all . mm' -0- .^-^^ .^ - r,:->^ .A-' ^.^' ''^^. •A ' '' N -' riy /, C" \. .^ ' -^^ ^. .-. ■^^ ,^^^' ^^ ,s^ ^ ^ .^^' ' -:'-' %^^ .^•% -^^ ' %/' X^^" % vOO aV\' . - ^ " * 0- <" ,^- -'-.. ;v .-.v ,0 o^ >' .^■«-- \' \^ "■ ■ " / > %r o^^ -,\^ ^ <.<^ U V, ,-^'' ^^.^■ .^ '^^. .'^^^ /- ■■-Ji ''^' V. -^. ,^V "^^^ -^^' .^^ -^ ' O o V. ■* ,0 ^ ,-0' »^ ^ "bo^ * , o ' . -i V / - \ ^'^^- .^^^ v\' * .-^• 'c- X> t. v^ c^^ '->. ^^. - \o^ x- 'l/' ^,^ % 4 .-Js"^' r * ■ ^ >• (0 10 to :^ fi) «h2 •-3 s pi t3 (0 r^ 10 ifk »1 n [ESTABLISHED IN 1863.] For extent of accommodation, excellence of cooking, number and variety of courses, careful attention and cheapness, this dining room is uusurpassed by any similar establishments in the United States. Price for Full Meals only Thirty-Five Cts. Our location is convenient to all the Departments, and within easy access of every lino of street cars. BTEAmQEBB WmiTWQ WABMmBTQN should, without fail, test the merits of our establishment by a personal visit F. W. & M. E. EVANS, Froprielors. p\fi s'wm^ Xo. 414 ^n\tl\ ^ti'eet. — ^ — • — ^ — LADIES CAN FIND IN OUR ESTABLISHMENT t% Ut 9dmmi$ mM BAf lliil All lAHAiil illKS, ^£,M, WMEi^mWEBT BTYI^EB OF WOOLEMB A FULL LINE OF CHILDREN'S CLOAKS AND COATS. - Ladies will find, hy giving us a call, that they will get the VERY BEST THE MARKET CAN SUPPLY, made hy Experienced Hands, and a Perfect Fit Guaranteed, at the Washington, D. C- JVo. 414 Ninth Street, GEO. T. KEEN", Propnetor. WM. BERNAT, Cutie)' THE lARGFST ClOTHING ESTABLISHMENT IN MARYLAND. I >- DC (£1 _J CD -< \— oo LU o DC h- o _J o h- GO UJ CD C/5 05 CO p 03 > H c/j H cq • T-l 1-) • T— I o o o T 1 t <1 O a; (/) :^ o w • i-H 5 m 0^ •ttuniuvw Ki iNakHSiiuVisa snibioio mmi Mi THE LARGEST CLOTHING ESTABLISHMENT IN MARYLAND. ^ d A s ^ a ^ ^ s £ .2 -5 S C5 OJ E CC 02 C3 CO (D cc o ;d ^ o o S o PM 2 ^] IS ^ '*' ^ M i ^ a; ^ <4^ o o H O o C^ O) S ^ c« Cw P— 03 Oi cd ci ^ fl o ;::? O fl OD • I— I c« ?3 ^ -rl ^^ ct O 0^ O} jj o o cc be o CO ;:5 ^ C3 •^ cs Si q^ ^ o (S fl Q ^ /fif] a> .22 ^ ^1 *2 CO o o 'rt S • I— I ct ^ c+H ^ -d c3 d ^♦H 03 CO be 02 o m GO I — o DC o m GO -H D> 03 -< I — O •QOTiAHYW Ni MawHsnausa snihioio isasHVi ani liT'« WS f) W. W. CORCORAN Leaves foot of Seventh Street at 10 A, M., returning: at 3 : 30 p. M., Sundays excepted, allowing passengers TVITO HOURS AND A HALF to visit the Mansion and Grounds. L. L. BLAME, Captain. 40g S{levei\tl\ ^ti'eet, Near JPenna. Avenue, WASHINGTON, JD. C, MEALS SERVED AT ALL HOURS. WILLETT & RUOFF, DEALERS IN 9 9 ''W/ MA 9 % m^mwm\ AGENTS FOR BifiCLAP & €@^S PiiW Y©KK HATS. ©MRBSTY & (SQ)'S L@N1©@N1 MATS. KEAR NINTa STREET, AVASHINGTON, D. C. u WASHINGTON, D. C. Tf (5ki OPPOSITE THE WHITE HOUSE. FOR THE AND THE G(OYS^f{KOliH 0^ BTS^il^. ♦ ■ ^•^ '* ■First Class in all its Appointments.- • Proj^rieiors . bl.o. Uo YKtown Cgyrt'eviriiyii CoYyirv;ii>&ior] , OFFICIAL PROGRAMME YORKTOWN CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION, October 18, 19, 20, 21, 1881. UNDER THE JOINT RESOLUTION OF CONGRESS OF JUNE 7, 1880. PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY OF THE Yorktown Centennial Commission, :■-< «jt i.-.'^ By F. T. WILSON. XC^^ OF WASHlti^^ 'VV^A.SIIIlSrG^XON, TD. C, 1881. V>^ .\> (.OPYRIGHTED BY F. T. WII^ON, 1881. 