M., 1581 01:17:53,301 --> 01:17:57,582 the French and American armies, now 18,000 strong, 1582 01:17:57,606 --> 01:17:59,817 started toward Yorktown. 1583 01:17:59,841 --> 01:18:03,187 The allies established a crescent-shaped encampment 1584 01:18:03,211 --> 01:18:04,522 around the town... 1585 01:18:04,546 --> 01:18:08,326 The French on the left, the Americans on the right. 1586 01:18:08,350 --> 01:18:11,896 Washington and Rochambeau set up headquarters 1587 01:18:11,920 --> 01:18:14,465 just a few hundred yards apart. 1588 01:18:14,489 --> 01:18:16,034 ♪ 1589 01:18:16,058 --> 01:18:20,138 The two commanders rode forward to reconnoiter. 1590 01:18:20,162 --> 01:18:24,442 Washington had long understood Yorktown's strategic limitations 1591 01:18:24,466 --> 01:18:27,612 and the hole the British had dug for themselves. 1592 01:18:27,636 --> 01:18:29,580 ♪ 1593 01:18:29,604 --> 01:18:32,150 800 to 1,000 yards from Yorktown 1594 01:18:32,174 --> 01:18:35,520 stood an outer line of trenches and redoubts, 1595 01:18:35,544 --> 01:18:38,156 their bases bristling with abatis, 1596 01:18:38,180 --> 01:18:41,225 sharpened logs meant to repel invaders. 1597 01:18:41,249 --> 01:18:42,827 ♪ 1598 01:18:42,851 --> 01:18:45,596 Black laborers could be seen struggling 1599 01:18:45,620 --> 01:18:48,366 to complete an inner ring around the town. 1600 01:18:48,390 --> 01:18:52,303 ♪ 1601 01:18:52,327 --> 01:18:57,475 Swamps and marshy creeks made a direct assault impractical. 1602 01:18:57,499 --> 01:19:01,279 The allies didn't have time to starve the defenders, either. 1603 01:19:01,303 --> 01:19:04,615 The French fleet was due to return to the Caribbean 1604 01:19:04,639 --> 01:19:06,317 within weeks. 1605 01:19:06,341 --> 01:19:11,089 A traditional, European-style siege seemed to be the answer. 1606 01:19:11,113 --> 01:19:14,125 Washington left its planning to the French. 1607 01:19:14,149 --> 01:19:16,227 The Americans were "totally ignorant 1608 01:19:16,251 --> 01:19:20,031 of the operations of a siege," Rochambeau said. 1609 01:19:20,055 --> 01:19:23,134 He had taken part in 14 of them. 1610 01:19:23,158 --> 01:19:26,571 ♪ 1611 01:19:26,595 --> 01:19:30,508 At dawn on September 30, French and American troops 1612 01:19:30,532 --> 01:19:34,612 edged cautiously toward the outermost British defenses, 1613 01:19:34,636 --> 01:19:37,014 expecting stiff resistance. 1614 01:19:37,038 --> 01:19:40,151 Instead, they found them empty. 1615 01:19:40,175 --> 01:19:42,787 Cornwallis, outnumbered 3 to 1, 1616 01:19:42,811 --> 01:19:46,224 had pulled his men back into town. 1617 01:19:46,248 --> 01:19:49,260 Lengel: Cornwallis makes a fatal mistake. 1618 01:19:49,284 --> 01:19:52,163 He's exhausted. He's depressed. 1619 01:19:52,187 --> 01:19:54,966 A commander who otherwise is very effective 1620 01:19:54,990 --> 01:19:58,069 is just not at his best. 1621 01:19:58,093 --> 01:20:01,939 Narrator: For 5 days and nights, allied soldiers worked 1622 01:20:01,963 --> 01:20:04,442 to transform the abandoned British positions 1623 01:20:04,466 --> 01:20:08,846 into their own strongholds and to bring up the artillery, 1624 01:20:08,870 --> 01:20:11,849 equipment, and entrenching tools needed to dig 1625 01:20:11,873 --> 01:20:15,453 their first parallel trench and begin the siege. 1626 01:20:15,477 --> 01:20:17,455 ♪ 1627 01:20:17,479 --> 01:20:20,158 British artillery hurled shot and shells 1628 01:20:20,182 --> 01:20:23,294 at the Americans and Frenchmen as they worked. 1629 01:20:23,318 --> 01:20:26,297 [Men shouting] 1630 01:20:26,321 --> 01:20:29,500 Sarah Osborn, the wife of a New Jersey corporal, 1631 01:20:29,524 --> 01:20:32,203 was one of the women who carried beef, bread, 1632 01:20:32,227 --> 01:20:35,473 and hot coffee to the men as they dug. 1633 01:20:35,497 --> 01:20:39,710 One day, she remembered, George Washington happened by 1634 01:20:39,734 --> 01:20:41,546 and asked her if she wasn't afraid 1635 01:20:41,570 --> 01:20:43,881 of the British cannonballs. 1636 01:20:43,905 --> 01:20:45,583 "No," she said, 1637 01:20:45,607 --> 01:20:50,354 "It would not do for the men to fight and starve, too." 1638 01:20:50,378 --> 01:20:52,190 [Distant explosion] 1639 01:20:52,214 --> 01:20:54,125 When the parallel was complete, 1640 01:20:54,149 --> 01:20:56,460 it stretched for more than a mile, 1641 01:20:56,484 --> 01:21:00,498 a trench 10 feet wide and nearly 4 feet deep. 1642 01:21:00,522 --> 01:21:03,425 ♪ 1643 01:21:05,193 --> 01:21:07,972 At 3:00 in the afternoon on October 9, 1644 01:21:07,996 --> 01:21:10,265 the French opened fire. 1645 01:21:12,133 --> 01:21:15,146 Two hours later, Washington was given the honor 1646 01:21:15,170 --> 01:21:18,883 of touching off the first American cannon. 1647 01:21:18,907 --> 01:21:21,719 [Man shouting] 1648 01:21:21,743 --> 01:21:24,488 Narrator: All along the allied lines, 1649 01:21:24,512 --> 01:21:28,917 cannon and mortars began firing into Yorktown. 1650 01:21:30,418 --> 01:21:32,363 ♪ 1651 01:21:32,387 --> 01:21:34,165 Voice: The remainder of the night 1652 01:21:34,189 --> 01:21:36,334 passed in a dreadful slaughter. 1653 01:21:36,358 --> 01:21:40,304 Several parts of the garrison were in flames on this night, 1654 01:21:40,328 --> 01:21:44,976 and the whole discovered a view awful and tremendous. 1655 01:21:45,000 --> 01:21:47,712 Bartholomew James. 1656 01:21:47,736 --> 01:21:50,014 Voice: It was as if one witnessed 1657 01:21:50,038 --> 01:21:52,116 the shock of an earthquake. 1658 01:21:52,140 --> 01:21:56,254 3,600 shot by the enemy were counted in this 24 hours. 1659 01:21:56,278 --> 01:21:59,056 These were fired at the city into our lines 1660 01:21:59,080 --> 01:22:01,659 and against the ships in the harbor. 1661 01:22:01,683 --> 01:22:04,295 Private Johann Conrad Doehla. 1662 01:22:04,319 --> 01:22:07,365 ♪ 1663 01:22:07,389 --> 01:22:09,467 Narrator: By the night of October 11, 1664 01:22:09,491 --> 01:22:12,603 the allies had begun digging a second parallel, 1665 01:22:12,627 --> 01:22:16,073 but before the noose could be tightened completely, 1666 01:22:16,097 --> 01:22:20,077 two enemy redoubts, Numbers Nine and Ten, 1667 01:22:20,101 --> 01:22:22,580 had to be taken. 1668 01:22:22,604 --> 01:22:26,117 The American target was redoubt Number Ten. 1669 01:22:26,141 --> 01:22:28,953 The men were from Lafayette's force. 1670 01:22:28,977 --> 01:22:32,123 Alexander Hamilton was in command. 1671 01:22:32,147 --> 01:22:36,260 Joseph Plumb Martin and his company led the way. 1672 01:22:36,284 --> 01:22:38,195 ♪ 1673 01:22:38,219 --> 01:22:39,697 Voice: We advanced beyond the trenches 1674 01:22:39,721 --> 01:22:42,433 and lay down on the ground to await the signal. 1675 01:22:42,457 --> 01:22:44,769 Our watchword was "Rochambeau," 1676 01:22:44,793 --> 01:22:47,972 a good watchword, for being pronounced "Rochambeau," 1677 01:22:47,996 --> 01:22:49,840 it sounded, when pronounced quick, 1678 01:22:49,864 --> 01:22:52,109 like "Rush on, boys." [Martin] 1679 01:22:52,133 --> 01:22:54,245 [Cannon fires] 1680 01:22:54,269 --> 01:22:56,047 Narrator: When the signal was given, 1681 01:22:56,071 --> 01:22:59,350 Martin and his fellow soldiers rushed forward. 1682 01:22:59,374 --> 01:23:02,186 Right behind them came Rhode Islanders, 1683 01:23:02,210 --> 01:23:05,756 including many free Black men or former slaves. 1684 01:23:05,780 --> 01:23:07,158 ♪ 1685 01:23:07,182 --> 01:23:09,160 The moment they reached the abatis, 1686 01:23:09,184 --> 01:23:12,830 the redoubt's defenders began firing down into them. 1687 01:23:12,854 --> 01:23:15,099 ♪ 1688 01:23:15,123 --> 01:23:17,134 Voice: But there was no stopping us. 1689 01:23:17,158 --> 01:23:19,737 I forced a passage at a place where I saw our shot 1690 01:23:19,761 --> 01:23:21,639 had cut away some of the abatis. 1691 01:23:21,663 --> 01:23:24,642 While passing, a man at my side received a ball in his head 1692 01:23:24,666 --> 01:23:28,346 and fell under my feet, crying out bitterly. 1693 01:23:28,370 --> 01:23:32,249 The fort was taken and all quiet in a short time. [Martin] 1694 01:23:32,273 --> 01:23:34,251 ♪ 1695 01:23:34,275 --> 01:23:37,154 Narrator: Lafayette sent a dispatch to a French officer 1696 01:23:37,178 --> 01:23:40,458 in the column assigned to capture Redoubt Number 9, 1697 01:23:40,482 --> 01:23:43,427 saying his men were in his redoubt. 1698 01:23:43,451 --> 01:23:45,496 "Where are you?" 1699 01:23:45,520 --> 01:23:47,798 "Tell the Marquis I am not in mine," 1700 01:23:47,822 --> 01:23:53,104 the French officer replied, "but will be in 5 minutes." 1701 01:23:53,128 --> 01:23:55,006 [Cannon fires] 1702 01:23:55,030 --> 01:23:56,574 Voice: There was no mercy that night. 1703 01:23:56,598 --> 01:23:59,477 Complaints and groans could be heard everywhere. 