Don't miss out on our other full length films if you enjoyed this video! Discover the battles of the Revolution that solidified General Washington's legacy as "First in War." - ua-cam.com/video/cFvx8n_9s9M/v-deo.html Next, once the Americans have won the war, how will the founding fathers craft the Constitution to create a more Perfect Union? ua-cam.com/video/k55VdRD8DDo/v-deo.html
The revolutionary war is greatly exaggerated in terms of America’s development. Decades after 1781 America was regarded by European empires as still being a Frontierland with wealth in untapped resources. That being said it wasn’t a necessity yet. The war of 1812 was the American version of the Napoleonic Wars, when in comparison were like skirmishes. If you were to locate the catalyst for the American superpower then you have to say it was the American Civil War. That was the birth of the United States. The weight of Wars and empire expansion was chipping away at the European powers and there began the great transition of power in which a former reservoir was to bare responsibility for the future.
Best Production This Side Of The Milenium I Enjoyed It So Much I Will Invest Further Time To Understand More About What Founded The Republic...Any Recommendations..??
Fun fact: Charles O'Hara, the british officer that surrendered Cornwallis's sword to Washington, had to surrender his own sword a few years later to a young french artillery officer named Napoleon Bonaparte during the siege of Toulon in 1793. That guy sure met a lot of game changing leaders in his time...
@@robertcaldwell2994Washington wasn't a particularly remarkable military strategist/tactician, but as a leader he was exceptional. Without his leadership, no doubt the Continental armies would never have held out long enough for the French to join the war.
the french came along towards the end of the war George Washington was an amazing commander and president and held this country together and God was looking out for him the french gave American that extra edge to win and become one of the greatest nations gratitude to them but it wasn’t them that won the war all together and now America returns the favor that the french gave us back then
My ancestor was at Yorktown in Washington’s army !❤️🇺🇸 4th continental artillery from Pennsylvania fought in the battle of Yorktown I’m a proud descendent of a patriot
My ancestor fought in the Militia under the Carolina gamecock (Thomas Sumter). I'm sure I have other family that fought for the Patriot side. Well that is what the family says either way love my family's history.
That’s cool. My ancestor (Colonel Peter Livingston) was a under Washington at the battle of White Plains and Saratoga. His cousin Robert Livingston helped draft the Declaration of Independence and broker the Louisiana purchase.
My 6x and 5x great grandfathers didn’t fight in the war but they stood guard at camp security which is around York Pennsylvania and they were guarding Burgoyne’s army you know the army that was defeated at Saratoga
Mine died in the battle of Eutaw Springs SC. 1781 The last major battle of the war. He fought with Nathaniel Green. He was born in VA 1740 and died at 41 yrs old. His son moved to Western NC mountains and we have been here since.
bro i asked my teacher if i could teach the class about yorktown and he said its a test grade. our entire class passed because i based my all notes on this video
Thank you so much for sharing. Being a very hard-core George Washington, founding fathers, and American revolutionary addict and historian, this was a really well put together visual presentation.
My great-grandfather was George Washington Adams. And his wife was actually named Martha. Very popular names in the day. George was born 1871. ?No I am not a direct descendant of the Presidents. My ancestor Francis Adams came over in 1658 from Somerset Wales/England. He was 15 and an indentured servant. He came to farm tobacco.
My maternal 8x grandfather was Major General Anthony Wayne and was at the seige of Yorktown. Since 1666 when my family first came to this country they have served to defend.
My ancestor was at Yorktown, as a Hessian soldier. He was captured along with the Hessian soldier ancestor of Rob Lowe (I learned this on an old episode of Who Do You Think You Are?). Both of our Hessian grandfathers were given a propaganda leaflet written in German that they can desert and be a part of the new country. My ancestor and Lowe's did exactly that. They were marched from Yorktown to parts in Maryland, Virginia and Pennsylvania with German settlers to quarter the POWs since the Colonial Congress did not have the means, money and supplies to care for the POWs. The POWs worked for their overseers until the surrender of Cornwallis. My ancestor stayed in America because not being a first born and single, there was nothing back in Germany for him as an inheritance or means of a livelihood. He may have started out as a hired mercenary soldier trying to help the British defeat Washington and the Colonial Army, he saw the possibilities of a free new country and his prospects were more promising here than back in Hesse, Germany.
Imagine how terrified, and hopeful they had to have been through all fo that. Knowing nothing was at home for them, the possibility of a failed attempt for a new nation, and the absolute open possibilities they had when Cornwallis surrendered. I would imagine excited and amazed doesn't even begin to express what they felt at that moment
These men suffered from the snow, injuries, illnesses, hunger, tiredness, and lots of other things. They did this all for the cause of freedom, and the future of their new nation.
And look at how our bankrkupt government rembers them----they lie, cheat, steal, commit treason, treachery and are the worst set of politicians under one roof since Hitler and the Nazis. Only difference is the Nazis had better uniforms.
Doug Bevins You are clueless about what is happening in our Nation. President Trump has ended the Act of 1871. Supreme Court Ruled SEC Corporations can be seized. The Corporations Acting as our Government were seized. All our land and assets are now in our US Treasury safe and secure. 1.4 Quadrillion. We are transitioning to Gold Backed Currency. We are no longer slaves under our Federal Government. Now we have to stand up, and take our power back against the States. Democrat States are violating our Constitutional Republic Rights. Time all the treasonous liberals wake up. They want Marxist Rule. They sold us out to China and Iran. We are at war between good and evil. Berman blocked all investigations Biden Ukraine and China. Maxwell Epstein Island, look up Adrenochrome. Weiner laptop and many more.
@Connie Crawford - Too many of today's teachers are too busy trying to indoctrinate our children into transgender, LBGTQ, and socialist lifestyles rather than our rich history. I always find it amusing when teachers strike for more pay and benefits considering where our children rank amongst industrialized nations. I know in my job I don't get more pay and bennies for underperforming.
I totally agree, but in today's world where socialism seems to have taken hold, and value, virtue and principal thrown to the trough as if it were some antiquated way of thinking unaligned with today's world, it,s becomes a very difficult sell... Not 30 years ago we seem to deem the things these who sought after and fought for and died for as well, a noble effort... Today this generation is differed in thought on what truth and nobility really are. They assay themselves to conveniences unlike the needs that are pertinent for life, liberty and the pursuits of happiness.... This generation is totally different of those of Americas past, and of recent memory as when i was a child into my adulthood... This progression is different than anything viable for upholding what true national individual sovereignty is all about... its in line with 'what you can give me' vs 'where my abilities and willingness can take me'.
the430movie you do realize the conservatives of their time said the same things you are saying about socialism about republican governments? Republican government was considered scary, and upsetting of conservative values of feudal monarchy.
