OF THE OP THE BRITISH FORCES 1 i d. O 4 TO THE M Cy ^ The Cextexxial Axxiversary avill be celebrated ox the field of Yorktowx, Va. October 18th, 1881. aass_t._2AA Book Xfolill. -^c^au lEZJSTOIE"^"^^- SURR[ID[R OF THE BRITISH FORCES ^fmml&m b 'L TiiK C!entennial Anniversary will be celebrated ON THE field OF YoRKTOWN, Va. October 18th, 1881. C ~1 Dk. \V. J. (\ DuHamel, I'OMMISSHINK.K, DISLIUCT ((ILl' M lil A. EXA\ ^/ > ^^%^ ^l^ On the York river, in full view of the beavitiful waters of the Chesapeake, with its waves sparkling in the morning sun, is to be seen on a projection of land, Yorktown, Va., a place memorable in American history, and near by stands the old church, built over two hundred years ago, where repose the ashes of many patriot dead, who were killed during the siege of October, 1781.*.»»m #V(»«*^*< m /v f^^i^ / •*• It was a sad sight to see Yorktown after the siege, with bodies of men and horses half covered with earth, the fine houses riddled with cannon balls, and the rich furniture and books scattered over the ruins. The loss of men of the French army was double that of the Americans. There were eleven thousand in the British army at the commencement of the siege, and our forces in all amounted to about twelve thousand six hundred. *The " Moore House," where the treaty was signed for the surrender of the British, is still existing on the " temple" farm, wliich was named after the ruins of an old temple erected by the Indians and was also the scene of many romances. f Such was his mortification that he feigned sickness and deputed General O'llara to surrender tlie army, which was marched out at two o'clock. Col. Taiiton, after the surrender, was mounted on a fine horse remarkable for its noble bearing, and Avhile riding with several French officers with whom he was to dine, was met by a Virginia gentleman who recognized and demanded his horse, but Tarlton was reluctant to give it up; General O'Hara who was present advised him to give it up at once, which he did, and had to remount a miserable old plough horse to finish his ride, as it appears that this horse had been captured in the following manner: — At Hanover Court House there were a number of Virginia gentlemen who were there to hear the news and talk over the events of the day, a servant man came at full speed to inform them that Colonel Tarlton and his British troops were not three miles off, and in their alarm and sudden confusion to get away, each one mounted the first horse he could put his hands on, thereby returned home on horses not their own. They all escaped but one gentleman who hid himself in the chimney -way and Colonel Tarlton helped himself to his splendid charger then in the stable. Col. Tarlton who had done much injury to the citizens in his raids through the country, heard a Virginia lady speak in high terms of Colonel Washington, a relative of General Washington. Colonel Tarlton remarked that he would like to see Colonel Washington, she replied "that he could have had that pleasure if he had looked behind him in his retreat at the battle of the Cowpens. Next to our American General Washington, much is due to the patriot General Lafayette by his skill for the success in capturing the British army at Yorktown. Lafayette was born near Paris, and the inheritor of a princely fortune. At eight years of age he entered the College of Louis the Great, and he was in a few years rewarded for his success in his studies. Here the lovely but ill fated Queen of France, Maria Antoinette, who was beheaded with the King during the reign of terror in France, encouraged him in his progress at College and had him promoted as an officer in the King's guard, and also aided him in obtaining money to help the Americans. He met Dr. Franklin in Paris and offered his services before he was twenty- one years old, and equipped a vessel at his own expense, arrived at Philadelphia and presented himself to Congress, "I have come!" he said, "to request two favors of this assemblage of patriots, one is that I may serve in your army !" "the other, that I receive no pay." His services Avere accepted and he was commissioned as Major- Greneral. The American army was much in need of supplies and rations for the men, and Lafayette sent several thousand dollars to General Washington for the purchase of the same. At the battle of Brandy- wine, Lafayette, gave full evidence of his skill and bravery, as he was wounded on the first day of the