1704 01:23:59,501 --> 01:24:02,613 Someone called out here, another there, 1705 01:24:02,637 --> 01:24:05,716 begging to be killed for the love of God, 1706 01:24:05,740 --> 01:24:09,153 as the redoubt was strewn with the dead and wounded, 1707 01:24:09,177 --> 01:24:12,690 so much so that we had to walk on them. 1708 01:24:12,714 --> 01:24:15,993 Georg Daniel Flohr. 1709 01:24:16,017 --> 01:24:18,195 Narrator: The allies lost no time 1710 01:24:18,219 --> 01:24:21,265 in rolling their big guns into both redoubts 1711 01:24:21,289 --> 01:24:24,535 and opening fire on Yorktown. 1712 01:24:24,559 --> 01:24:27,038 Friederike Baer: It was absolutely horrific. 1713 01:24:27,062 --> 01:24:29,440 There was no moment to rest. 1714 01:24:29,464 --> 01:24:32,100 There was no place to hide. 1715 01:24:33,668 --> 01:24:36,547 For days, there was continuous bombardment. 1716 01:24:36,571 --> 01:24:38,716 [Shells whooshing] 1717 01:24:38,740 --> 01:24:46,740 ♪ 1718 01:24:49,417 --> 01:24:52,730 Narrator: Cornwallis knew his cause was hopeless, 1719 01:24:52,754 --> 01:24:56,300 but he could not seem to bear what Banastre Tarleton called 1720 01:24:56,324 --> 01:24:59,336 "the mortification of a surrender." 1721 01:24:59,360 --> 01:25:00,604 ♪ 1722 01:25:00,628 --> 01:25:03,974 [Snare drum playing] 1723 01:25:03,998 --> 01:25:06,343 At about 10:00 in the morning 1724 01:25:06,367 --> 01:25:09,680 on October 17, 1781, 1725 01:25:09,704 --> 01:25:12,750 a drummer boy appeared on a British parapet, 1726 01:25:12,774 --> 01:25:14,385 beating his drum, 1727 01:25:14,409 --> 01:25:18,255 the signal that Cornwallis wished to negotiate. 1728 01:25:18,279 --> 01:25:21,258 When the thunder of the guns drowned out the drumming, 1729 01:25:21,282 --> 01:25:23,928 an officer climbed up next to the boy 1730 01:25:23,952 --> 01:25:27,565 and waved a white handkerchief. 1731 01:25:27,589 --> 01:25:30,301 Voice: He might have beat away till doomsday 1732 01:25:30,325 --> 01:25:33,971 if he had not been sighted by men on the front lines, 1733 01:25:33,995 --> 01:25:36,540 but when the firing ceased, 1734 01:25:36,564 --> 01:25:40,544 I thought I had never heard a drum equal to it, 1735 01:25:40,568 --> 01:25:44,849 the most delightful music to us all. 1736 01:25:44,873 --> 01:25:46,817 Ebenezer Denny. 1737 01:25:46,841 --> 01:25:49,687 [Snare drum continues] 1738 01:25:49,711 --> 01:25:53,124 Narrator: The Battle of Yorktown was over. 1739 01:25:53,148 --> 01:25:57,495 The Patriots and their French allies had won. 1740 01:25:57,519 --> 01:26:00,631 ♪ 1741 01:26:00,655 --> 01:26:03,667 The world would never be the same. 1742 01:26:03,691 --> 01:26:08,873 ♪ 1743 01:26:08,897 --> 01:26:12,576 Surrender negotiations went on for a day and a half. 1744 01:26:12,600 --> 01:26:16,247 Cornwallis wanted his British and German soldiers 1745 01:26:16,271 --> 01:26:18,749 free to sail home. 1746 01:26:18,773 --> 01:26:20,518 Washington refused. 1747 01:26:20,542 --> 01:26:22,620 He recalled the disrespectful way 1748 01:26:22,644 --> 01:26:26,157 Patriot General Benjamin Lincoln and his men had been treated 1749 01:26:26,181 --> 01:26:29,026 after the fall of Charles Town. 1750 01:26:29,050 --> 01:26:31,028 Until a formal peace was reached, 1751 01:26:31,052 --> 01:26:34,765 the surrendering soldiers were to remain in the United States 1752 01:26:34,789 --> 01:26:37,134 as prisoners of war. 1753 01:26:37,158 --> 01:26:39,970 Cornwallis had little choice but to agree. 1754 01:26:39,994 --> 01:26:43,340 ♪ 1755 01:26:43,364 --> 01:26:45,643 As the British and Germans marched out 1756 01:26:45,667 --> 01:26:49,413 of what was left of Yorktown... Their flags cased, 1757 01:26:49,437 --> 01:26:52,850 their numbers reduced by wounds and disease... 1758 01:26:52,874 --> 01:26:55,586 They had orders to avoid even looking 1759 01:26:55,610 --> 01:26:58,222 at the victorious Americans. 1760 01:26:58,246 --> 01:27:00,391 Only the French, they'd been told, 1761 01:27:00,415 --> 01:27:02,660 were worthy opponents. 1762 01:27:02,684 --> 01:27:06,530 Washington and Rochambeau waited on horseback. 1763 01:27:06,554 --> 01:27:09,500 Lord Cornwallis was nowhere to be seen. 1764 01:27:09,524 --> 01:27:13,637 He claimed to be ill, but, as a professional soldier, 1765 01:27:13,661 --> 01:27:16,540 he may simply have been too humiliated 1766 01:27:16,564 --> 01:27:20,177 at having to surrender his army to a group of rebels 1767 01:27:20,201 --> 01:27:22,513 to make an appearance. 1768 01:27:22,537 --> 01:27:26,817 Cornwallis' second in command, General Charles O'Hara, 1769 01:27:26,841 --> 01:27:30,054 stood in for him and tried to surrender his sword 1770 01:27:30,078 --> 01:27:32,656 to General Rochambeau. 1771 01:27:32,680 --> 01:27:35,426 Rochambeau refused to accept it. 1772 01:27:35,450 --> 01:27:38,395 "We are subordinate to the Americans," he said. 1773 01:27:38,419 --> 01:27:41,899 "General Washington will give you orders." 1774 01:27:41,923 --> 01:27:44,969 Washington wouldn't accept it, either. 1775 01:27:44,993 --> 01:27:48,706 He passed O'Hara on to his second in command, 1776 01:27:48,730 --> 01:27:52,409 Benjamin Lincoln, who formally accepted the sword 1777 01:27:52,433 --> 01:27:56,046 and then handed it back, as custom dictated. 1778 01:27:56,070 --> 01:27:58,082 ♪ 1779 01:27:58,106 --> 01:28:00,451 Conway: The ultimate humiliation... 1780 01:28:00,475 --> 01:28:02,920 Not only having to surrender to the Americans, 1781 01:28:02,944 --> 01:28:04,521 but having to surrender 1782 01:28:04,545 --> 01:28:06,523 to the second in command of the Americans. 1783 01:28:06,547 --> 01:28:08,125 ♪ 1784 01:28:08,149 --> 01:28:09,860 Voice: With what soldiers in the world 1785 01:28:09,884 --> 01:28:13,264 could one do what was done by these men? 1786 01:28:13,288 --> 01:28:15,966 One can perceive what an enthusiasm 1787 01:28:15,990 --> 01:28:20,237 which these poor fellows call liberty can do. 1788 01:28:20,261 --> 01:28:22,840 Who would have thought a hundred years ago 1789 01:28:22,864 --> 01:28:25,576 that out of this multitude of rabble 1790 01:28:25,600 --> 01:28:30,180 would arise a people who could defy kings? 1791 01:28:30,204 --> 01:28:31,873 Johann Ewald. 1792 01:28:32,974 --> 01:28:35,486 [Church bell ringing] 1793 01:28:35,510 --> 01:28:37,921 Voice: This is a blow, my Lord, which gives me 1794 01:28:37,945 --> 01:28:41,892 the most serious concern, as it will, in its consequences, 1795 01:28:41,916 --> 01:28:44,995 be exceedingly detrimental to the King's interest 1796 01:28:45,019 --> 01:28:46,930 in this country. 1797 01:28:46,954 --> 01:28:48,866 Henry Clinton. 1798 01:28:48,890 --> 01:28:51,435 Narrator: When the Prime Minister, Lord North, 1799 01:28:51,459 --> 01:28:54,071 finally heard about the surrender at Yorktown 1800 01:28:54,095 --> 01:28:57,374 5 weeks after it happened, he staggered around 1801 01:28:57,398 --> 01:28:59,777 as if he'd been hit by a musket ball, 1802 01:28:59,801 --> 01:29:03,547 waving his arms and crying out again and again, 1803 01:29:03,571 --> 01:29:06,717 "Oh, God, it is all over." 1804 01:29:06,741 --> 01:29:08,552 ♪ 1805 01:29:08,576 --> 01:29:11,822 In a speech to Parliament, King George III said 1806 01:29:11,846 --> 01:29:15,759 that, while recent events in Virginia had been "unfortunate," 1807 01:29:15,783 --> 01:29:18,495 he remained determined to fight on 1808 01:29:18,519 --> 01:29:21,699 "to restore my deluded subjects to that happy 1809 01:29:21,723 --> 01:29:25,569 and prosperous condition which they formerly derived 1810 01:29:25,593 --> 01:29:28,906 from... obedience to the laws," 1811 01:29:28,930 --> 01:29:32,142 but Britain had grown weary of the war. 1812 01:29:32,166 --> 01:29:33,811 ♪ 1813 01:29:33,835 --> 01:29:37,881 Some 50,000 British, German, and Loyalist troops 1814 01:29:37,905 --> 01:29:41,352 had lost their lives in North America. 1815 01:29:41,376 --> 01:29:44,455 The British national debt had doubled. 1816 01:29:44,479 --> 01:29:48,025 Other battlefields seemed more important... 1817 01:29:48,049 --> 01:29:49,693 In the Caribbean, 1818 01:29:49,717 --> 01:29:52,896 where they would soon destroy Admiral de Grasse's fleet; 1819 01:29:52,920 --> 01:29:57,267 in the Mediterranean, where they still held Gibraltar; 1820 01:29:57,291 --> 01:29:59,570 and in India, 1821 01:29:59,594 --> 01:30:02,639 where they continued to expand their empire. 1822 01:30:02,663 --> 01:30:05,776 ♪ 1823 01:30:05,800 --> 01:30:10,814 On February 27, 1782, Parliament voted to halt 1824 01:30:10,838 --> 01:30:14,818 all offensive activity in North America. 1825 01:30:14,842 --> 01:30:18,122 Lord North's government fell. 1826 01:30:18,146 --> 01:30:20,391 Alan Taylor: Could they have kept the war going 1827 01:30:20,415 --> 01:30:22,559 from a purely military perspective? 1828 01:30:22,583 --> 01:30:27,698 Sure, but politically, the will to fight vanishes, 1829 01:30:27,722 --> 01:30:31,468 so the pro-war administration is toppled, 1830 01:30:31,492 --> 01:30:35,406 and the King is forced to accept a new government 1831 01:30:35,430 --> 01:30:39,710 with a new political coalition that is committed to negotiating 1832 01:30:39,734 --> 01:30:43,080 a peace settlement with the American rebels. 