Spending Memorial Day watching like 10 hours of these type of vids about the Revolution, the US Founding, and Washington. A great way to remember those who did so much.
Inspiring !!! We must never forget the sacrifices of all who served and the contribution of the French. They do not forget our sacrifices in Normandy !!
This is the best channel for history I've found. It doesn't reduce the importance/contradict of our Patriots and how they contributed to our great Country.
I live in Yorktown! My kids grew up on the battlefields. It’s a wonderful place to visit. One of my friends owned a house that Washington stayed and was also a hospital. Shall we say haunted..very. Surrender Road is still there we drive on it to get the surrender field. It’s all so well preserved.
I often fall back on bits and pieces of this documentary when I am telling campfire stories. What a great resource... and told concisely! This is not your typical high school history lecture.
Lived in Yorktown growing up. Walked the battlefields many times. Never understood how it all happened. This video explained it like never before. I stood in Cornwallis' cave on the beach at York River across from Gloucester Point. Cannonballs still seen in the sides of the original houses that are well kept to this day. I never knew those were American cannonballs hitting the British who had taken up residency in our houses. Always thought they were British cannonballs hitting our houses. Isn't history amazing.
You're right... I've lived in Yorktown most of my life and still do... and even with all of the information right here at my fingertips I have a much better understanding of what happened by seeing it in this video... crazy
Your nation didn't fight the British, only about 1/3rd of people in the colonies supported independence, the majority were not in favor of independence. Also, the support France gave financially crippled France, and resulted in the French monarchy being sent to the guillotine. When France asked for financial support, the colonies said they wouldn't pay them anything. The new USA screwed France in the same way they screwed the Brits.
@@methylene5 Mdr sa n'a rien a voir pauvre abrutis, Notre révolution c'était juste car les gens de cette époque en avait ras le cul du gouvernement et de son leader ils ont demandés des changements le gouvernement en a fait qu'a sa tête ils sont tous mort donc on s'est fait baiser pas personne. Par contre vous les rosebeefs ont vous a ken mais tellement fort mdr 19 000 soldats ont débarqués a Yorktown pour combattre les anglais qui a Gagner ? les fr et les us :)
One of my ancestors was taken prisoner at Yorktown, he was part of the relief army that landed in New York, his name was Robert Brown, and was in the 43rd foot infantry regiment, when doing our family tree, after he was released he stayed in America, married a woman from North Carolina, and lived out the rest of his life there. i have had other ancestors at major battles throughout history, inc Waterloo, The Somme, Dunkirk, El Alamein, D-Day ( Sword beach) Korea, Suiz Crisis, and my Brother was in the navy during the Falklands war, and the 1st gulf war.
It's kind of ironic that Georges Washington had fought alongside the British against the French during the French and Indian wars in the 1750s. He was at the French victory at the battle of the Monongahela in 1755 (which took place near what is now Pittsburgh). French: 108 soldiers of the French Marine troops, 637 Amerindians, 146 French militia Total: 891 British: 1,300 regulars and provincial troops. French casualties: 39 killed, 57 wounded British casualties: 457 killed, 450+ wounded Colonel Washington, although he had no official position in the chain of command, was able to impose and maintain some order and formed a rear guard, which allowed the remants of the force to disengage. He recollected the event in a letter sent to his mother: _"We marched to that place, without any considerable loss, having only now and then a straggler picked up by the French and scouting Indians. When we came there, we were attacked by a party of French and Indians, whose number, I am persuaded, did not exceed three hundred men; while ours consisted of about one thousand three hundred well-armed troops, chiefly regular soldiers, who were struck with such a panic that they behaved with more cowardice than it is possible to conceive. The officers behaved gallantly, in order to encourage their men, for which they suffered greatly, there being near sixty killed and wounded; a large proportion of the number we had."_ Daniel Boone, a famous American pioneer, explorer, woodsman, and frontiersman - and one of the first folk heroes of the United States - was also among the soldiers involved in that battle.
I grew up on land the Revolution was fought on. My children were raised there as well! The town I lived in was rich in revolution history and I've been in love with it my entire life! Wish I could say my family was part of this amazing time of human bravery, a time when men were men...brave and dedicated to something amazing!
My ancestor, Thomas Stone, signed the Declaration of Independence. Since that time, a member of my family served in every major US war. Every male in my family served in the military with the exception of a few of my cousins who'd rather not serve during a time of war. I continued that tradition and served in the US Army from 2005 into 2013. I didn't do it for recognition. I did it because that is what my family does and that I felt it necessary to serve a great nation such as ours. Our nation faces some difficulties in this time but she is not lost. Her greatest enemy is the generation that forgets what she stands for. But there are those of us who will never forget. We no longer carry the name Stone but the name sits proudly in our tree.
Born in 1960 in Boston we were taught about the revolution at a young age, every morning at school we'd put our right hand over are hearts and recite, the pledge of allegiance and the revolution was on my mind, I still praise and thank those men who fought for my freedoms as an American. 🙏🇺🇸
I live in a small town here in Virginia called west point, its right outside of gloucester. Growing up here every building and street is named after many individuals in this video..Washington, Thomas Nelson..pretty much every history icon imaginable. It really makes me feel very proud and privileged to be near so much rich history that originated our country.
Considering the enormous effort and cost on the part of France during the war, I think it's only fair we Americans at least give the French a huge shout out every 4th of July. EDIT: Geez, I only suggested a shout out on the 4th of July, I'm not saying we need to be constantly grovelling at their feet!
Oh the French army....was that the same army that the motherland went bankrupt fighting to defend the American Colonies for a hundred and thirty years?
@@rpm1796 just sad that their own DNC emerged following to give rise to Napolean..Enlightenment ideas had went extreme and anarchic. Then we have Command and Master Russel Crowe to depict some of that..
My fifth great grandfather's were there, James Turner a captain in the Virginia militia and Zachariah Sanders who served two 3 year tours in George Washington's continental army. Also great uncles Lt Col. Charles Dabney, his brother George and good friend Stephan Pratt. They all ended up in Wayne County Kentucky.
@@valerier3673 makes you proud doesn't it! It does me. To know my blood line had a stake in helping millions across the globe ( I know we've done bad things too)......but we've also saved millions of lives before Eisenhower left office anyhow.