7AV ^ JUDD & DeTWEILER, PRINTERS. ®0ntc«tsi. Preliminary entertainments attending the reception of the French guests The Programme at Yorktowu The Origin of the Celebration The Act of Congress creating the Commission and directing the building of the Monument The Congressional Commission and its Officers The State Commissioners .... The Monument . . Distinguished Guests and Military . Our Foreign Guests The Commanding General and Staff The Regular Army Pennsylvania .... New Jersey .... Wisconsin . . . . , . North Carolina .... Vermont ..... PAGE. XIII XV 17 20 21 22 23 27 28 30 31 34 38 39 40 48 XII CONTENTS. Distinguished Guests and Military — Continued New York Michigan Maryland Kentucky Maine . South Carolina Rhode Island New Hampshire Connecticut Delaware Massachusetts Virginia Sketch of the Siege of Yorktown Masonic Bodies participating in the Ceremonies Vessels composing the Fleet and their officers The Marine Corps Sketch of the Foreign Guests . Robert C. Winthrop, the Centennial Orator James Barron Hope, the Centennial Poet . The Camp ...... Publisher's Note 49 50 52 57 58 59 ()4 66 67 70 72 77 93 115 133 145 148 151 152 154 155 Ibe li'cliiuiH«KU (^tttei'taiuittcuts. The French guests will arrive at New York on the 5th October, where they will be roceived by Hon. K. R. Hitt, Assistant Secretary of State, representing the Government, and a committee of the citizens of New York city. October 6th. — Keoeption of ^the guests by Governor Cornell, of New York, and grand military review of the First Division N. Y. N. G. October 7th. — Excursion to West Point on the U. S. Steamer Vandaiia October 8th. — Excursion to Niagara Falls. October 9th. — At Niagara, leaving on the afternoon and arriving at New York on the morning of October 10th, when the party will leave Jersey City on the limited ex- press, 9.30, for Baltimore. B A.i_.Ti:\d:o:R.E. First Day — Monday, October 10th. Introduction of water from the Gunpowder river by direct flow. Cere- monies to begin at 2 p. m. at Battle Monument Fountain, Monument Square. Parade and review participated in by the Fifth Regiment Maryland N. G. Washington Light Infantry. National Rifles, Washington, D. C. Grand Army of the Republic, 800 men. Police Fcrce of Baltimore, 250 men. Baltimore Fire Brigade, with engines and apparatus. Etening. — Grand illumination of the city by electric and calcium lights. Second Day — Tuesday, October 11th. Athletic games at Newington Park, 3 p. m. Game of La Crosse between New York and Baltimore teams. Concert by Gilmore's Band, from 3 to 5 o'clock p. m., at the Washington Monument, Mt. Vernon Place. THE ORIOLE PAGEANT will start at 7 p. m. from Madison and Boundary Avenues. Col. H. D. Loney, Chief Marshal. PROCESSION. 1. The Marshal and Aides. 2. Lfical Tableaux, designed by James Hodges and Dr. Volck. 3. Tableaux of German Societies, attended by 150 members of the Butchers' Association in costume. 4. Tableaux of French, Italian, and Caledonian Societies. 6. Tableaux of Business Firms. The Mystic Pageant will comprise 24 tableaux under the direction of T, C. DeLeon. XIV PRELIMINARY ENTERTAINMENTS. Route of Procession. Madison Avenue to Eutaw, to Fayette, to Carey, to Baltimore, to Broad- way. At Broadway Institute the figurantes will dismount, thus ending the display. Third Day — Wednesday, October 12th. Reception of the French guests of the Nation at City Hull, 11 a. m. to 2 p. m., after which they will lake carriagos and visit the parks and places of interest. Bicycle tournament at Druid Hill Park. 2 p. m. — Parade of Tugboats in the Harjjor, from Light street wharf to Fort Carroll. 