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Routes to
Yorktown
The Washington &
Rochambeau march to Yorktown, in conjunction with the arrival of the
French fleet from the Caribbean, has long been recognized as a military
masterstroke, which resulted in victory at Yorktown and brought an end to
the long struggle for American independence. Just 36 days after a decision
was made to attack Cornwallis in Virginia, allied forces were assembling
on the York River 300 miles away. To have moved armies that far, that fast
was a remarkable feat. To have outwitted the enemy and successfully
completed campaign without provoking a counterattack was a
miracle.
The route of Rochambeau's march to Yorktown across New
Jersey is well known from maps, journals and military records. Food for an
army of 5,000 plus as many as 1,000 servants and civilian workers, and
forage for no less than 1,500 horses and 600 oxen had to be provided at
each campsite along the way.
| Because area
crossed was not enemy territory, the French could not simply help
themselves to whatever they needed. Everything had to be bought and
paid for with cash upfront. So, in addition to giving Washington a
numerical advantage at Yorktown, the French army presence provided a
most welcome injection of hard cash into the war-ravaged New Jersey
economy.
On the map of the "March through New
Jersey", the heavy line on the left indicates the French troop
movement. The French left Suffern, New York on August 25th,
proceeded 12 miles down the. Ramapo Valley, and camped at Pompton
Plains. The following day, a march of 15 miles brought them to
Whippany where they camped two days, before marching 14 miles
through Morristown to Bullion's Tavern (Liberty Comer) the next day.
From Bullion's Tavern, they marched 13 miles the next day brought
them to Somerset Court House (Millstone) and a like distance through
the Millstone Valley the next day to Princeton. A final 12 miles to
Trenton completed their march across New Jersey on September 1.
Washington and Rochambeau went ahead of the troops to meet with the
Continental Congress meeting in Philadelphia. |
March through New
Jersey
 (click on Image for full
size) |
Unlike the well planned and well
documented French march across New Jersey, routes taken by American forces
can be pieced together only from fragmentary evidence. Washington did not
issue written orders, and his units did not need detailed instructions.
New Jersey was by then familiar territory to the American Army and they
readily made their way to Trenton and then on further south where some
crossed the Delaware to Pennsylvania and others traveled downriver by
boat.
An important consideration was the potential reaction of the
strong British garrison in New York City. Sir Henry Clinton, commander of
British forces, had to be kept guessing as to the ultimate objective of
allied troop movements. Misleading letters were deliberately dispatched
via routes where they would likely be intercepted by Clinton's
intelligence network, and conflicting rumors were set abroad. Only a
handful of trusted senior officers were told that they were headed for
Virginia.
The broken lines on the map indicate several routes taken
by American forces. One was an advance guard sent marching southward
through Bergen County by way of various routes including Paramus and
Belleville, near Newark, a move certain to be noticed by the British and
make it appear the focus was on New York. Another American column marched
from Mahwah, by way of Oakland and Wayne, to Springfield. At Chatham bake
ovens were built to prepare bread for the French army and to suggest a
possibility attack on New York by way of Staten Island.
While the
tactics worked in that they kept Clinton confused, the multiple routes of
the American troops have also left historians confused. Although much has
been gleaned from fragmentary evidence in letters and journals, and from a
trail of IOUs and damage claims left in their wake by the chronically
cash-starved Continentals, there are many gaps in the picture.
Even
Washington himself has been difficult to trace. As the heavy black line
indicates, he set out along the same route as the French, and then took a
more easterly course, stopping at Chatham before passing through
Springfield, New Brunswick, Princeton, and Trenton.
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The Maps of
Louis-Alexandre Berthier (1753-1815)
Berthier's maps - numbering
111 - were executed, presumably soon after the event, from
information and sketches made on the spot while Berthier was
accompanying Rochambeau's Army in America. The maps include the
French Army's camp sites on the southward march from Newport, Rhode
Island, to Yorktown, Virginia, in 1781, and on the return march
northward in the summer and autumn of 1782.
The Berthier who drew the maps
- later to become famous as one of Napoleon's marshals and chief
military advisers - was born in Versailles in 1753, one of the four
sons of Jean - Baptiste Berthier, military engineer and
cartographer, chief of the Royal French Army Map Service. Following
in his father's footsteps, young Louis-Alexandre Berthier entered
the army and received training in military engineering. He thus
acquired proficiencey in map-making according to the hightest
standards of the day. The Berthier maps, now at Princeton, reflect
the best French cartography of the period.
It is possible that part of
the credit for these maps should go to Berthier's younger brother,
Charles Louis Berthier (1759-1783). As related in Louis-Alexandre's
journal, the two brothers were together during the entire American
campaign; Charles-Louis died in 1783, before reaching home, as a
result of wounds received in a duel while the French fleet was off
the Dutch colony of Curaçao.
See below, examples from the
Berthier collection (click on Image for full size), and visit the Princeton Department of Rare Books and Special
Collections for additional information. |
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