Yorktown Battlefield Park is an amazing place to visit. Very well laid out so that you can do a road tour and get out of your car and check out various points of interest such as Washington's HQ, The French HQ, gun emplacements, redoubts 9&10, and the house where the surrender of Cornwallis's forces was negotiated. Well worth the trip and a wonderful destination for parents who want to bring history alive for their kids!
Indeed! Most Americans these days couldn't walk 10 miles empty handed. If they could most of their shoes made in China would fall apart before doing so! I grew up in the Jersey Shore. Many of the roads in the Pine Barrens are sandy. As kids we'd take Saturdays walking about the pines on them. Trust me, walking in sand in sneakers was a chore. There's a trail in Morristown, NJ where the Continental troops walked in. Many were in bare feet. We had a class trip there in the 1960's. It was nicknamed something like the bloody trail because so many of the troop's were barefooted, feet rapped in cloth to fight the cold and their feet stained the sand red from blood. I swear that you could still see the sand stained by blood there and then in the 1960's!
Also have to remember Virginia during this time is much bigger it is today. Not sure of actual scale but u can Google Virginia in those times to see its not as far as u think.
Donated to y’all for my birthday this year. Love these videos and hope you continue to make more. I’m grateful to Washington and all Patriots for their sacrifices for our freedoms.
My god this channel is soo underrated! And you DESERVE more subscribers!! Please keep up the good work and do more of these. I wish you would do a detailed from start to finish just like this it will grow!!
Very interesting document, thank you. I have a question : it seems that Lafayette is famous in the US, but why Rochambeau isn't, as he actually seemed to have been more influential at that time as the chief of the French forces?
These videos are awesome! The production quality and narration is fantastic. Thank you so much for making these! I watch these videos on my morning run and they give me hope and inspire. We are made of great stuff 🇺🇸
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I didn't hear any mention of Lafayette's command of American troops at the siege of Yorktown. His command was significant in this battle and leading up to it
Still better than the shameless stalinian rewrite of French help by Mel Gibson in The Patriot. One french officer helping and boats showing at the very end when everything was over...
@@TeeloSeyna yes he was, but Lafayette was leading AMERICAN troops and was the general to trap Cornwallis at Yorktown with the American troops Washington gave him. Not mentioning that was wrong!
It baffles me how anybody was able to communicate well enough to coordinate anything. A simple message took days or even weeks. It’s practically a miracle it all worked out like it did
There’s more to be learned in this one video about the genesis of this country than in ANY Ivy League University today, and there you have it. Thank you!
In 1781 the biggest battle of the war took place, when Spain attempted to take back Gibraltar. The year before a combined Spanish and French fleet had attempted a landing on England’s South Coast. Meanwhile the British Army was involved in a major conflict in India. Holland had also declared war against Britain. So very much a global conflict.
Observations: George Washington had to be a genius. Thankfully the French despised the British as if it weren't for the French, there most likely would not be a United States of America.
Absolutely right! One of the biggest reasons for the French Revolution of 1789 was the French treasury was bankrupt from helping the Americans with both an army and a navy.
@ --------Daniel Morgan, the Vermont mountaineer, and Francis Marion the southern swamp fox, while super heroes in their own right, were only peripheral combatants in a larger war, like Col. John Singleton Mosby, hero of the Shenandoah Valley, commanding 23rd Virginia Partisan Rangers, Cavalry Brigade, Army of Northern Virginia, CSA, another super hero.
I am just a beginner in finding out about the Revolutionary War, however, I admire the early Founders of U. S. independence. This documentary is well narrated.
I see the Lord hand in the final outcome. The wind that effected the British fleet and the French who help was indispensable especially taking Redoudt 9.
One could argue the only thing Uniting the 13 soon to be "States"(don't use that word in Virginia) was in fact George Washington. His was not a very happy Presidency...and in no small measure "thanks" to Thomas Jefferson ironically enough.
Oh, they were divided horribly. Entire families and communities were torn asunder. The monarchists versus the patriots was a vast cavern of distrust and hate. Colonists fought amongst themselves, and shiploads of people were forced to leave if they supported the king.
I have always been enthralled with the revolutionary war not knowing I had so many direct line ancestors who fought in it. I also have a female patriot who donated 900 pounds of beef to the cause. My rancher friend said “that’s a whole cow!”
I did extensive work on the Pennsylvania section of the Washington Rochambau route rededication for the sesquicentennial in 2012. I was a junior working on my B.A. in history at Holy Family in Philadelphia and we found actual primary source material that proved that French and Continential troops made camp near or on our campus the day before they paraded before congress in Philadelphia!!
My ancestor, General Daniel Morgan, was there at Yorktown at Washington insistence, to witness the surrender of British forces, even though Morgan had been forced to retire from the field by a sciatic condition in his lower back, so bad that he could not even sit a horse. Morgan had given Washington one of the first defeats of the British regulars at the Cowpens, out on the frontier. He was also, at that time, somewhere in his sixties, or seventies. Not a young man. We forget that some of those pivotal revolutionary characters, were not young men, at least by modern standards, but still had the fire of human liberty coursing through their veins.
As a visual learner I love the animation in ur videos. Its fantastic! The narration is clear and concise while I can still follow along and know whats going on.
Thank you for watching! The Yorktown Campaign solidified our independence but it was only one of many. We dive into the other battles led by General Washington here, enjoy!: ua-cam.com/video/cFvx8n_9s9M/v-deo.html
This was very well done. An objective perspective on history is how we should be educated. It should also often be taught in an historical context, which this film did a good job at doing as well. Thanks 🍻
Great video to show in class, many kids do not know this story. The current textbooks just Yorktown, America wins! Good back ground information and great visuals. Works perfectly for online learning. Will show this when my class get to this point. In fact many of the videos here are wonderfully produced and filled with information that the current middle school US History leaves out.
People are not wanting to erase history, just learn from it. From everything I have read they are also not talking about the war of Independence, but about the Civil War. This is something some sections of the South or Republicans have learned from
I am a descendant of a Ranger of Truby's Rangers American Revolution, 5th great grand father, German immigrant who passed a diary on and in this diary said we live in THE greatest country in the world once the war was one. Every generation since has served in every conflict including myself, my nephew shipped to basic training last month.
Yorktown resulted in the capture of about 7,000 British but there was still another 20,000 in New York. What the siege accomplished was the political defeat of the war proponents in The Parliament. From Yorktown, the action moved to the peace table, but the British still had Canada and the Carribean Colonies. The Carribean Colonies produced a huge, lucrative amount of sugar for export to England. And of course, England saved its navy.
My ancestors grandfather fought in Yorktown and one from Virginia donated 1000 pounds of beef to Washington military. One other grandfather was fighting in North Carolina.