1833 01:30:43,104 --> 01:30:48,476 ♪ 1834 01:30:50,144 --> 01:30:54,024 Voice: Alas, what remains of Yorktown now, 1835 01:30:54,048 --> 01:30:56,794 what had given it its high privilege, 1836 01:30:56,818 --> 01:30:59,663 that of being accessible from every quarter, 1837 01:30:59,687 --> 01:31:02,099 proved its greatest misfortune. 1838 01:31:02,123 --> 01:31:05,836 Its excellent harbor rendered it the port of all others 1839 01:31:05,860 --> 01:31:08,839 most favorable for an invading enemy. 1840 01:31:08,863 --> 01:31:11,809 Too soon did they avail themselves of it, 1841 01:31:11,833 --> 01:31:14,611 and this Eden became desolate. 1842 01:31:14,635 --> 01:31:17,714 Betsy Ambler. 1843 01:31:17,738 --> 01:31:20,117 Narrator: Betsy Ambler and her family 1844 01:31:20,141 --> 01:31:21,919 never returned to Yorktown, 1845 01:31:21,943 --> 01:31:24,721 settling permanently in Richmond. 1846 01:31:24,745 --> 01:31:26,757 ♪ 1847 01:31:26,781 --> 01:31:28,559 Not long after the surrender, 1848 01:31:28,583 --> 01:31:31,395 slaveholders began turning up at Yorktown, 1849 01:31:31,419 --> 01:31:34,331 eager to reclaim the surviving runaways 1850 01:31:34,355 --> 01:31:37,401 who had fled to the British. 1851 01:31:37,425 --> 01:31:40,504 Washington set up two fortified posts 1852 01:31:40,528 --> 01:31:42,940 where slaves were to be kept under guard 1853 01:31:42,964 --> 01:31:45,809 until their owner came to claim them. 1854 01:31:45,833 --> 01:31:49,880 Patriot troops were encouraged to help track them down. 1855 01:31:49,904 --> 01:31:51,381 ♪ 1856 01:31:51,405 --> 01:31:54,985 "The Negroes looked condemned," one militiaman remembered, 1857 01:31:55,009 --> 01:31:58,288 "for the British had promised them their freedom." 1858 01:31:58,312 --> 01:32:00,424 ♪ 1859 01:32:00,448 --> 01:32:03,393 5 enslaved people captured at Yorktown 1860 01:32:03,417 --> 01:32:06,096 were returned to Thomas Jefferson. 1861 01:32:06,120 --> 01:32:09,500 Two more, both women, were returned 1862 01:32:09,524 --> 01:32:12,035 to George Washington's Mount Vernon. 1863 01:32:12,059 --> 01:32:15,372 ♪ 1864 01:32:15,396 --> 01:32:18,876 Washington's army soon moved north. 1865 01:32:18,900 --> 01:32:22,679 Rochambeau's men marched up to Boston the following year 1866 01:32:22,703 --> 01:32:24,448 and sailed away. 1867 01:32:24,472 --> 01:32:26,149 ♪ 1868 01:32:26,173 --> 01:32:29,353 Cornwallis' defeated men were marched to prison camps 1869 01:32:29,377 --> 01:32:31,221 in the interior. 1870 01:32:31,245 --> 01:32:34,825 Eager to get them back, Parliament finally recognized 1871 01:32:34,849 --> 01:32:38,028 captured Americans as prisoners of war. 1872 01:32:38,052 --> 01:32:42,266 Redcoats and rebels alike could expect to be exchanged. 1873 01:32:42,290 --> 01:32:45,802 Jennifer Kreisberg: [Vocalizing "Amazing Grace"] 1874 01:32:45,826 --> 01:32:47,804 After 7 months of suffering 1875 01:32:47,828 --> 01:32:50,073 aboard the prison ship the "Jersey," 1876 01:32:50,097 --> 01:32:55,345 James Forten was released, emaciated but lucky to be alive. 1877 01:32:55,369 --> 01:32:57,281 ♪ 1878 01:32:57,305 --> 01:33:01,151 He walked all the way home to Philadelphia from New York, 1879 01:33:01,175 --> 01:33:04,121 most of the way barefoot. 1880 01:33:04,145 --> 01:33:07,491 He astonished his mother on arrival. 1881 01:33:07,515 --> 01:33:10,360 She had long since given him up for dead. 1882 01:33:10,384 --> 01:33:13,330 ♪ 1883 01:33:13,354 --> 01:33:16,600 After the war, Forten would build a great fortune 1884 01:33:16,624 --> 01:33:19,269 making sails for the American merchant fleet 1885 01:33:19,293 --> 01:33:21,138 and use part of those earnings 1886 01:33:21,162 --> 01:33:24,908 to fund the abolitionist movement. 1887 01:33:24,932 --> 01:33:28,345 When decades later, a friend urged him to apply 1888 01:33:28,369 --> 01:33:31,782 for one of the pensions being granted to war veterans, 1889 01:33:31,806 --> 01:33:34,084 Forten refused. 1890 01:33:34,108 --> 01:33:36,920 "I was a volunteer, sir," he said. 1891 01:33:36,944 --> 01:33:41,391 He didn't want money. He wanted citizenship. 1892 01:33:41,415 --> 01:33:44,361 ♪ 1893 01:33:44,385 --> 01:33:47,030 Voice: Our country asserts for itself the glory 1894 01:33:47,054 --> 01:33:50,767 of being the freest upon the surface of the globe. 1895 01:33:50,791 --> 01:33:54,905 She proclaimed freedom to all mankind. 1896 01:33:54,929 --> 01:33:58,742 The brightness of her glory was radiant, 1897 01:33:58,766 --> 01:34:03,513 but one dark spot still dimmed its luster. 1898 01:34:03,537 --> 01:34:06,016 So much is doing in the world 1899 01:34:06,040 --> 01:34:09,119 to ameliorate the condition of mankind, 1900 01:34:09,143 --> 01:34:13,490 and the spirit of freedom is marching with rapid strides 1901 01:34:13,514 --> 01:34:17,160 and causing tyrants to tremble. 1902 01:34:17,184 --> 01:34:20,063 May America awake from the apathy 1903 01:34:20,087 --> 01:34:22,866 in which she has long slumbered. 1904 01:34:22,890 --> 01:34:26,470 She must sooner or later fall in 1905 01:34:26,494 --> 01:34:32,142 with the irresistible current in the cause of liberty. 1906 01:34:32,166 --> 01:34:34,435 James Forten. 1907 01:34:39,807 --> 01:34:42,519 Jasanoff: Loyalists knew the war was lost, 1908 01:34:42,543 --> 01:34:44,988 and the question for them became, 1909 01:34:45,012 --> 01:34:48,125 "What's gonna happen to us next?" 1910 01:34:48,149 --> 01:34:52,696 and... given the violence, this insurgency, 1911 01:34:52,720 --> 01:34:55,332 counterinsurgency, back and forth, 1912 01:34:55,356 --> 01:34:58,702 down-and-dirty fighting in the countryside... 1913 01:34:58,726 --> 01:35:01,371 Loyalists had every reason to fear 1914 01:35:01,395 --> 01:35:05,075 that now that the Patriots were in charge, 1915 01:35:05,099 --> 01:35:07,210 they were gonna find themselves 1916 01:35:07,234 --> 01:35:09,846 on the rough end of recriminations. 1917 01:35:09,870 --> 01:35:11,948 [Pounding on door] 1918 01:35:11,972 --> 01:35:14,785 Narrator: Everywhere, Patriots were seeking revenge 1919 01:35:14,809 --> 01:35:17,854 on men and women who had once been their neighbors 1920 01:35:17,878 --> 01:35:20,457 and fellow subjects of the King. 1921 01:35:20,481 --> 01:35:22,826 "The mob," one Loyalist wrote, 1922 01:35:22,850 --> 01:35:26,363 "now reigns... fully and uncontrolled." 1923 01:35:26,387 --> 01:35:28,065 [Gunshots and shouting] 1924 01:35:28,089 --> 01:35:31,635 In Georgia, Patriots hunted down and killed Loyalists 1925 01:35:31,659 --> 01:35:34,438 who had sought sanctuary in the swamps. 1926 01:35:34,462 --> 01:35:36,306 ♪ 1927 01:35:36,330 --> 01:35:40,510 Other Loyalists were exiled and their property confiscated. 1928 01:35:40,534 --> 01:35:42,245 ♪ 1929 01:35:42,269 --> 01:35:44,247 Voice: I cannot say I look back with regret 1930 01:35:44,271 --> 01:35:46,950 at the part I took from motives of loyalty, 1931 01:35:46,974 --> 01:35:51,688 from love to my country as well as duty to my sovereign, 1932 01:35:51,712 --> 01:35:53,990 and, notwithstanding my sufferings, 1933 01:35:54,014 --> 01:35:56,626 I would do it again if there was occasion. 1934 01:35:56,650 --> 01:35:58,562 John Peters. 1935 01:35:58,586 --> 01:35:59,996 [Church bell ringing] 1936 01:36:00,020 --> 01:36:02,399 Narrator: John Peters and his wife Ann 1937 01:36:02,423 --> 01:36:04,759 settled in Nova Scotia. 1938 01:36:05,993 --> 01:36:09,606 Most Loyalists would choose to stay despite the danger 1939 01:36:09,630 --> 01:36:11,174 and take their chances, 1940 01:36:11,198 --> 01:36:14,978 hoping to resume their old lives in the new country, 1941 01:36:15,002 --> 01:36:18,115 but thousands decided to leave. 1942 01:36:18,139 --> 01:36:21,418 They huddled together in the last British strongholds 1943 01:36:21,442 --> 01:36:24,488 of New York City, Charles Town, and Savannah, 1944 01:36:24,512 --> 01:36:29,025 waiting for ships to be found to take them away. 1945 01:36:29,049 --> 01:36:32,062 Jasanoff: In an incredible gesture at the end 1946 01:36:32,086 --> 01:36:34,531 of the American Revolution, the British government 1947 01:36:34,555 --> 01:36:39,269 offers continuing protection to American Loyalists, 1948 01:36:39,293 --> 01:36:42,239 and I don't know of any other precedent for this kind 1949 01:36:42,263 --> 01:36:48,912 of mass evacuation of civilians organized by a government, 1950 01:36:48,936 --> 01:36:51,248 and particularly by the military, 1951 01:36:51,272 --> 01:36:55,218 with a view to helping these refugees get started 1952 01:36:55,242 --> 01:36:58,588 with a new life somewhere else outside the place 1953 01:36:58,612 --> 01:37:01,091 that they had always called home. 1954 01:37:01,115 --> 01:37:04,494 Narrator: General Guy Carleton, who had replaced Henry Clinton 1955 01:37:04,518 --> 01:37:08,431 as commander of British forces, was expected to move 1956 01:37:08,455 --> 01:37:12,302 more than 30,000 troops with their mountains of supplies 1957 01:37:12,326 --> 01:37:17,808 as well as 60,000 Loyalists and 15,000 enslaved people 1958 01:37:17,832 --> 01:37:20,944 out of the United States. 