Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 105 pages of information about Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans.

Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 105 pages of information about Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans.

When Cornwallis knew that the Americans had gone to Princeton, he hurried there to help his men.  But it was too late.  Washington had beaten the British at Princeton, and had gone on into the hills, where he was safe.

The fox had got out of the trap.

WASHINGTON’S LAST BATTLE.

Washington had been fighting for seven years to drive the British soldiers out of this country.  But there were still two strong British armies in America.

One of these armies was in New York.  It had been there for years.  The other army was far away at Yorktown in Virginia.  The British general at Yorktown was Cornwallis.  You have read how Washington got away from him at Trenton.

The King of France had sent ships and soldiers to help the Americans.  But still Washington had not enough men to take New York from the British.  Yet he went on getting ready to attack the British in New York.  He had ovens built to bake bread for his men.  He bought hay for his horses.  He had roads built to draw his cannons on.

He knew that the British in New York would hear about what he was doing.  He wanted them to think that he meant to come to New York and fight them.  When the British heard what the Americans were doing, they got ready for the coming of Washington and the French.  All at once they found that Washington had gone.  He and his men had marched away.  The French soldiers that had come to help him had gone with him.

Nobody knew what it meant.  Washington’s own men did not know where they were going.  They went from New Jersey into Penn-syl-va-ni-a.  Then they marched across Penn-syl-va-ni-a.  Then they went into Mary-land.  They marched across that State, and then they went into Vir-gin-i-a.

By this time everybody could tell where Washington was going.  People could see that he was going straight to York-town.  They knew that Washington was going to fight his old enemy at York-town.

But he had kept his secret long enough.  The British in New York could not send help to Cornwallis.  It was too late.  The French ships sailed to Vir-gin-i-a, and shut up Yorktown on the side of the sea.  Washington’s men shut it up on the side of the land.  They built great banks of earth round it.  On these banks of earth they put cannons.

The British could not get away.  They fought bravely.  But the Americans and French came closer and closer.

Then the British tried to fight their way out.  But they were driven back.  Then Cornwallis tried to get his men across the river.  He wanted to get out by the back door, as Washington had done.  But the Americans on the other side of the river drove them back again.  Washington had now caught Cornwallis in a trap.

The Americans fired red-hot cannon balls into Yorktown.  These set the houses on fire.  At last Cornwallis had to give up.  The British marched out and laid down their guns and swords.

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Stories of Great Americans for Little Americans from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.