I knew that de Grasse was important at Yorktown. We get that in high school. What I did NOT know was that Rochambeau was effectively in command and his was the plan all along. Old George wanted to attack New York which would have probably resulted in an extended stand off at best. He would have had to ferry across to upper Manhattan Island and move south against very formidable works. Fortunately, Washington eventually realized the folly of such an enterprise and was easily talked into moving south to Virginia. The French also took far more casualties at Yorktown than the Americans. We pretty much owe the French a huge debt for their aid in the war. But how did we respond? By stabbing them in the back with our signing of a separate peace with Britain---something we pledged we would not do. Funny how all this is not taught in American high schools. We laugh at the French for believing we would actually honor our word.
As someone who is French, what hurts me more is that the US never acknowledges that in WW2 Roosevelt constantly opposed Charles De Gaulle and the US recognised Vichy France over Free France right until Vichy collapsed. De Gaulle is then blamed for being "hard-headed and arrogant" for standing up for French interests. But who was in his corner?
@@earthenjadis8199 Nobody. For me, DeGaulle was a patriot and the Free French were always the Fighting French. But both Churchill and Roosevelt despised CdG quite openly.
Its not that simple, The treaty of Paris had problems resulting from the different priorities regarding the major allies. The stabbing in the back as you say was a result of Spain not wanting to end the war with Briton because she had not recovered Gibraltar. (and still hasn't to this day) France came up with a proposal satisfying Spain which was a more important ally then us, which was to give the British the area north of the Ohio and we would be contained eby treaty East of the Apppalachia. We said no way and made our now peace. So maybe you live west of those mountains and maybe you would be a British subject if we didn't "stab them in the back as you say.."
The idea of a nation of free men, serving no king, appealed to many foreign born soldiers whose names are etched in the honor role of American History. They appear again and again when sorely needed. Hamilton is one example. He played a key role at Yorktown, as well as Trenton where he commander a battery of artillery. Lafayette kept Cornwallis boxed in until Washington and Rochambeau arrived. He also prevented a defeat at Brandywine from being a route. And the list goes on.
Don't miss out on our other full length films if you enjoyed this video!
Discover the battles of the Revolution that solidified General Washington's legacy as "First in War." - ua-cam.com/video/cFvx8n_9s9M/v-deo.html
Next, once the Americans have won the war, how will the founding fathers craft the Constitution to create a more Perfect Union? ua-cam.com/video/k55VdRD8DDo/v-deo.html
The revolutionary war is greatly exaggerated in terms of America’s development. Decades after 1781 America was regarded by European empires as still being a Frontierland with wealth in untapped resources. That being said it wasn’t a necessity yet. The war of 1812 was the American version of the Napoleonic Wars, when in comparison were like skirmishes. If you were to locate the catalyst for the American superpower then you have to say it was the American Civil War. That was the birth of the United States. The weight of Wars and empire expansion was chipping away at the European powers and there began the great transition of power in which a former reservoir was to bare responsibility for the future.
Best Production This Side Of The Milenium I Enjoyed It So Much I Will Invest Further Time To Understand More About What Founded The Republic...Any Recommendations..??
God bless you Americans
Great nation, proud to have been grown up in the USA
Love Peace and Respect
💟💙❤️💚🌹
@@johnrobinson1762 Most people assign the Spanish-American War the memento of being the War that made the American Empire.
@@johnrobinson1762 WW1 was also when America really stepped into the world stage. Before then we didn't concern ourselves much with Europe.
Fun fact: Charles O'Hara, the british officer that surrendered Cornwallis's sword to Washington, had to surrender his own sword a few years later to a young french artillery officer named Napoleon Bonaparte during the siege of Toulon in 1793. That guy sure met a lot of game changing leaders in his time...
Napoléon Bonaparte was the greatest commander in history
he won the most nattles
Definitely a fun fact. 💯💯
ooo... boii....
It also means that he sucked as a soldier.
Luck of the draw, its like facing Bolt in the 100meter sprint, or Phelps in swimming. Being good is not enough when you face great.
George Washington is truly the father of the world's greatest nation ever. He is the single greatest American that ever lived. God was with him.
Suprising this comment is only 1 year ago, the world's greatest nations government has been hell bent on destroying the world . Wake up pal.
_"God is on the side with the best artillery"_
- Napoléon Bonaparte
Actually it was the French that was with him. George wasn't really a very successful general but he did persevere.
@@robertcaldwell2994Washington wasn't a particularly remarkable military strategist/tactician, but as a leader he was exceptional. Without his leadership, no doubt the Continental armies would never have held out long enough for the French to join the war.
the french came along towards the end of the war George Washington was an amazing commander and president and held this country together and God was looking out for him the french gave American that extra edge to win and become one of the greatest nations gratitude to them but it wasn’t them that won the war all together and now America returns the favor that the french gave us back then
My ancestor was at Yorktown in Washington’s army !❤️🇺🇸 4th continental artillery from Pennsylvania fought in the battle of Yorktown I’m a proud descendent of a patriot
Bless his service along with all the other patriots.
My ancestor fought in the Militia under the Carolina gamecock (Thomas Sumter). I'm sure I have other family that fought for the Patriot side. Well that is what the family says either way love my family's history.
That’s cool. My ancestor (Colonel Peter Livingston) was a under Washington at the battle of White Plains and Saratoga. His cousin Robert Livingston helped draft the Declaration of Independence and broker the Louisiana purchase.
My 6x and 5x great grandfathers didn’t fight in the war but they stood guard at camp security which is around York Pennsylvania and they were guarding Burgoyne’s army you know the army that was defeated at Saratoga
Mine died in the battle of Eutaw Springs SC. 1781 The last major battle of the war. He fought with Nathaniel Green. He was born in VA 1740 and died at 41 yrs old. His son moved to Western NC mountains and we have been here since.
bro i asked my teacher if i could teach the class about yorktown and he said its a test grade. our entire class passed because i based my all notes on this video
Good job bro
A true G
Cap
@@swiftchicken9911 how would you know
And then I bet the entire class stood and clapped for you?
Learning about jean-baptiste donatien de vimeur, comte de Rochambeau at age 33 is amazing for me.
As a huge fan of George Washington, it's so cool we have an official account of his work right here on UA-cam for free.
Wow George you sound unusually chipper for a man who died almost 200 years ago
@@jackmitchelles2646 over 200
@@jackmitchelles2646What do you care? There are people who are fans of a guy that dies over 2000 years ago.