1959 01:37:20,968 --> 01:37:23,814 Carleton began that summer with Savannah. 1960 01:37:23,838 --> 01:37:28,084 Some 3,000 Whites and perhaps 5,000 Blacks 1961 01:37:28,108 --> 01:37:31,154 sailed to other British colonies. 1962 01:37:31,178 --> 01:37:33,223 Charles Town was next... 1963 01:37:33,247 --> 01:37:37,394 Almost 11,000 people, Black and White. 1964 01:37:37,418 --> 01:37:41,965 Most of them ended up in Jamaica and the Bahamas. 1965 01:37:41,989 --> 01:37:45,502 Only New York remained in British hands. 1966 01:37:45,526 --> 01:37:47,337 ♪ 1967 01:37:47,361 --> 01:37:51,708 Meanwhile, in Paris, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, 1968 01:37:51,732 --> 01:37:53,810 John Jay, and Henry Laurens 1969 01:37:53,834 --> 01:37:57,147 were trying to work out a permanent peace. 1970 01:37:57,171 --> 01:38:00,684 Ignoring their instructions to include the French, 1971 01:38:00,708 --> 01:38:04,221 whose assistance had ensured their astonishing victory, 1972 01:38:04,245 --> 01:38:08,658 the American envoys decided to negotiate alone 1973 01:38:08,682 --> 01:38:11,094 with British emissaries. 1974 01:38:11,118 --> 01:38:14,664 "Let us be honest and grateful to France," John Jay said, 1975 01:38:14,688 --> 01:38:17,534 "but let us think for ourselves." 1976 01:38:17,558 --> 01:38:19,769 ♪ 1977 01:38:19,793 --> 01:38:22,939 They had a draft treaty within a week. 1978 01:38:22,963 --> 01:38:26,109 Its terms were generous to the Americans, 1979 01:38:26,133 --> 01:38:29,646 so generous they would cause the new British government 1980 01:38:29,670 --> 01:38:31,281 to fall, as well. 1981 01:38:31,305 --> 01:38:33,250 ♪ 1982 01:38:33,274 --> 01:38:37,220 It declared the 13 former colonies "to be free, 1983 01:38:37,244 --> 01:38:39,623 Sovereign and independent states" 1984 01:38:39,647 --> 01:38:43,393 and set expansive boundaries, stretching all the way 1985 01:38:43,417 --> 01:38:45,762 from the Great Lakes to Florida 1986 01:38:45,786 --> 01:38:49,332 and from the Appalachians westward to the Mississippi, 1987 01:38:49,356 --> 01:38:55,405 a territory larger than England, France, and Spain put together. 1988 01:38:55,429 --> 01:38:58,208 British troops were to be withdrawn 1989 01:38:58,232 --> 01:39:01,211 with "all convenient Speed" and were barred, 1990 01:39:01,235 --> 01:39:04,681 the agreement said, from "carrying away any Negroes 1991 01:39:04,705 --> 01:39:08,318 or other Property of the American Inhabitants." 1992 01:39:08,342 --> 01:39:10,153 ♪ 1993 01:39:10,177 --> 01:39:13,089 This provisional treaty was signed by the American 1994 01:39:13,113 --> 01:39:18,328 and British negotiators on November 30, 1782. 1995 01:39:18,352 --> 01:39:21,331 A final comprehensive treaty 1996 01:39:21,355 --> 01:39:24,534 would not come for another 9 months. 1997 01:39:24,558 --> 01:39:26,670 ♪ 1998 01:39:26,694 --> 01:39:29,072 Joseph Ellis: There's a consensus at the end 1999 01:39:29,096 --> 01:39:31,875 among the negotiators, including the Brits, 2000 01:39:31,899 --> 01:39:35,745 that we're witnessing the creation of an American empire. 2001 01:39:35,769 --> 01:39:37,314 ♪ 2002 01:39:37,338 --> 01:39:40,183 De Rode: Some people would say the British lost the war, 2003 01:39:40,207 --> 01:39:44,187 but then they won the aftermath, and France lost that period. 2004 01:39:44,211 --> 01:39:46,156 They could not reinvent themselves 2005 01:39:46,180 --> 01:39:49,125 in order to prevent their collapse. 2006 01:39:49,149 --> 01:39:51,261 The promise of the American Revolution was, of course, 2007 01:39:51,285 --> 01:39:54,331 a promise of democracy, of equality, of liberties, 2008 01:39:54,355 --> 01:39:58,101 of all these new concepts at a time where in Europe, 2009 01:39:58,125 --> 01:40:00,270 there were only monarchies. 2010 01:40:00,294 --> 01:40:03,506 The republic had won against the monarchy. 2011 01:40:03,530 --> 01:40:06,009 It inspired many. 2012 01:40:06,033 --> 01:40:07,877 Narrator: The American Revolution would be 2013 01:40:07,901 --> 01:40:12,048 the opening signal for more than two centuries of revolution, 2014 01:40:12,072 --> 01:40:16,152 first in Europe, then in the Caribbean, 2015 01:40:16,176 --> 01:40:20,824 South America, Asia, and Africa. 2016 01:40:20,848 --> 01:40:23,293 Baer: The ideas are very powerful. 2017 01:40:23,317 --> 01:40:25,195 When they're talking about liberty, 2018 01:40:25,219 --> 01:40:26,563 when they're talking about equality, 2019 01:40:26,587 --> 01:40:28,131 when they're talking about opportunity, 2020 01:40:28,155 --> 01:40:29,799 the freedom from oppression, 2021 01:40:29,823 --> 01:40:33,236 the American Revolutionary movement served as a model 2022 01:40:33,260 --> 01:40:37,941 for other societies and communities around the world. 2023 01:40:37,965 --> 01:40:40,343 ♪ 2024 01:40:40,367 --> 01:40:44,047 Narrator: But in early 1783 at the Continental Army's 2025 01:40:44,071 --> 01:40:46,750 winter encampment at Newburgh, New York, 2026 01:40:46,774 --> 01:40:49,052 things were not going well. 2027 01:40:49,076 --> 01:40:51,488 An unsigned manifesto began circulating 2028 01:40:51,512 --> 01:40:56,259 among Washington's officers openly calling for a mutiny. 2029 01:40:56,283 --> 01:41:00,263 If peace really came, they would refuse to disarm 2030 01:41:00,287 --> 01:41:04,367 and be free to use the army to force Congress and the states 2031 01:41:04,391 --> 01:41:07,237 into providing the back pay they were owed. 2032 01:41:07,261 --> 01:41:09,305 [Approaching hoofbeats] 2033 01:41:09,329 --> 01:41:13,476 On March 15, at a meeting to hear more about the conspiracy, 2034 01:41:13,500 --> 01:41:15,745 officers heard horse's hooves. 2035 01:41:15,769 --> 01:41:17,047 [Horse whinnies] 2036 01:41:17,071 --> 01:41:19,282 The door flew open. 2037 01:41:19,306 --> 01:41:22,385 Washington and his aides entered. 2038 01:41:22,409 --> 01:41:24,988 The general stepped to the lectern. 2039 01:41:25,012 --> 01:41:26,589 ♪ 2040 01:41:26,613 --> 01:41:29,559 He spoke for 20 minutes, urging his officers 2041 01:41:29,583 --> 01:41:34,121 to resist drowning "our rising empire in blood." 2042 01:41:35,222 --> 01:41:39,536 Most shifted in their seats, unconvinced. 2043 01:41:39,560 --> 01:41:40,770 ♪ 2044 01:41:40,794 --> 01:41:43,406 Then Washington asked if he could read a letter 2045 01:41:43,430 --> 01:41:45,408 from a Virginia congressman 2046 01:41:45,432 --> 01:41:48,511 who had pledged support for the army. 2047 01:41:48,535 --> 01:41:52,582 He stumbled over the first words, paused, 2048 01:41:52,606 --> 01:41:56,486 and pulled a pair of spectacles from his coat. 2049 01:41:56,510 --> 01:42:00,323 Voice: Gentlemen, you must pardon me. 2050 01:42:00,347 --> 01:42:03,426 I have grown gray in your service 2051 01:42:03,450 --> 01:42:06,029 and now find myself growing blind. [Washington] 2052 01:42:06,053 --> 01:42:09,365 ♪ 2053 01:42:09,389 --> 01:42:12,535 Narrator: The rest of the letter didn't matter. 2054 01:42:12,559 --> 01:42:17,240 Many officers, hard men made harder still by battle, 2055 01:42:17,264 --> 01:42:20,343 were openly weeping. 2056 01:42:20,367 --> 01:42:23,913 The mutiny was over before it could begin. 2057 01:42:23,937 --> 01:42:28,118 ♪ 2058 01:42:28,142 --> 01:42:30,320 Voice: The unparalleled perseverance 2059 01:42:30,344 --> 01:42:32,856 of the armies of the United States, 2060 01:42:32,880 --> 01:42:36,426 through almost every possible suffering and discouragement 2061 01:42:36,450 --> 01:42:39,596 for the space of 8 long years, 2062 01:42:39,620 --> 01:42:43,366 was little short of a standing miracle. 2063 01:42:43,390 --> 01:42:46,326 George Washington. 2064 01:42:47,494 --> 01:42:50,173 Narrator: As the Continental Army began to disband, 2065 01:42:50,197 --> 01:42:53,009 Washington tried again to persuade Congress 2066 01:42:53,033 --> 01:42:58,314 to provide his men with at least 3 months' back pay in cash, 2067 01:42:58,338 --> 01:43:00,550 but the best they could do was issue 2068 01:43:00,574 --> 01:43:03,086 a blizzard of paper certificates, 2069 01:43:03,110 --> 01:43:06,422 vaguely promising to redeem them one day. 2070 01:43:06,446 --> 01:43:09,225 ♪ 2071 01:43:09,249 --> 01:43:11,327 Voice: Some of the soldiers went off for home 2072 01:43:11,351 --> 01:43:13,663 the same day their fetters were knocked off. 2073 01:43:13,687 --> 01:43:16,866 Others stayed and got their final settlement certificates, 2074 01:43:16,890 --> 01:43:19,536 which they sold to procure decent clothing 2075 01:43:19,560 --> 01:43:21,171 and money sufficient to enable them 2076 01:43:21,195 --> 01:43:23,606 to pass with decency through the country 2077 01:43:23,630 --> 01:43:25,642 and to appear something like themselves 2078 01:43:25,666 --> 01:43:28,411 when they arrived among their friends. 