battle. He continued actively ('mi)loyed with the army until 1779, when he returned to France and «)l)tained further aid for America. Lafayette was left an orphan in early childhood, with the inheri- tance of a princely fortune, and married at sixteen years of age. To men of ordinary mould this condition would have been one of luxurious apathy, and sensual indulgence. It was the life into which from the operation of such causes Louis the Fifteenth had sunk with his household and court, while Lafayette was rising to manhood and fame, although surrounded by the contamination of their example. He was at the time of the Declaration of Indepen- dence a captain of dragoons in garrison at Metz. On the 7th of December, 1776, Silas Deane, then a secret agent of the American Congress, agreed that Lafayette should have a com- mission in the United States army and the Marquis stipulated in return to depart when and how Mr. Deane should judge proper, to serve the United States with all possible zeal, without pay or emolu- ment. The commission was conlirmed by Dr. Franklin. "The more desperate the cause," says Lafayette, "the greater need has it of my services, and if Mr. Deane has no vessel for my passage, I shall purchase one myself and will traverse the ocean Avith a selected company of my own." But other impediments arose; at the instance of the British embassador, orders were issued for the detention of the vessel purchased by the Marquis, and fitted at Bor- deaux, and for the arrest of his person. To elude these orders the vessel was removed from Bordeaux to the neighboring ports of passage within the dominion of Sjiain, from Avhence he sailed. He landed with his companions on the 25th of April, 1777, in South Carolina, not far from Charleston, where he was received with cordial welcome in the house of INEajor Huger. He served at the headquarters of Washington as volunteer, with the rank and commission of Major General, without command. The fall of Philadelphia was the result of the battle of Brandy- wine, in which Lafayette was engaged, and the first lesson of his l)ractical military school was a lesson of misfortune. In the attempt to rally the American troops in their retreat he received a musket ball in the leg. Th(! minister plenipotentiary, at the court of Versailles, Avas directed to cause an elegant sword, with proper devices, to be pre- sented to him in the name of the United States. Shortly after, he returned to the United States, in May, 17S0, and from this time until the termination of the campaign of 1781, Avith the surrender of Lord Cornwallis and his army at Yorktown, and his service was of incessant activity always signalized by military talents unsurpassed and by a spirit never to be subdued. His army needed clothing, and from the patriotic merchants of Baltimore he obtained, on the pledge of his own personal credit, a loan of money adequate to the purchase of the materials ; and from the hands of the fair daughters of the Monumental City, even then as now Avorthy to be so called, he obtained their aid in making up the needed garments. After forty years had elapsed he again revisited the United States which he had left at the close of the revolutionary war. The greater part of the generation for, and with whom he had fought his first battles had passed away. Of the two millions of souls for whose rescue from oppression he had crossed the ocean in 1777, not one in ten survived, and the sentiment of gratitude and affection for La- fayette far from declining with the lapse of time, quickened in spirit as it advanced in years, and seemed to multiply with the increasing numljers of the people. And though fifty-six years have passed since that event there still exist men and Avomen in our midst who contributed to the glorious reception of General Lafayette, and who speak of it ivith just pride, i-^folx. ov/^/t^if zV- After the war was over he returned to France. In 1789 he was elected Commander of the National Guards, and for a time checked the mob from running into those horrid excesses Avhich Avere after- Avards committed during the revolution. A short time after, he had to fly his country for safety and was throAvn into prison and chained by the Emperor of Austria on account of his republican principles. Several years after, Bonaparte had him set at liberty, and he Avas elected to the Chamber of Deputies. In 1824 General Lafayette visited the United States and Avas received AA'ith great ovations by a grateful people, and hailed as their benefactor by an immense concourse of American people Avho remem- bered his former services and liberality. He retiirned home in 1825 in a ship fitted out by the United States and named "BrandyAvine,'" in honor of his bravery at that memorable battle. He died in France, in 1834. We are to have a Centennial celebration at YorktoAvn, October. 