Thank you so much for sharing. Being a very hard-core George Washington, founding fathers, and American revolutionary addict and historian, this was a really well put together visual presentation.
Ronald Kern just don't send him back to Newcastle....
My great-grandfather was George Washington Adams. And his wife was actually named Martha. Very popular names in the day. George was born 1871. ?No I am not a direct descendant of the Presidents. My ancestor Francis Adams came over in 1658 from Somerset Wales/England. He was 15 and an indentured servant. He came to farm tobacco.
I agree, well done!
My maternal 8x grandfather was Major General Anthony Wayne and was at the seige of Yorktown. Since 1666 when my family first came to this country they have served to defend.
That surrender sequence is fascinating, considering the times, the protocol, the egos, the gamesmanship...
Davey Givens , watch the series “TURN” on Netflix. The best Revolutionary War series ever made!
@@jakesmith8583 TURN rocks 😍
@@FrontierTradingCompany 😍🥰😘
It's beautiful.
My ancestor was at Yorktown, as a Hessian soldier. He was captured along with the Hessian soldier ancestor of Rob Lowe (I learned this on an old episode of Who Do You Think You Are?). Both of our Hessian grandfathers were given a propaganda leaflet written in German that they can desert and be a part of the new country. My ancestor and Lowe's did exactly that. They were marched from Yorktown to parts in Maryland, Virginia and Pennsylvania with German settlers to quarter the POWs since the Colonial Congress did not have the means, money and supplies to care for the POWs. The POWs worked for their overseers until the surrender of Cornwallis. My ancestor stayed in America because not being a first born and single, there was nothing back in Germany for him as an inheritance or means of a livelihood. He may have started out as a hired mercenary soldier trying to help the British defeat Washington and the Colonial Army, he saw the possibilities of a free new country and his prospects were more promising here than back in Hesse, Germany.
@@earnieeveridge My ancestors were farmers in the Netherlands. They milked cows. The next day they would milk them again.
Imagine how terrified, and hopeful they had to have been through all fo that. Knowing nothing was at home for them, the possibility of a failed attempt for a new nation, and the absolute open possibilities they had when Cornwallis surrendered. I would imagine excited and amazed doesn't even begin to express what they felt at that moment
@@vanmanrick1 lol
Interesting
Great story!
These men suffered from the snow, injuries, illnesses, hunger, tiredness, and lots of other things. They did this all for the cause of freedom, and the future of their new nation.
And look at how our bankrkupt government rembers them----they lie, cheat, steal, commit treason, treachery and are the worst set of politicians under one roof since Hitler and the Nazis. Only difference is the Nazis had better uniforms.
Beautiful story. God bless America. MAGA
And still won
They suffered because the majority didn't want revolution and destruction.
Doug Bevins You are clueless about what is happening in our Nation. President Trump has ended the Act of 1871. Supreme Court Ruled SEC Corporations can be seized. The Corporations Acting as our Government were seized. All our land and assets are now in our US Treasury safe and secure. 1.4 Quadrillion. We are transitioning to Gold Backed Currency. We are no longer slaves under our Federal Government. Now we have to stand up, and take our power back against the States. Democrat States are violating our Constitutional Republic Rights. Time all the treasonous liberals wake up. They want Marxist Rule. They sold us out to China and Iran. We are at war between good and evil. Berman blocked all investigations Biden Ukraine and China. Maxwell Epstein Island, look up Adrenochrome. Weiner laptop and many more.
More Americans need to know this history and more about the American Revolution!
@Connie Crawford - Too many of today's teachers are too busy trying to indoctrinate our children into transgender, LBGTQ, and socialist lifestyles rather than our rich history. I always find it amusing when teachers strike for more pay and benefits considering where our children rank amongst industrialized nations. I know in my job I don't get more pay and bennies for underperforming.
yes
i love it
I totally agree, but in today's world where socialism seems to have taken hold, and value, virtue and principal thrown to the trough as if it were some antiquated way of thinking unaligned with today's world, it,s becomes a very difficult sell... Not 30 years ago we seem to deem the things these who sought after and fought for and died for as well, a noble effort... Today this generation is differed in thought on what truth and nobility really are. They assay themselves to conveniences unlike the needs that are pertinent for life, liberty and the pursuits of happiness.... This generation is totally different of those of Americas past, and of recent memory as when i was a child into my adulthood... This progression is different than anything viable for upholding what true national individual sovereignty is all about... its in line with 'what you can give me' vs 'where my abilities and willingness can take me'.
@@rufusbarnabus4490 shut up
the430movie you do realize the conservatives of their time said the same things you are saying about socialism about republican governments?
Republican government was considered scary, and upsetting of conservative values of feudal monarchy.
Spending Memorial Day watching like 10 hours of these type of vids about the Revolution, the US Founding, and Washington. A great way to remember those who did so much.
Inspiring !!! We must never forget the sacrifices of all who served and the contribution of the French. They do not forget our sacrifices in Normandy !!
Ironic that the French contribution led to the downfall of their aristocracy
also spain helped the usa or us brits would have won in 8 months a fact
The Spanish greatly contributed as well
@@paulmcdonough1093yea, the French fleet doesn't leave the Caribbean without Spain.
This is the best channel for history I've found. It doesn't reduce the importance/contradict of our Patriots and how they contributed to our great Country.
PS - Contribute? They founded our country!
Rochambeau was a smooth operator and Washington was a good listener. He got it without having it spelled out. That's called tact.
I live in Yorktown! My kids grew up on the battlefields. It’s a wonderful place to visit. One of my friends owned a house that Washington stayed and was also a hospital. Shall we say haunted..very. Surrender Road is still there we drive on it to get the surrender field. It’s all so well preserved.
I often fall back on bits and pieces of this documentary when I am telling campfire stories. What a great resource... and told concisely! This is not your typical high school history lecture.
Lived in Yorktown growing up. Walked the battlefields many times. Never understood how it all happened. This video explained it like never before. I stood in Cornwallis' cave on the beach at York River across from Gloucester Point. Cannonballs still seen in the sides of the original houses that are well kept to this day. I never knew those were American cannonballs hitting the British who had taken up residency in our houses. Always thought they were British cannonballs hitting our houses. Isn't history amazing.
You're right... I've lived in Yorktown most of my life and still do... and even with all of the information right here at my fingertips I have a much better understanding of what happened by seeing it in this video... crazy
Watch Turn on Netflix!!!
These are amazing historical stories that should be shown in schools across the nation.
Thank you France for helping our Nation defeat the British. We could not have done it without you. Long live our friendship. Long live France.