2079 01:43:28,435 --> 01:43:30,446 I was among those. 2080 01:43:30,470 --> 01:43:31,948 ♪ 2081 01:43:31,972 --> 01:43:34,851 When the country had drained the last drop of service 2082 01:43:34,875 --> 01:43:37,520 it could screw out of the poor soldiers, 2083 01:43:37,544 --> 01:43:41,391 we returned to drift like old, worn-out horses. 2084 01:43:41,415 --> 01:43:43,459 Joseph Plumb Martin. 2085 01:43:43,483 --> 01:43:45,328 ♪ 2086 01:43:45,352 --> 01:43:48,598 Ellis: That group of people are ordinary Americans, 2087 01:43:48,622 --> 01:43:51,501 below the level of ordinary, 2088 01:43:51,525 --> 01:43:56,139 and they won the war because they never left. 2089 01:43:56,163 --> 01:43:58,208 They stayed. That was it. 2090 01:43:58,232 --> 01:44:01,110 They refused to leave, and, um... 2091 01:44:01,134 --> 01:44:03,213 um... 2092 01:44:03,237 --> 01:44:05,615 you can sound pretty patriotic, 2093 01:44:05,639 --> 01:44:08,151 but I don't think you can be patriotic enough about them. 2094 01:44:08,175 --> 01:44:09,786 ♪ 2095 01:44:09,810 --> 01:44:11,955 Voice: We had lived together as a family of brothers 2096 01:44:11,979 --> 01:44:15,992 for several years... had shared with each other the hardships, 2097 01:44:16,016 --> 01:44:19,696 dangers, and sufferings incident to a soldier's life; 2098 01:44:19,720 --> 01:44:23,266 had sympathized with each other in trouble and sickness... 2099 01:44:23,290 --> 01:44:25,835 And now we were to be parted forever, 2100 01:44:25,859 --> 01:44:30,173 as unconditionally separated as though the grave lay between us. [Martin] 2101 01:44:30,197 --> 01:44:35,378 ♪ 2102 01:44:35,402 --> 01:44:36,980 [Gulls squawking] 2103 01:44:37,004 --> 01:44:41,484 Narrator: By the spring of 1783, more than 30,000 Loyalists 2104 01:44:41,508 --> 01:44:44,621 and almost as many British and German troops 2105 01:44:44,645 --> 01:44:46,723 still remained in New York City, 2106 01:44:46,747 --> 01:44:49,859 all waiting for ships to take them away, 2107 01:44:49,883 --> 01:44:52,695 so many people that General Carleton 2108 01:44:52,719 --> 01:44:54,831 could not tell George Washington 2109 01:44:54,855 --> 01:44:57,967 precisely when they would all be gone. 2110 01:44:57,991 --> 01:45:01,904 Soldiers shipped out for home or the West Indies. 2111 01:45:01,928 --> 01:45:06,109 Some Loyalists planned to sail to Quebec or the Bahamas, 2112 01:45:06,133 --> 01:45:08,044 but the overwhelming majority... 2113 01:45:08,068 --> 01:45:11,814 Nearly 30,000 American men, women, and children... 2114 01:45:11,838 --> 01:45:14,050 Resolved to begin their new lives 2115 01:45:14,074 --> 01:45:19,346 like John and Ann Peters had, to the north in Nova Scotia. 2116 01:45:20,547 --> 01:45:22,959 Of the more than 3,000 Black people 2117 01:45:22,983 --> 01:45:25,828 who had also found sanctuary in New York, 2118 01:45:25,852 --> 01:45:28,731 half were considered the property of Loyalists 2119 01:45:28,755 --> 01:45:31,434 and so would have to accompany their owners 2120 01:45:31,458 --> 01:45:33,836 wherever they chose to go... 2121 01:45:33,860 --> 01:45:35,738 ♪ 2122 01:45:35,762 --> 01:45:38,107 But most of the rest were runaways, 2123 01:45:38,131 --> 01:45:39,509 like Harry Washington, 2124 01:45:39,533 --> 01:45:41,978 who had been the property of George Washington, 2125 01:45:42,002 --> 01:45:45,481 and Boston King, who had been promised that if they fled 2126 01:45:45,505 --> 01:45:48,685 their Patriot owners, they would be free. 2127 01:45:48,709 --> 01:45:51,988 That freedom now seemed in peril. 2128 01:45:52,012 --> 01:45:54,257 ♪ 2129 01:45:54,281 --> 01:45:56,726 Voice: Peace was restored between America 2130 01:45:56,750 --> 01:46:01,197 and Great Britain, which issued universal joy among all parties 2131 01:46:01,221 --> 01:46:04,701 except us who had escaped from slavery 2132 01:46:04,725 --> 01:46:07,503 and taken refuge in the English army, 2133 01:46:07,527 --> 01:46:11,407 for a report prevailed at New York that all slaves 2134 01:46:11,431 --> 01:46:14,644 were to be delivered up to their masters. 2135 01:46:14,668 --> 01:46:17,380 This dreadful rumor filled us all 2136 01:46:17,404 --> 01:46:20,550 with inexpressible anguish and terror, 2137 01:46:20,574 --> 01:46:22,752 especially when we saw our masters coming 2138 01:46:22,776 --> 01:46:26,289 and seizing upon their slaves in the streets of New York 2139 01:46:26,313 --> 01:46:29,625 or even dragging them out of their beds. 2140 01:46:29,649 --> 01:46:33,596 Many of the slaves had very cruel masters 2141 01:46:33,620 --> 01:46:36,566 so that thoughts of returning home with them 2142 01:46:36,590 --> 01:46:38,835 embittered life to us. 2143 01:46:38,859 --> 01:46:42,372 For some days, we lost our appetite for food, 2144 01:46:42,396 --> 01:46:46,909 and sleep departed from our eyes. 2145 01:46:46,933 --> 01:46:49,836 Boston King. 2146 01:46:50,971 --> 01:46:53,383 Narrator: From his headquarters up the Hudson, 2147 01:46:53,407 --> 01:46:55,985 George Washington continued to insist 2148 01:46:56,009 --> 01:47:00,990 every runaway be returned to his or her owner. 2149 01:47:01,014 --> 01:47:03,793 General Carleton refused. 2150 01:47:03,817 --> 01:47:06,529 "National Honour," he told Washington, 2151 01:47:06,553 --> 01:47:09,732 required him to make good on official British pledges 2152 01:47:09,756 --> 01:47:13,870 made to persons of "any complexion." 2153 01:47:13,894 --> 01:47:17,140 Voice: The English had compassion upon us 2154 01:47:17,164 --> 01:47:19,542 in the day of distress. 2155 01:47:19,566 --> 01:47:21,277 In consequence of this, 2156 01:47:21,301 --> 01:47:22,578 each of us received 2157 01:47:22,602 --> 01:47:23,813 a certificate 2158 01:47:23,837 --> 01:47:25,314 from the commanding officer 2159 01:47:25,338 --> 01:47:26,616 at New York, 2160 01:47:26,640 --> 01:47:29,285 which dispelled all our fears. [King] 2161 01:47:29,309 --> 01:47:30,987 ♪ 2162 01:47:31,011 --> 01:47:33,990 Narrator: Carleton decreed that any enslaved person 2163 01:47:34,014 --> 01:47:36,659 who had left a Patriot owner and served 2164 01:47:36,683 --> 01:47:41,297 behind the British lines for 12 months was free. 2165 01:47:41,321 --> 01:47:46,002 Disputes between runaways and owners or slave catchers 2166 01:47:46,026 --> 01:47:49,272 determined to return them to slavery were adjudicated 2167 01:47:49,296 --> 01:47:53,075 by a committee of 4 British officers and 3 Americans 2168 01:47:53,099 --> 01:47:57,046 who met weekly at Fraunces Tavern on Pearl Street. 2169 01:47:57,070 --> 01:47:58,714 ♪ 2170 01:47:58,738 --> 01:48:00,783 Voice: I came from Virginia. 2171 01:48:00,807 --> 01:48:02,652 I was with Lord Dunmore, 2172 01:48:02,676 --> 01:48:05,455 washing and ironing in his service. 2173 01:48:05,479 --> 01:48:07,557 I came with him to New York 2174 01:48:07,581 --> 01:48:11,294 and was in service with him till he went away. 2175 01:48:11,318 --> 01:48:13,596 My master came for me. 2176 01:48:13,620 --> 01:48:16,999 I told him I would not go with him. 2177 01:48:17,023 --> 01:48:20,536 He took my money and stole my child from me 2178 01:48:20,560 --> 01:48:23,005 and sent it to Virginia. 2179 01:48:23,029 --> 01:48:24,740 Judith Jackson. 2180 01:48:24,764 --> 01:48:27,210 ♪ 2181 01:48:27,234 --> 01:48:30,913 Narrator: Judith Jackson won the right to go to Nova Scotia, 2182 01:48:30,937 --> 01:48:33,149 but she stayed on in New York, 2183 01:48:33,173 --> 01:48:36,018 frantically trying to recover her daughter 2184 01:48:36,042 --> 01:48:38,988 until she was forced to sail without her. 2185 01:48:39,012 --> 01:48:40,890 ♪ 2186 01:48:40,914 --> 01:48:42,191 [Man shouts] 2187 01:48:42,215 --> 01:48:44,894 Narrator: There were more tense moments at dockside. 2188 01:48:44,918 --> 01:48:49,131 Before any vessel carrying Black passengers, slave or free, 2189 01:48:49,155 --> 01:48:52,802 could leave New York, British and American inspectors 2190 01:48:52,826 --> 01:48:55,404 demanded to see their certificates 2191 01:48:55,428 --> 01:48:57,740 and entered their names and descriptions 2192 01:48:57,764 --> 01:49:00,142 in separate ledgers... 2193 01:49:00,166 --> 01:49:02,912 Rhiannon Giddens: [Vocalizing "Dean Cadalan Samhach"] 2194 01:49:02,936 --> 01:49:04,413 ♪ 2195 01:49:04,437 --> 01:49:08,217 Narrator: but once underway, Boston King, Harry Washington, 2196 01:49:08,241 --> 01:49:10,553 and all the hundreds of other free persons 2197 01:49:10,577 --> 01:49:13,956 the British allowed to sail north were filled, 2198 01:49:13,980 --> 01:49:17,460 as King wrote, "with joy and gratitude." 2199 01:49:17,484 --> 01:49:20,963 ♪ 2200 01:49:20,987 --> 01:49:25,601 In the end, Nova Scotia proved cold and unforgiving. 2201 01:49:25,625 --> 01:49:28,337 Black refugees were not made welcome. 