Hardcover. Dust jacket is worn and torn. Previous owners name is written inside. Book Club Edition. St. Martin's Press. 1976. 214 pages. Old price sticker inside. Inside pages are good! - Disclaimer: May have a different cover image than stock photos shows, as well as being a different edition/printing, unless otherwise stated. Please contact us if you're looking for one of these specifically. Your order will ship with FREE Delivery Confirmation (Tracking). We are a family business, and your satisfaction is our goal!
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Product description: On the night of 4/18/1775, a contingent of British troops marched towards Lexington. On the Green, they found their way barred by 77 Minutemen. The Colonists were hopelessly outnumbered & began to disperse. Suddenly, a single shot rang out. The American Rebellion--or the American War of Independence--had begun. Six & a half years later, on 10/17/1781, Cornwallis surrendered his entire army to Washington outside Yorktown. The following March, the House of Commons passed a resolution against 'the further prosecution of offensive war on the Continent of N. America for the purpose of reducing the revolted Colonies to obedience by force'.
In the opening campaigns of the struggle, no one could have supposed that the Americans had much chance of success against the British army & navy--no one, that is, except for Col. George Washington. Time & time again, as British supremacy seemed on the point of being restored, Washington regained the initiative, lived to fight another day, merely survived. As Selby shows so dramatically, it was a time for courage & bravado. The Road to Yorktown was scattered with a series of extraordinary incidents: Paul Revere's famous ride; the crossing of the Delaware; the battle of Bunker's Hill; Brandywine; the appalling winter conditions at Valley Forge; the treachery of Benedict Arnold & the tragedy of Major Andre; the campaigns in the Carolinas; the idealism of Lafayette & the scandal of Lee. All these, together with many of the commanders & politicians on both sides, are brought vividly to life in a book which is scrupulously fair to both the Americans and the British. The Road to Yorktown is a splendid contribution to the Bicentenary of American Independence.