Your nation didn't fight the British, only about 1/3rd of people in the colonies supported independence, the majority were not in favor of independence. Also, the support France gave financially crippled France, and resulted in the French monarchy being sent to the guillotine. When France asked for financial support, the colonies said they wouldn't pay them anything.
The new USA screwed France in the same way they screwed the Brits.
@@methylene5 how did "the new USA" screw the Brits?
@@methylene5 Mdr sa n'a rien a voir pauvre abrutis, Notre révolution c'était juste car les gens de cette époque en avait ras le cul du gouvernement et de son leader ils ont demandés des changements le gouvernement en a fait qu'a sa tête ils sont tous mort donc on s'est fait baiser pas personne. Par contre vous les rosebeefs ont vous a ken mais tellement fort mdr 19 000 soldats ont débarqués a Yorktown pour combattre les anglais qui a Gagner ? les fr et les us :)
@@vichedges8858 didn't help out much in both world wars to start with
methylene5
methylene5
To bad we can not use the guillotine on those that over spend in our government
One of my ancestors was taken prisoner at Yorktown, he was part of the relief army that landed in New York, his name was Robert Brown, and was in the 43rd foot infantry regiment, when doing our family tree, after he was released he stayed in America, married a woman from North Carolina, and lived out the rest of his life there. i have had other ancestors at major battles throughout history, inc Waterloo, The Somme, Dunkirk, El Alamein, D-Day ( Sword beach) Korea, Suiz Crisis, and my Brother was in the navy during the Falklands war, and the 1st gulf war.
That is cool
Great video! I really like the graphics showing the maps, troop and ship movements.
One of the best presentations of the Yorktown campaign.
Who ever puts this series together does a great job.
Very good film. It is easy to view the French as just helping out but this film shows it was really the Patriots helping out with a French plan.
Especially in naval warfare. It was basically a French war on the waters
Really high production values. Combines with a taught storytelling style. Well done.
It's kind of ironic that Georges Washington had fought alongside the British against the French during the French and Indian wars in the 1750s.
He was at the French victory at the battle of the Monongahela in 1755 (which took place near what is now Pittsburgh).
French:
108 soldiers of the French Marine troops, 637 Amerindians, 146 French militia
Total: 891
British:
1,300 regulars and provincial troops.
French casualties:
39 killed, 57 wounded
British casualties:
457 killed, 450+ wounded
Colonel Washington, although he had no official position in the chain of command, was able to impose and maintain some order and formed a rear guard, which allowed the remants of the force to disengage.
He recollected the event in a letter sent to his mother:
_"We marched to that place, without any considerable loss, having only now and then a straggler picked up by the French and scouting Indians. When we came there, we were attacked by a party of French and Indians, whose number, I am persuaded, did not exceed three hundred men; while ours consisted of about one thousand three hundred well-armed troops, chiefly regular soldiers, who were struck with such a panic that they behaved with more cowardice than it is possible to conceive. The officers behaved gallantly, in order to encourage their men, for which they suffered greatly, there being near sixty killed and wounded; a large proportion of the number we had."_
Daniel Boone, a famous American pioneer, explorer, woodsman, and frontiersman - and one of the first folk heroes of the United States - was also among the soldiers involved in that battle.
I'm a dyed in the wool documentary freak, and this is superbly done.
I grew up on land the Revolution was fought on. My children were raised there as well!
The town I lived in was rich in revolution history and I've been in love with it my entire life!
Wish I could say my family was part of this amazing time of human bravery, a time when men were men...brave and dedicated to something amazing!
My ancestor, Thomas Stone, signed the Declaration of Independence. Since that time, a member of my family served in every major US war. Every male in my family served in the military with the exception of a few of my cousins who'd rather not serve during a time of war. I continued that tradition and served in the US Army from 2005 into 2013. I didn't do it for recognition. I did it because that is what my family does and that I felt it necessary to serve a great nation such as ours. Our nation faces some difficulties in this time but she is not lost. Her greatest enemy is the generation that forgets what she stands for. But there are those of us who will never forget. We no longer carry the name Stone but the name sits proudly in our tree.
Born in 1960 in Boston we were taught about the revolution at a young age, every morning at school we'd put our right hand over are hearts and recite, the pledge of allegiance and the revolution was on my mind, I still praise and thank those men who fought for my freedoms as an American. 🙏🇺🇸
Excellent video! We need that spirit back that we lost along the way.
Happy Yorktown Day on October 19, 2023 from here in Yorktown, Virginia!!!
This helped so much on my project at school and I am sure it has helped all 433000 people who have watched it :)
I live in a small town here in Virginia called west point, its right outside of gloucester. Growing up here every building and street is named after many individuals in this video..Washington, Thomas Nelson..pretty much every history icon imaginable. It really makes me feel very proud and privileged to be near so much rich history that originated our country.
Considering the enormous effort and cost on the part of France during the war, I think it's only fair we Americans at least give the French a huge shout out every 4th of July.
EDIT: Geez, I only suggested a shout out on the 4th of July, I'm not saying we need to be constantly grovelling at their feet!
The french General refused to alloy the Americans to give him tribute. While we know the truth we must honor his wish. This was an American victory.
We saved their ass in both world wars are debt is payed back twice
Oh the French army....was that the same army that the motherland went bankrupt fighting to defend the American Colonies for a hundred and thirty years?
@@rpm1796 yes sir
@@rpm1796 just sad that their own DNC emerged following to give rise to Napolean..Enlightenment ideas had went extreme and anarchic. Then we have Command and Master Russel Crowe to depict some of that..
My fifth great grandfather's were there, James Turner a captain in the Virginia militia and Zachariah Sanders who served two 3 year tours in George Washington's continental army. Also great uncles Lt Col. Charles Dabney, his brother George and good friend Stephan Pratt. They all ended up in Wayne County Kentucky.
you have a painting of them?
THANK GOD, FOR THEM , TRUE PATRIOTS 🇺🇸 AND YOU 😊🇺🇸 MY FELLOW AMERICAN 🇺🇸 PATRIOT 🦅
Thank You so much for sharing this. I absolutely love the history of this period..... My 5th G Grandad was at Yorktown..... Makes me so proud.
What side was he on?
That's cool! My ancestors fought in the Battle of Bunker Hill.
@@valerier3673 makes you proud doesn't it! It does me. To know my blood line had a stake in helping millions across the globe ( I know we've done bad things too)......but we've also saved millions of lives before Eisenhower left office anyhow.