2202 01:49:28,361 --> 01:49:31,507 ♪ 2203 01:49:31,531 --> 01:49:33,643 Both men would eventually join 2204 01:49:33,667 --> 01:49:36,245 nearly 1,200 other African Americans 2205 01:49:36,269 --> 01:49:42,118 who emigrated again, this time to Sierra Leone in West Africa, 2206 01:49:42,142 --> 01:49:44,987 where they founded a new British colony 2207 01:49:45,011 --> 01:49:49,249 with a new capital city they called Freetown. 2208 01:49:51,985 --> 01:49:54,030 Voice: If we had the means of publishing 2209 01:49:54,054 --> 01:49:57,099 to the world the many acts of treachery and cruelty 2210 01:49:57,123 --> 01:50:01,070 committed by them on our women and children, 2211 01:50:01,094 --> 01:50:04,273 it would appear that the title of Savages would 2212 01:50:04,297 --> 01:50:09,278 with much greater justice be applied to them than to us. 2213 01:50:09,302 --> 01:50:12,181 Old Smoke. 2214 01:50:12,205 --> 01:50:15,318 Narrator: The 150,000 Native Americans who lived 2215 01:50:15,342 --> 01:50:18,921 in the vast territory that was now the United States 2216 01:50:18,945 --> 01:50:22,725 were not so much as mentioned in the treaty. 2217 01:50:22,749 --> 01:50:25,027 Kreisberg: [Vocalizing "Grief"] 2218 01:50:25,051 --> 01:50:26,829 Voice: We were struck with astonishment 2219 01:50:26,853 --> 01:50:28,764 at hearing we were forgot. 2220 01:50:28,788 --> 01:50:31,767 We could not believe it possible such firm friends 2221 01:50:31,791 --> 01:50:34,704 and allies could be so neglected by England, 2222 01:50:34,728 --> 01:50:39,875 whom we had served with so much zeal and fidelity. 2223 01:50:39,899 --> 01:50:43,670 Thayendanegea, Joseph Brant. 2224 01:50:44,971 --> 01:50:47,950 The losers in the negotiation of Paris 2225 01:50:47,974 --> 01:50:50,286 are the Native Americans. 2226 01:50:50,310 --> 01:50:53,055 I mean, it would be hard-pressed to say that they'd be better off 2227 01:50:53,079 --> 01:50:56,892 if the British had won, but they probably would have. 2228 01:50:56,916 --> 01:50:59,228 ♪ 2229 01:50:59,252 --> 01:51:01,964 Narrator: The contributions Native Americans had made 2230 01:51:01,988 --> 01:51:06,736 to winning American independence would soon be forgotten, too, 2231 01:51:06,760 --> 01:51:11,841 including Oneidas, Tuscaroras, Delawares, Catawbas, 2232 01:51:11,865 --> 01:51:15,578 and the Indian community at Stockbridge, Massachusetts. 2233 01:51:15,602 --> 01:51:17,980 ♪ 2234 01:51:18,004 --> 01:51:21,083 Voice: In this late war, we have suffered much. 2235 01:51:21,107 --> 01:51:24,253 Our blood has been spilled with yours, 2236 01:51:24,277 --> 01:51:26,322 and many of our young men 2237 01:51:26,346 --> 01:51:29,191 have fallen by the side of your warriors. 2238 01:51:29,215 --> 01:51:30,993 ♪ 2239 01:51:31,017 --> 01:51:33,462 Almost all those places where your warriors 2240 01:51:33,486 --> 01:51:38,267 have left their bones, there our bones are seen also. [Stockbridge petitioners] 2241 01:51:38,291 --> 01:51:40,436 ♪ 2242 01:51:40,460 --> 01:51:43,072 Philip Deloria: The Stockbridge Indians, their home, 2243 01:51:43,096 --> 01:51:45,408 their land is gonna go away. 2244 01:51:45,432 --> 01:51:47,910 They're not gonna be able to hold on to that, 2245 01:51:47,934 --> 01:51:50,112 and they are moved to New York. 2246 01:51:50,136 --> 01:51:52,548 Then they end up in Wisconsin. 2247 01:51:52,572 --> 01:51:54,450 Like so many tribes, right, 2248 01:51:54,474 --> 01:51:58,054 they end up being kicked around and moved from place to place. 2249 01:51:58,078 --> 01:52:00,723 This is, of course, the story of Native people 2250 01:52:00,747 --> 01:52:03,159 relative to the United States. 2251 01:52:03,183 --> 01:52:04,960 ♪ 2252 01:52:04,984 --> 01:52:07,496 Voice: Beloved men and warriors 2253 01:52:07,520 --> 01:52:10,032 of the United States, 2254 01:52:10,056 --> 01:52:12,635 we, the women of the Cherokee Nation, 2255 01:52:12,659 --> 01:52:14,737 now speak to you. 2256 01:52:14,761 --> 01:52:18,908 We are mothers and have many sons, 2257 01:52:18,932 --> 01:52:22,578 some of them warriors and beloved men. 2258 01:52:22,602 --> 01:52:25,981 Our cry is all for peace. 2259 01:52:26,005 --> 01:52:27,750 ♪ 2260 01:52:27,774 --> 01:52:31,454 This peace must last forever. 2261 01:52:31,478 --> 01:52:35,391 Let your women hear our words. [Delegation of Cherokee Women] 2262 01:52:35,415 --> 01:52:37,093 [Drum and rattle playing] 2263 01:52:37,117 --> 01:52:39,428 Narrator: There would be no peace. 2264 01:52:39,452 --> 01:52:42,665 As the United States moved inexorably westward, 2265 01:52:42,689 --> 01:52:45,167 Native nations would continue to fight 2266 01:52:45,191 --> 01:52:48,204 for their independence for another century. 2267 01:52:48,228 --> 01:52:50,272 ♪ 2268 01:52:50,296 --> 01:52:52,908 Native Americans would not become citizens 2269 01:52:52,932 --> 01:52:56,645 of the United States until 1924, 2270 01:52:56,669 --> 01:53:00,950 and their struggle to remain sovereign would never end. 2271 01:53:00,974 --> 01:53:02,909 ♪ 2272 01:53:05,178 --> 01:53:08,090 ♪ 2273 01:53:08,114 --> 01:53:13,195 At 1:00 in the afternoon on November 25, 1783, 2274 01:53:13,219 --> 01:53:15,698 George Washington... "straight as a dart," 2275 01:53:15,722 --> 01:53:19,535 an eyewitness recalled, "and as noble as he could be"... 2276 01:53:19,559 --> 01:53:24,173 Led a procession of soldiers and civilians down Bowery Lane 2277 01:53:24,197 --> 01:53:27,443 and Queen Street, west across Wall Street, 2278 01:53:27,467 --> 01:53:29,178 and then down Broadway. 2279 01:53:29,202 --> 01:53:30,679 [Fireworks pop and crackle] 2280 01:53:30,703 --> 01:53:33,182 The British were finally gone. 2281 01:53:33,206 --> 01:53:35,451 Washington was back in the city 2282 01:53:35,475 --> 01:53:39,388 he had been forced to abandon in 1776. 2283 01:53:39,412 --> 01:53:43,559 New Yorkers celebrated for days with illuminations, 2284 01:53:43,583 --> 01:53:45,661 bonfires, and fireworks... 2285 01:53:45,685 --> 01:53:48,030 [Fireworks continue] 2286 01:53:48,054 --> 01:53:53,102 and now George Washington had one more duty to perform. 2287 01:53:53,126 --> 01:53:56,005 He would ride to Annapolis, Maryland, 2288 01:53:56,029 --> 01:53:59,008 where the Confederation Congress was now meeting, 2289 01:53:59,032 --> 01:54:01,811 and formally resign his commission. 2290 01:54:01,835 --> 01:54:03,779 [Trumpet playing "Amazing Grace"] 2291 01:54:03,803 --> 01:54:06,081 Ellis: He knew what he was doing. 2292 01:54:06,105 --> 01:54:09,151 He walks away from power. 2293 01:54:09,175 --> 01:54:12,154 He's not gonna be a Cromwell. He's not gonna be a Caesar. 2294 01:54:12,178 --> 01:54:16,058 He's not gonna be what Napoleon is gonna become. 2295 01:54:16,082 --> 01:54:18,994 He could have easily become dictator head, 2296 01:54:19,018 --> 01:54:21,497 and he had no interest in that whatsoever. 2297 01:54:21,521 --> 01:54:23,899 ♪ 2298 01:54:23,923 --> 01:54:26,402 Narrator: Accompanied by two military aides 2299 01:54:26,426 --> 01:54:29,605 and his enslaved companion William Lee, 2300 01:54:29,629 --> 01:54:32,875 Washington set out right away for Mount Vernon, 2301 01:54:32,899 --> 01:54:36,111 hoping to be home for Christmas Eve. 2302 01:54:36,135 --> 01:54:39,548 ♪ 2303 01:54:39,572 --> 01:54:41,150 Voice: These are the times 2304 01:54:41,174 --> 01:54:44,486 that tried men's souls, and they are over, 2305 01:54:44,510 --> 01:54:48,791 and the greatest and completest Revolution the world ever knew 2306 01:54:48,815 --> 01:54:51,861 gloriously and happily accomplished. 2307 01:54:51,885 --> 01:54:56,799 As United States, we are equal to the importance of the title, 2308 01:54:56,823 --> 01:54:59,835 but otherwise we are not. 2309 01:54:59,859 --> 01:55:02,805 Our union is the most sacred thing 2310 01:55:02,829 --> 01:55:07,042 and that which every man should be most proud and tender of. 2311 01:55:07,066 --> 01:55:11,513 Our great title is Americans. 2312 01:55:11,537 --> 01:55:13,515 Thomas Paine. 2313 01:55:13,539 --> 01:55:16,252 [Drum roll] 2314 01:55:16,276 --> 01:55:19,021 Narrator: The war had brought the states together, 2315 01:55:19,045 --> 01:55:23,058 but peace soon threatened to tear them apart. 2316 01:55:23,082 --> 01:55:26,395 Small states continued to fear large ones. 2317 01:55:26,419 --> 01:55:30,232 Northern and Southern states jockeyed for dominance 2318 01:55:30,256 --> 01:55:33,302 and quarreled over borders. 2319 01:55:33,326 --> 01:55:37,673 Vermonters had already declared themselves a separate republic. 2320 01:55:37,697 --> 01:55:42,444 North Carolina's Overmountain settlers were seeking to secede 2321 01:55:42,468 --> 01:55:46,315 and form their own state called Franklin. 2322 01:55:46,339 --> 01:55:47,850 [Gunfire] 2323 01:55:47,874 --> 01:55:50,586 Elsewhere, farmers turned to violence 2324 01:55:50,610 --> 01:55:55,257 to protest state taxes they considered unreasonable. 2325 01:55:55,281 --> 01:55:59,995 In Massachusetts, protest became insurrection, 2326 01:56:00,019 --> 01:56:02,431 Shays' Rebellion put down 2327 01:56:02,455 --> 01:56:07,469 only after former comrades in arms fired on each other. 