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The Trail to Victory at Yorktown (Historical Marker)

GPS Coordinates: 38.6749804, -77.2260517
Closest Address: 10418 Old Colchester Road, Lorton, VA 22079

The Trail to Victory at Yorktown (Historical Marker)

Here follows the inscription written on this roadside historical marker:

The Trail to Victory at Yorktown
On The Washington-Rochambeau Revolutionary Route

Late in the American War for Independence, allied generals George Washington and the Comte de Rochambeau received good news. A French fleet under Admiral de Grasse carrying 3,000 French soldiers was headed for the Chesapeake Bay. Following the march of Rochambeau's army from Providence, Rhode Island, to White Plains, New York, the generals decided on August 14 that the combined Armies would march for the 450 miles southward to Yorktown at all possible speed. They would try to create a combined army to surprise and then lay siege to General Cornwallis' British army at Yorktown, Virginia.

General Washington learned on September 5 that Admiral de Grasse had landed troops at Jamestown, Virginia, under the Command of General Saint-Simon. Admiral de Grasse then successfully intercepted and defeated a British fleet headed for the Chesapeake, eliminating the possibility of Cornwallis escaping by water. The majority of the allied armies sailed down the Chesapeake Bay to Yorktown. Their emptied baggage wagons and livestock continued on the overland route to Yorktown.

This map existed in 1781 at the time of the Yorktown Campaign by General Washington and Comte De Rochambeau's armies. The diagrams represent the passage (blue) of the troop ships down the Chesapeake Bay and the route (red) of the overland baggage train, all finally converging for the victorious siege of the British army at Yorktown which proved to be the most decisive engagement in the American War of Independence.

Among the prominent visitors to the ferry at Colchester and nearby river fords in 1781 were Generals Washington and Rochambeau who journeyed through here on September 13 following a brief visit at Mount Vernon on their way to lead the siege of Yorktown. It was the first time that General Washington had been to his home at Mount Vernon in six years.

The American wagons passed through Colchester on September 21, 1781. The route followed the old Kings Highway, the 1781 equivalent to today's Interstate I-95. In 2009, the route was designated a National Historic Trail.

Lauzan's French Legion, in two escadrons totaling almost 300 handsomely uniformed men passed through Colchester on September 26, 1781, after camping near Pohick Creek north of Colchester.

Following the British surrender at Yorktown, the American army passed northward through Colchester in small detachments over a nearly two week period. The French army also returned northward through Colchester in July of 1782 after wintering in Southern Virginia.

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Award-winning local historian and tour guide in Franconia and the greater Alexandria area of Virginia.

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ADDRESS

Nathaniel Lee

c/o Franconia Museum

6121 Franconia Road

Alexandria, VA 22310

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