My ancestors are Native Americans and on my bio dad’s side I think it’s Vikings (at least that’s what he told me)
Yorktown Battlefield Park is an amazing place to visit. Very well laid out so that you can do a road tour and get out of your car and check out various points of interest such as Washington's HQ, The French HQ, gun emplacements, redoubts 9&10, and the house where the surrender of Cornwallis's forces was negotiated. Well worth the trip and a wonderful destination for parents who want to bring history alive for their kids!
Just the fact of walking from New York to Virginia is amazing.🇺🇸
Indeed! Most Americans these days couldn't walk 10 miles empty handed. If they could most of their shoes made in China would fall apart before doing so!
I grew up in the Jersey Shore. Many of the roads in the Pine Barrens are sandy. As kids we'd take Saturdays walking about the pines on them. Trust me, walking in sand in sneakers was a chore.
There's a trail in Morristown, NJ where the Continental troops walked in. Many were in bare feet. We had a class trip there in the 1960's. It was nicknamed something like the bloody trail because so many of the troop's were barefooted, feet rapped in cloth to fight the cold and their feet stained the sand red from blood. I swear that you could still see the sand stained by blood there and then in the 1960's!
I would recommend reading Joseph Plumb Martin's memoir about his experience throughout the war. He does describe the march to VA and Yorktown.
@@melissalarigan325
There’s an audio version of his book on UA-cam that I’ve listened to. It was phenomenal. 🍻
Also have to remember Virginia during this time is much bigger it is today. Not sure of actual scale but u can Google Virginia in those times to see its not as far as u think.
People, all people, should respect and admire this early American history.
I can't get enough of this stuff!!
We will never surrender, long live the USA
Donated to y’all for my birthday this year. Love these videos and hope you continue to make more. I’m grateful to Washington and all Patriots for their sacrifices for our freedoms.
do u know whothe video was creatyed for
This is amazing! Every American should take the time to watch this.
Vive les Etats-Unis d'Amérique, vive la France, et longue vie à notre amitié !
The United States owes France its independence. We are eternally grateful.❤️🇺🇸 🇫🇷
Amazing Graphics and visual imagery to tell this amazing story. Thank you so much for sharing this!
My god this channel is soo underrated! And you DESERVE more subscribers!! Please keep up the good work and do more of these. I wish you would do a detailed from start to finish just like this it will grow!!
POV: Your teacher assigned this to watch along with a google form to fill out:)
Yup
She did tho, that why im here
I wish I had a doodle form I a have a test
ya
O_O YES
Very interesting document, thank you. I have a question : it seems that Lafayette is famous in the US, but why Rochambeau isn't, as he actually seemed to have been more influential at that time as the chief of the French forces?
I THINK I'M ADDICTED TO VIDEOS LIKE THESE...! THANK YOU FOR SHARING @GEAORGEWASHINGTONMOUNTVERNON 🕊
These videos are awesome! The production quality and narration is fantastic. Thank you so much for making these! I watch these videos on my morning run and they give me hope and inspire. We are made of great stuff 🇺🇸
George Washington: First in War, First in Peace, and First in the Hearts of His Countrymen !
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I didn't hear any mention of Lafayette's command of American troops at the siege of Yorktown. His command was significant in this battle and leading up to it
Because Rochambeau was the one leading the French army, not Lafayette
Still better than the shameless stalinian rewrite of French help by Mel Gibson in The Patriot. One french officer helping and boats showing at the very end when everything was over...
@@TeeloSeyna yes he was, but Lafayette was leading AMERICAN troops and was the general to trap Cornwallis at Yorktown with the American troops Washington gave him. Not mentioning that was wrong!
Very well done, and authentic. The best version of that battle I've ever seen, and I've seen them all.
It baffles me how anybody was able to communicate well enough to coordinate anything. A simple message took days or even weeks. It’s practically a miracle it all worked out like it did
If you or your ancestors have gained any happiness or wellbeing from this country, please donate to Mount Vernon. No matter how small.
There’s more to be learned in this one video about the genesis of this country than in ANY Ivy League University today, and there you have it. Thank you!
Beautifully narrated! Beautifully written! God bless America!
284 dislikes from the people that hate this country , well done , well presented. I could watch these types of documentaries day n night !
🙏🦅🇺🇲
284 down votes by the people waiting for fauci to tell them what they are allowed to do
In 1781 the biggest battle of the war took place, when Spain attempted to take back Gibraltar. The year before a combined Spanish and French fleet had attempted a landing on England’s South Coast. Meanwhile the British Army was involved in a major conflict in India. Holland had also declared war against Britain. So very much a global conflict.
Sounds almost like World War 1 was really the first world war.
Rusty Russell WWI was really like the third of fourth world war.
Hello from Yorktown, Virginia. We have a nice parade every October 19th.
Bravo. Excellent! I’m so proud of our ancestors who fought for Freedom against such tyranny! God Bless America.
Observations: George Washington had to be a genius. Thankfully the French despised the British as if it weren't for the French, there most likely would not be a United States of America.
Absolutely right! One of the biggest reasons for the French Revolution of 1789 was the French treasury was bankrupt from helping the Americans with both an army and a navy.
@@williamdean4101 Correct
@@etienne-charlesbre2852 --Thank You!
You should research Daniel Morgan and Francis Marion
@ --------Daniel Morgan, the Vermont mountaineer, and Francis Marion the southern swamp fox, while super heroes in their own right, were only peripheral combatants in a larger war, like Col. John Singleton Mosby, hero of the Shenandoah Valley, commanding 23rd Virginia Partisan Rangers, Cavalry Brigade, Army of Northern Virginia, CSA, another super hero.
Please make more of these videos regarding the Revolution. Its engaging, inspiring, enlightening and exciting!
AMAZING production quality. I love this! Thank you for uploading it!
I am just a beginner in finding out about the Revolutionary War, however, I admire the early Founders of U. S. independence. This documentary is well narrated.
I see the Lord hand in the final outcome. The wind that effected the British fleet and the French who help was indispensable especially taking Redoudt 9.
Please the French had a atheist bias
love the music and the presenters voice is so soothing ..the way he speaks ..
Amazing what Americans fought for back in the day and it’s amazing how they stood together and it’s amazing how divided we are more than ever.
Why is it?
One could argue the only thing Uniting the 13 soon to be "States"(don't use that word in Virginia) was in fact George Washington. His was not a very happy Presidency...and in no small measure "thanks" to Thomas Jefferson ironically enough.
Oh, they were divided horribly. Entire families and communities were torn asunder. The monarchists versus the patriots was a vast cavern of distrust and hate. Colonists fought amongst themselves, and shiploads of people were forced to leave if they supported the king.