2328 01:56:07,493 --> 01:56:10,339 A "cloud of evils," George Washington wrote, 2329 01:56:10,363 --> 01:56:13,475 "was threatening the tranquility of the Union." 2330 01:56:13,499 --> 01:56:15,377 ♪ 2331 01:56:15,401 --> 01:56:18,113 Voice: Our situation is truly delicate 2332 01:56:18,137 --> 01:56:20,316 and critical. 2333 01:56:20,340 --> 01:56:23,118 On the one hand, we stand in need 2334 01:56:23,142 --> 01:56:26,555 of a strong Federal Government founded on principles 2335 01:56:26,579 --> 01:56:30,626 that will support the prosperity and union of the states. 2336 01:56:30,650 --> 01:56:34,997 On the other, we have struggled for liberty 2337 01:56:35,021 --> 01:56:38,534 and made lofty sacrifices at her shrine, 2338 01:56:38,558 --> 01:56:43,339 and there are still many among us who revere her name too much 2339 01:56:43,363 --> 01:56:48,877 to relinquish the rights of man for the dignity of government. 2340 01:56:48,901 --> 01:56:51,246 Mercy Otis Warren. 2341 01:56:51,270 --> 01:56:52,982 ♪ 2342 01:56:53,006 --> 01:56:54,383 Narrator: The new Congress, 2343 01:56:54,407 --> 01:56:56,552 created by the Articles of Confederation, 2344 01:56:56,576 --> 01:57:00,356 was toothless, saddled with colossal debts, 2345 01:57:00,380 --> 01:57:02,725 and incapable of collecting taxes 2346 01:57:02,749 --> 01:57:04,693 with which to pay them off. 2347 01:57:04,717 --> 01:57:07,997 Christopher Brown: It's not hard to imagine at all 2348 01:57:08,021 --> 01:57:09,932 Britain, France, and Spain picking off 2349 01:57:09,956 --> 01:57:14,036 individual states to create sort of commercial alliances 2350 01:57:14,060 --> 01:57:16,271 or political alliances and military alliances, 2351 01:57:16,295 --> 01:57:18,474 as client states, and all kinds of things. 2352 01:57:18,498 --> 01:57:22,177 Sounds crazy, but it's no more crazy 2353 01:57:22,201 --> 01:57:24,313 to have actually created a federal government 2354 01:57:24,337 --> 01:57:26,482 that would actually work, and famously, 2355 01:57:26,506 --> 01:57:28,951 a lot of British observers throughout the 1780s... 2356 01:57:28,975 --> 01:57:31,744 "Just give them a few years. It's all gonna fall apart." 2357 01:57:32,845 --> 01:57:34,456 Philbrick: One of the lessons Washington learned 2358 01:57:34,480 --> 01:57:37,393 during the American Revolution is that without 2359 01:57:37,417 --> 01:57:42,765 a powerful central government, nothing effective could happen. 2360 01:57:42,789 --> 01:57:44,767 The frustrations he experienced 2361 01:57:44,791 --> 01:57:48,804 trying to get these 13 colonies to work in unison 2362 01:57:48,828 --> 01:57:52,608 and failing every time in the Continental Congress 2363 01:57:52,632 --> 01:57:55,778 taught him that something had to change. 2364 01:57:55,802 --> 01:57:58,914 ♪ 2365 01:57:58,938 --> 01:58:01,383 Narrator: In late May 1787, 2366 01:58:01,407 --> 01:58:06,855 55 delegates met in Philadelphia to draw up a constitution. 2367 01:58:06,879 --> 01:58:09,858 Nearly half owned slaves. 2368 01:58:09,882 --> 01:58:13,595 30 had served in the war. 2369 01:58:13,619 --> 01:58:16,198 George Washington lent his prestige 2370 01:58:16,222 --> 01:58:18,867 by agreeing to preside over the convention. 2371 01:58:18,891 --> 01:58:21,336 ♪ 2372 01:58:21,360 --> 01:58:23,639 4 months later, they had hammered out 2373 01:58:23,663 --> 01:58:26,909 a 4-page document. 2374 01:58:26,933 --> 01:58:28,710 To devise a government 2375 01:58:28,734 --> 01:58:31,914 that the American people could agree to live under 2376 01:58:31,938 --> 01:58:35,017 demanded historic compromises... 2377 01:58:35,041 --> 01:58:38,020 Some creative, some tragic. 2378 01:58:38,044 --> 01:58:40,489 ♪ 2379 01:58:40,513 --> 01:58:43,258 The Constitution delineated which powers 2380 01:58:43,282 --> 01:58:45,227 fell to the central government 2381 01:58:45,251 --> 01:58:47,463 and which remained with the states, 2382 01:58:47,487 --> 01:58:52,267 a system of shared sovereignty they called federalism. 2383 01:58:52,291 --> 01:58:55,137 The architects of the Constitution 2384 01:58:55,161 --> 01:58:58,273 divided the federal government into 3 branches... 2385 01:58:58,297 --> 01:59:02,211 The legislative, executive, and judicial... 2386 01:59:02,235 --> 01:59:05,714 In a delicate balance by which each was meant 2387 01:59:05,738 --> 01:59:09,418 to check the others to ensure against overreach 2388 01:59:09,442 --> 01:59:12,354 that could result in tyranny. 2389 01:59:12,378 --> 01:59:16,725 They feared that a demagogue might incite citizens 2390 01:59:16,749 --> 01:59:19,862 into betraying the American experiment. 2391 01:59:19,886 --> 01:59:24,700 Alexander Hamilton was concerned that an "unprincipled" man 2392 01:59:24,724 --> 01:59:27,636 would "mount the hobby horse of popularity" 2393 01:59:27,660 --> 01:59:30,472 and "throw things into confusion." 2394 01:59:30,496 --> 01:59:33,108 "In a government like ours," he would write, 2395 01:59:33,132 --> 01:59:36,778 no one is "above the law." 2396 01:59:36,802 --> 01:59:38,480 [Bell rings] 2397 01:59:38,504 --> 01:59:40,883 Voice: I wish the Constitution which is offered 2398 01:59:40,907 --> 01:59:45,354 had been made more perfect, but I sincerely believe 2399 01:59:45,378 --> 01:59:48,223 it is the best that could be obtained at this time, 2400 01:59:48,247 --> 01:59:52,861 and as a constitutional door is opened for amendment hereafter, 2401 01:59:52,885 --> 01:59:57,966 the adoption of it is, in my opinion, desirable. 2402 01:59:57,990 --> 02:00:00,269 [Washington] 2403 02:00:00,293 --> 02:00:02,204 Bailyn: They were trying to create 2404 02:00:02,228 --> 02:00:04,072 a system in which you could have 2405 02:00:04,096 --> 02:00:06,642 a sufficiently powerful government 2406 02:00:06,666 --> 02:00:10,245 that could work properly for its own people 2407 02:00:10,269 --> 02:00:12,781 and the great powers of the world 2408 02:00:12,805 --> 02:00:17,920 and still retain the freedoms of the individual, 2409 02:00:17,944 --> 02:00:19,755 and that is the great issue 2410 02:00:19,779 --> 02:00:22,457 that runs all the way through the Revolution. 2411 02:00:22,481 --> 02:00:26,028 It's a struggle between the possibilities 2412 02:00:26,052 --> 02:00:28,530 of power and of liberty. 2413 02:00:28,554 --> 02:00:29,898 ♪ 2414 02:00:29,922 --> 02:00:32,868 Narrator: In order for the Constitution to take effect, 2415 02:00:32,892 --> 02:00:36,471 the individual states had to ratify it. 2416 02:00:36,495 --> 02:00:39,308 That would foster one of the most extensive 2417 02:00:39,332 --> 02:00:41,476 public debates in history. 2418 02:00:41,500 --> 02:00:42,945 ♪ 2419 02:00:42,969 --> 02:00:45,214 Gordon-Reed: The people who created the American Revolution 2420 02:00:45,238 --> 02:00:47,149 and created the American nation 2421 02:00:47,173 --> 02:00:49,551 assumed that Americans would be involved, 2422 02:00:49,575 --> 02:00:53,255 that they would be active citizens, not subjects. 2423 02:00:53,279 --> 02:00:56,625 Being a citizen requires the kind of participation 2424 02:00:56,649 --> 02:01:00,028 in the democracy that keeps it vibrant. 2425 02:01:00,052 --> 02:01:01,697 ♪ 2426 02:01:01,721 --> 02:01:04,233 Narrator: In the end, all 13 states 2427 02:01:04,257 --> 02:01:06,535 did ratify the Constitution, 2428 02:01:06,559 --> 02:01:08,670 but before consenting to live 2429 02:01:08,694 --> 02:01:10,872 under the new federal government, 2430 02:01:10,896 --> 02:01:13,976 the American people wanted to enshrine the liberties 2431 02:01:14,000 --> 02:01:17,312 they had won in the Revolution. 2432 02:01:17,336 --> 02:01:20,549 The Constitution was almost immediately amended 2433 02:01:20,573 --> 02:01:24,286 with a Bill of Rights guaranteeing freedom of worship 2434 02:01:24,310 --> 02:01:27,522 and the separation of church and state, 2435 02:01:27,546 --> 02:01:30,425 freedom of speech and assembly, 2436 02:01:30,449 --> 02:01:33,095 the right to keep and bear arms, 2437 02:01:33,119 --> 02:01:34,830 trial by jury, 2438 02:01:34,854 --> 02:01:38,867 and a ban on cruel and unusual punishment. 2439 02:01:38,891 --> 02:01:41,937 James Madison, who wrote the Bill of Rights, 2440 02:01:41,961 --> 02:01:46,341 called the Constitution "nothing more than the draft of a plan, 2441 02:01:46,365 --> 02:01:48,877 "nothing but a dead letter, 2442 02:01:48,901 --> 02:01:52,481 "until life and validity were breathed into it 2443 02:01:52,505 --> 02:01:54,950 by the voice of the people." 2444 02:01:54,974 --> 02:01:56,652 ♪ 2445 02:01:56,676 --> 02:01:59,521 Vincent Brown: The idea that government derives its authority 2446 02:01:59,545 --> 02:02:02,991 from the consent of the governed was pretty radical. 2447 02:02:03,015 --> 02:02:05,794 It's still pretty radical. 2448 02:02:05,818 --> 02:02:08,330 If we take the words of the Declaration of Independence, 2449 02:02:08,354 --> 02:02:11,266 written by Thomas Jefferson... "All men... " 2450 02:02:11,290 --> 02:02:13,135 let's say men, women... 