1881, and let every American visit the place and imbibe some of the patriotic sentiments on that occasion to make an impression Avhich 10 he may koe]) during life. It will also teach him the lesson of tlu- past. From amid the machinery of the politics of the present day he may learn what was once the tone of puhlic life. It will enlarge his patriotism and elevate his notions of public life, and call out some veneration for the dead ; the patriots of those days. Ancient and modern history do not show a parallel for those men ; for nature made those men great, called as they Avere by their country to defend her liberties, they vindicated the rights of human- ity, and on the foundation of Independence they erected tins Republic. They vohmtarily refused the sword and sceptre, though thrust upon them, and by this sublime act they have from that time received the world's profound admiration. '' Onjame's eternal campin;/ (jromid^ Their silent tents are spread ; Millie glory guards ivith solcnin "round This bivouac of the dead.'" 11 An invitation was extended by Governer Holliday, of Virginia, to the Governors of the Colonial States, requesting them to meet in the city of Philadelphia and confer with regard to holding a celebra- tion of the Hundredth Anniversary'. In response to the call the Governors of the Colonial States met at "Carpenter's Hall," near "Independence Hall," on the 18th of October, 1870. On motion of Governor Hoyt, of Pennsylvania, Governor Holliday, of Virginia, was elected President, and Governor Talbot of Massachusetts, was elected Secretary. It was resolved that a Commissioner from each State, &c., be nominated by the Governors thereof, of which Committee Governor Holliday shall be Chairman ; be appointed to make all proper arrangements for such celebration. The Governors of the States, &c., appointed the followino- Commissioners : m^ :> '' Hon. Moses White .Tennessee. Col. M. Glennan Vimni. Majors. P. Hamilton. . .. South Carolina. Hon. J. L D Morrison M If ■ Hon. Milo P. Jewett, LL.D. . . .Wisconsin. Gen. J F Hartranf ' " ■p;,.;^! t ■■'• Hon. Irving W. Stanton Colorado. Ron.V/llSsh ' ' " ^'^""^STf"'^- Capt. Jn.. Milledge Georgia. Hon. E. F^Warf.'"^. •.•.•.•.•■• Kansa" |on:?;f-.J^^;ie,;u.-s;s.v.caii£- S^-^;tSL 6onin p,^i Til, , c! 11 -Licvctuit. iviajoi ,J . 1j. tJarstow Vermnnt Hon.Jno.A.King NewVk. Col.«. Tkj^:"^'"''^ ••• M.J^l Col. E. P. Mattocks Maine Dr W T P n„w i tx ' -/^f-''^'^'^''- -i^^'iaine. iJr W. J. C. DuHamel . .Dist. of Columbia. Joint Commission of Congress. On the Yorklown Centennial Celebration. Hon. John W. Johnson, Pres. . . Virginia. •• Edward H. Rollins, New HamiJshire! Henry L. Dawes, . .of Massachusetts. '• Henry B. Anthony. . .Rhode Island. Francis Kernan New York " Theo. F. Randolph. , . .New Jersey.' •■ Wilham W. Eaton . . . Connecticut. John Goode Virginia. J. G. Hall New Hampshire. George B. Loring. . . .Massachusetts. " Nelson W. Aldrich . . Rhode Island. " Joseph R. Hawley . . . Connecticut. Nicholas Muller New York Hon. William A Wallace. •■ William Pinkney Wh '• Matt W. Ransom . . •■ M. C.Butler. . . . " Benjamin H. Hill , '• Thomas F. Bayard . '• Samuel B. Dick. Lewis A. Bingham. '■ E. L. Martin. . . •• J. F. C. Talbott . . Josepli J. Davis '• John 8. Richardson . '• Henry Persons. . . . . -Pennsylvania. ite. . .Maryland. . Noi'th Carolina. . South Carolina. ■ . Georgia. • . . Delaware. . Pennsylvania. . .New Jersey. . Delaware. ■ . . Maryland. North Carolina. South Carolina. • . . . Georgia. OFFICERS OF YORKTOWN ASSOCIATION. UO^KOVP^^/^ President, HON. JOHN GOODE. First Vice-President, HON. THOS. COCHRAN. Secon d T Ice-Prcs ident. HON. ALEX. H. RICE. Third Vice-President, GEN'L J. PRESTON. Secretary, EDWARD EVERETT WINCHELL, Treasurer. ISAAC DAVENPORT. General Superintendent, COL. J. E. PEYTON. Committee on Finance, COL. J. B. WHITEHEAD, Chairman. MAJOR E. BRADFORD, PROFESSOR E. CHARLIER District of Columbia Committe, JOHN JAY KNOX, DR. W. J. DiHAMEL. W. W. CORCORAN, WM. M. GALT. STEWART VANFLEET. L. C. DUNCAN. LEWIS J. DAVIS. »3 »4-iF^^ S^G^ L AA/O ^ M»S w^,