And who do we have to thank for that? The treasonous, traitorous, treacherous collection of liars, cheats thieves and criminals called the Government.
Uh not true. There were definitely loyalists on the British side during that time.
I have always been enthralled with the revolutionary war not knowing I had so many direct line ancestors who fought in it. I also have a female patriot who donated 900 pounds of beef to the cause. My rancher friend said “that’s a whole cow!”
I did extensive work on the Pennsylvania section of the Washington Rochambau route rededication for the sesquicentennial in 2012. I was a junior working on my B.A. in history at Holy Family in Philadelphia and we found actual primary source material that proved that French and Continential troops made camp near or on our campus the day before they paraded before congress in Philadelphia!!
Good for you , Kyle. You seem to have survived the morally/mentally bankrupt public educational system.
Beautifully produced!! 😊
My ancestor, General Daniel Morgan, was there at Yorktown at Washington insistence, to witness the surrender of British forces, even though Morgan had been forced to retire from the field by a sciatic condition in his lower back, so bad that he could not even sit a horse. Morgan had given Washington one of the first defeats of the British regulars at the Cowpens, out on the frontier. He was also, at that time, somewhere in his sixties, or seventies. Not a young man. We forget that some of those pivotal revolutionary characters, were not young men, at least by modern standards, but still had the fire of human liberty coursing through their veins.
As a visual learner I love the animation in ur videos. Its fantastic! The narration is clear and concise while I can still follow along and know whats going on.
Beautiful. Thank you for uploading this.
Thank you for watching! The Yorktown Campaign solidified our independence but it was only one of many. We dive into the other battles led by General Washington here, enjoy!: ua-cam.com/video/cFvx8n_9s9M/v-deo.html
Such an excellent professionally done series of films. Thanks!!!
I have visited Yorktown, Williamsburg and Monticello.
It's like going back in time.
Very interesting to learn.
They’ve changed and the history has been rewritten
This was very well done. An objective perspective on history is how we should be educated. It should also often be taught in an historical context, which this film did a good job at doing as well. Thanks 🍻
Like it very much. Cool map scenes!
Bro this literally made me cry
God bless General Washington, and all these patriots that fought and died for our freedom.
For your freedom? Don’t you pay for simple healthcare
Great video to show in class, many kids do not know this story. The current textbooks just Yorktown, America wins! Good back ground information and great visuals. Works perfectly for online learning. Will show this when my class get to this point. In fact many of the videos here are wonderfully produced and filled with information that the current middle school US History leaves out.
Very well done. Thank you,
So well done...the music...everything...brilliant
It's 2020 now, I makes me sad to know that people are now erasing all of this history.
They're not people , they're democrats.
People are not wanting to erase history, just learn from it. From everything I have read they are also not talking about the war of Independence, but about the Civil War. This is something some sections of the South or Republicans have learned from
@@rtyler1869 yup. Conservatives and their victim mentality just hurts sometimes
How is this history being erased?
Try a reading a book, it’s more informative than a statue.
they explain it so well
I am a descendant of a Ranger of Truby's Rangers American Revolution, 5th great grand father, German immigrant who passed a diary on and in this diary said we live in THE greatest country in the world once the war was one. Every generation since has served in every conflict including myself, my nephew shipped to basic training last month.
Yorktown resulted in the capture of about 7,000 British but there was still another 20,000 in New York. What the siege accomplished was the political defeat of the war proponents in The Parliament. From Yorktown, the action moved to the peace table, but the British still had Canada and the Carribean Colonies. The Carribean Colonies produced a huge, lucrative amount of sugar for export to England. And of course, England saved its navy.
Thanks
This video makes me so proud to be an American. Thank you
I really enjoy these videos. Please do more
amazing artwork, and i appreciate your honesty regarding the critical roll France played in the foundation of America. top notch.
The French is a country of liberty, with the French revolution, friends with always country for the liberty
Excellent movie. Much appreciated.
My favorite man in all of history God was truly with him
Another excellent production by Wide Awake Films. Well done!
Very interesting as my 4X grandfather serving under Lafayette fired the last cannon in the Battle of Yorktown.
My ancestors grandfather fought in Yorktown and one from Virginia donated 1000 pounds of beef to Washington military. One other grandfather was fighting in North Carolina.
I knew that de Grasse was important at Yorktown. We get that in high school. What I did NOT know was that Rochambeau was effectively in command and his was the plan all along. Old George wanted to attack New York which would have probably resulted in an extended stand off at best. He would have had to ferry across to upper Manhattan Island and move south against very formidable works. Fortunately, Washington eventually realized the folly of such an enterprise and was easily talked into moving south to Virginia. The French also took far more casualties at Yorktown than the Americans. We pretty much owe the French a huge debt for their aid in the war. But how did we respond? By stabbing them in the back with our signing of a separate peace with Britain---something we pledged we would not do. Funny how all this is not taught in American high schools. We laugh at the French for believing we would actually honor our word.
Wow, you are GOOD! Also knowledgeable and educated despite the government daycare system laughingly called "Public Education."
As someone who is French, what hurts me more is that the US never acknowledges that in WW2 Roosevelt constantly opposed Charles De Gaulle and the US recognised Vichy France over Free France right until Vichy collapsed. De Gaulle is then blamed for being "hard-headed and arrogant" for standing up for French interests. But who was in his corner?
@@earthenjadis8199 Nobody. For me, DeGaulle was a patriot and the Free French were always the Fighting French. But both Churchill and Roosevelt despised CdG quite openly.
Its not that simple, The treaty of Paris had problems resulting from the different priorities regarding the major allies. The stabbing in the back as you say was a result of Spain not wanting to end the war with Briton because she had not recovered Gibraltar. (and still hasn't to this day) France came up with a proposal satisfying Spain which was a more important ally then us, which was to give the British the area north of the Ohio and we would be contained eby treaty East of the Apppalachia. We said no way and made our now peace. So maybe you live west of those mountains and maybe you would be a British subject if we didn't "stab them in the back as you say.."
@@hawssie1 good point
This is why it annoys me when people complain we get in other countries wars. If the French didn't get involved with our war we aren't a country.
The idea of a nation of free men, serving no king, appealed to many foreign born soldiers whose names are etched in the honor role of American History. They appear again and again when sorely needed. Hamilton is one example. He played a key role at Yorktown, as well as Trenton where he commander a battery of artillery. Lafayette kept Cornwallis boxed in until Washington and Rochambeau arrived. He also prevented a defeat at Brandywine from being a route. And the list goes on.