2451 02:02:13,159 --> 02:02:15,704 "are created free and equal," right... 2452 02:02:15,728 --> 02:02:19,975 Jefferson clearly didn't take that seriously as a slaveholder, 2453 02:02:19,999 --> 02:02:21,743 but I do, 2454 02:02:21,767 --> 02:02:24,346 and I think it's incumbent on all of us 2455 02:02:24,370 --> 02:02:26,615 to take those words from Jefferson 2456 02:02:26,639 --> 02:02:28,850 and make them real in our own lives, 2457 02:02:28,874 --> 02:02:32,254 even if they weren't real in his. 2458 02:02:32,278 --> 02:02:35,090 ♪ 2459 02:02:35,114 --> 02:02:38,060 Narrator: When the time came to choose the first president 2460 02:02:38,084 --> 02:02:39,928 under the Constitution, 2461 02:02:39,952 --> 02:02:42,664 George Washington was the only choice 2462 02:02:42,688 --> 02:02:45,667 and won the vote of every single elector. 2463 02:02:45,691 --> 02:02:47,336 ♪ 2464 02:02:47,360 --> 02:02:49,571 He was inaugurated in New York City 2465 02:02:49,595 --> 02:02:52,941 on April 30, 1789. 2466 02:02:52,965 --> 02:02:56,078 John Adams, the first vice president, 2467 02:02:56,102 --> 02:02:58,980 thought the chief executive should have a royal, 2468 02:02:59,004 --> 02:03:02,984 or at least a princely, title, but for Washington, 2469 02:03:03,008 --> 02:03:07,022 President of the United States was honor enough... 2470 02:03:07,046 --> 02:03:09,624 [People cheering] 2471 02:03:09,648 --> 02:03:13,328 and when he left the presidency in 1797, 2472 02:03:13,352 --> 02:03:16,465 King George himself paid tribute. 2473 02:03:16,489 --> 02:03:18,967 By surrendering first his military 2474 02:03:18,991 --> 02:03:21,603 and then his political power, he said, 2475 02:03:21,627 --> 02:03:24,439 George Washington had made himself 2476 02:03:24,463 --> 02:03:27,642 "the greatest character of the age." 2477 02:03:27,666 --> 02:03:31,103 ♪ 2478 02:03:32,338 --> 02:03:34,182 Voice: Our government daily acquires 2479 02:03:34,206 --> 02:03:36,318 strength and stability. 2480 02:03:36,342 --> 02:03:38,320 The union is complete. 2481 02:03:38,344 --> 02:03:40,021 ♪ 2482 02:03:40,045 --> 02:03:43,191 Nothing hinders our being a very happy and prosperous people, 2483 02:03:43,215 --> 02:03:48,263 provided we have wisdom rightly to estimate our blessings 2484 02:03:48,287 --> 02:03:51,900 and hearts to improve them. 2485 02:03:51,924 --> 02:03:53,869 Abigail Adams. 2486 02:03:53,893 --> 02:03:57,606 Rhiannon Giddens: [Vocalizing "Amazing Grace"] 2487 02:03:57,630 --> 02:04:01,376 Voice: I will not believe our labors are lost. 2488 02:04:01,400 --> 02:04:04,413 I shall not die without a hope 2489 02:04:04,437 --> 02:04:07,816 that light and liberty are on steady advance. 2490 02:04:07,840 --> 02:04:09,584 ♪ 2491 02:04:09,608 --> 02:04:13,054 And even should the cloud of barbarism and despotism 2492 02:04:13,078 --> 02:04:16,892 again obscure the science and liberties of Europe, 2493 02:04:16,916 --> 02:04:20,328 this country remains to preserve and restore 2494 02:04:20,352 --> 02:04:23,131 light and liberty to them. 2495 02:04:23,155 --> 02:04:29,771 In short, the flames kindled on the 4th of July, 1776, 2496 02:04:29,795 --> 02:04:32,707 have spread over too much of the globe 2497 02:04:32,731 --> 02:04:37,479 to be extinguished by the feeble engines of despotism. 2498 02:04:37,503 --> 02:04:39,848 Thomas Jefferson. 2499 02:04:39,872 --> 02:04:42,984 ♪ 2500 02:04:43,008 --> 02:04:46,188 Atkinson: America is predicated on an idea 2501 02:04:46,212 --> 02:04:51,960 that should act as a pole star for us to provide true north, 2502 02:04:51,984 --> 02:04:57,866 telling us what it is that we think we can do as a people. 2503 02:04:57,890 --> 02:05:00,836 ♪ 2504 02:05:00,860 --> 02:05:04,873 The perpetual challenge of the American experiment 2505 02:05:04,897 --> 02:05:10,712 is to draw on those aspirational ideals 2506 02:05:10,736 --> 02:05:12,614 and make them our own, 2507 02:05:12,638 --> 02:05:16,051 hand them off to our children and our grandchildren, 2508 02:05:16,075 --> 02:05:18,820 and to use that as a propulsion system 2509 02:05:18,844 --> 02:05:23,191 for being the nation that those forebears 2510 02:05:23,215 --> 02:05:25,760 thought we could become. 2511 02:05:25,784 --> 02:05:29,264 ♪ 2512 02:05:29,288 --> 02:05:32,367 Voice: The American war is over, 2513 02:05:32,391 --> 02:05:34,269 but this is far from being the case 2514 02:05:34,293 --> 02:05:37,205 with the American Revolution. 2515 02:05:37,229 --> 02:05:38,940 On the contrary, 2516 02:05:38,964 --> 02:05:42,777 nothing but the first act of the great drama is closed. 2517 02:05:42,801 --> 02:05:46,248 It remains yet to establish and perfect 2518 02:05:46,272 --> 02:05:48,183 our new forms of government. 2519 02:05:48,207 --> 02:05:50,252 ♪ 2520 02:05:50,276 --> 02:05:52,687 Patriots, come forward! 2521 02:05:52,711 --> 02:05:55,624 Your country demands your services. 2522 02:05:55,648 --> 02:05:59,828 Hear her proclaiming, in sighs and groans, 2523 02:05:59,852 --> 02:06:03,098 in her governments, in her finances, 2524 02:06:03,122 --> 02:06:07,102 in her trade, in her manufactures, 2525 02:06:07,126 --> 02:06:11,640 in her morals, and in her manners, 2526 02:06:11,664 --> 02:06:15,577 "The Revolution is not over!" 2527 02:06:15,601 --> 02:06:17,479 Benjamin Rush. 2528 02:06:17,503 --> 02:06:21,674 ♪ 2529 02:06:25,377 --> 02:06:33,377 ♪ 2530 02:07:32,244 --> 02:07:33,455 ♪ 2531 02:07:33,479 --> 02:07:36,524 Announcer: Scan this QR code with your smart device 2532 02:07:36,548 --> 02:07:39,995 to dive deeper into the story of "The American Revolution" 2533 02:07:40,019 --> 02:07:43,164 with interactives, games, classroom materials, and more. 2534 02:07:43,188 --> 02:07:48,694 ♪ 2535 02:07:51,997 --> 02:07:54,275 Announcer: "The American Revolution" DVD and Blu-ray, 2536 02:07:54,299 --> 02:07:57,078 as well as the companion book and soundtrack, 2537 02:07:57,102 --> 02:08:00,015 are available online and in stores. 2538 02:08:00,039 --> 02:08:02,317 The series is also available with PBS Passport 2539 02:08:02,341 --> 02:08:05,210 and on Amazon Prime Video. 2540 02:08:07,546 --> 02:08:15,546 ♪ 2541 02:09:10,142 --> 02:09:12,454 Announcer: The American Revolution caused 2542 02:09:12,478 --> 02:09:14,489 an impact felt around the world. 2543 02:09:14,513 --> 02:09:19,794 The fight would take ingenuity, determination, 2544 02:09:19,818 --> 02:09:21,930 and hope for a new tomorrow 2545 02:09:21,954 --> 02:09:24,132 to turn the tide of history 2546 02:09:24,156 --> 02:09:27,392 and set the American story in motion. 2547 02:09:31,964 --> 02:09:34,809 What would you like the power to do? 2548 02:09:34,833 --> 02:09:36,401 Bank of America. 2549 02:09:39,705 --> 02:09:41,015 Announcer: Major funding 2550 02:09:41,039 --> 02:09:42,083 for "The American Revolution" 2551 02:09:42,107 --> 02:09:43,518 was provided by The Better Angels Society 2552 02:09:43,542 --> 02:09:44,786 and its members 2553 02:09:44,810 --> 02:09:45,987 Jeannie and Jonathan Lavine 2554 02:09:46,011 --> 02:09:47,989 with the Crimson Lion Foundation 2555 02:09:48,013 --> 02:09:50,091 and the Blavatnik Family Foundation. 2556 02:09:50,115 --> 02:09:53,428 Major funding was also provided by David M. Rubenstein, 2557 02:09:53,452 --> 02:09:56,564 the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Family Foundation, 2558 02:09:56,588 --> 02:09:57,899 the Lilly Endowment, 2559 02:09:57,923 --> 02:10:00,068 and by Better Angels Society members: 2560 02:10:00,092 --> 02:10:02,403 Eric and Wendy Schmidt, Stephen A. Schwarzman, 2561 02:10:02,427 --> 02:10:05,106 and Kenneth C. Griffin with Griffin Catalyst. 2562 02:10:05,130 --> 02:10:06,875 Additional support was provided by 2563 02:10:06,899 --> 02:10:08,943 The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, 2564 02:10:08,967 --> 02:10:10,779 the Pew Charitable Trusts, 2565 02:10:10,803 --> 02:10:12,714 Gilbert S. Omenn and Martha A. Darling, 2566 02:10:12,738 --> 02:10:14,149 the Park Foundation, 2567 02:10:14,173 --> 02:10:16,084 and by Better Angels Society members: 2568 02:10:16,108 --> 02:10:19,053 Gilchrist and Amy Berg, Perry and Donna Golkin, 2569 02:10:19,077 --> 02:10:21,589 The Michelson Foundation, Jacqueline B. Mars, 2570 02:10:21,613 --> 02:10:25,059 the Kissick Family Foundation, Diane and Hal Brierley, 2571 02:10:25,083 --> 02:10:27,762 John H.N. Fisher and Jennifer Caldwell, 2572 02:10:27,786 --> 02:10:29,297 John and Catherine Debs, 2573 02:10:29,321 --> 02:10:31,166 The Fullerton Family Charitable Fund, 2574 02:10:31,190 --> 02:10:33,001 and these additional members. 2575 02:10:33,025 --> 02:10:34,636 "The American Revolution" 2576 02:10:34,660 --> 02:10:36,070 was made possible with support 2577 02:10:36,094 --> 02:10:38,306 from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, 2578 02:10:38,330 --> 02:10:39,570 and Viewers Like You. Thank You. 200420

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