8 p. m. — Grand display of fireworks at Druid Hill Park and around Druid Lake. "v^^SHCiisra-Tonsr. The French and German guests will arrive at Washington on the after- noon of October 13th, and will be escorted to the Arlington Hotel, where they will hold an informal reception. Friday, October 14th. The guests will be escorted by a grand military and civic procession, under the chief marslmlship of Robert Boyd, Esq., to the Capitol, where a formal reception will be held in the rotunda, alter which they will be escorted to their quarters. 8 p. m. — Illumination of the city and grand pyrotechnic display at the east front of the Capitol, the Avenue being decorated and illuminated by electric lights. Saturday, October 15th. Morning. — Excursion to Mount Vernon. Evening. — Reception at the residence of Secretary Blaine. Sunday, October 16th. The guests will attend church during the morning, and leave for York- town at 6 p. m. lE^IGHIIMIOItTID. Monday, October 17th. A grand military parade and review in Capitol Square of the entire Vir- ginia Militia, under the command of General Fitzhugh Lee, participated in by the 13lh Regiment National Guard State of New York and the 1st Regiment Connecticut National Guard. On Monday, October 17th, and Tuesday, October 18th, the city of Nor- folk, Virginia, will celebrate the 20(llh anniversary of its settlement, by a grand military and civic procession. Oration and congratulatory ad- dresses, illumination and fireworks by night, the city being lighted by electricity. ^ifjerjcisjes< TUESDAY, OCTOBEE 18. 10 A. M. OUT DOOR CONCERT, AT GKAND STAND, MONUMENT SITE, BY THE THIRD U. S. ARTILLERY BAND, William Ihnenfeldt, Leader. 1. OvERTURK — " Jolly Robbers " Suppe. 2. Duetto — " II Masnadieri " Verdi. 3. Selection — Barbe Bleu Offenbach. 4. Musical Melange—" This and That " Boettger. 5. Selection — Huguenots Meyerbeer. 6. Introduction — Norma Bellmi. 7. Overture — Nabucco Verdi. 8. Selection — " A Night in Granada " Krentzer. 9. Waltz — " Les Sirenes " Waldtenfel. 10. Grand National Medley Potpourri Heinieke. ORDER OF EXERCISES. AT MILITARY CAMP, BY WORTH CAROLINA STATE BAND. W. H. Nkave, - - - - Director. 10. Overture — " Cliristian Reid " Neave. "Waltzes — " Blue Danube ' Strauss. Polonaise on Fifth Air De Beriot. Selection of Popular Airs. Selection — " Barber of Seville" Rossini. (a. " Libussa'" Zickoff. Polka Mazurkas-^ I h. " Coliseum " Faust. Selection — " Lurline " Wallace. Quick March — '• Fire of Youth " Neave. Hallelujah Chorus ■. Handel. (a. God Save Our President From Harm Millard. I b. Washington's Grand March. [c. Old North State ■ Gaston. 11 A. M. Reception by the Governor of Virginia, At Lafayette Hall, Of the President and his Cabinet, the Guests of the Nation, the Diplomatic Corps, the Congressiona 1 Commission, and the Governors and Commissioners of the States. 11 A. M. THE MASONIC PROCESSION Will form and proceed to the Monument Site, in the following order : M. W. ROBERT ENOCH WITHERS, P. G. M., Grand Marshal. Tiler, with Drawn Sword. Other Tilers of Subordinate Lodges, six abreast, with Drawn Swords. ORDER OF EXERCISES. Music;. Two Stewards witli Wliitc Rods. Master Masons, six abreast. Junior Deacons, six abreast. Senior Deacons, six abreast. Secretaries, six abreast. Treasurers, six abreast. Visiting Brethren from other Grand Jurisdictions in charge of the Committee on Assignment of Quarters. Escort. Grand Commandery of Virginia and its Subordinates. Grand Commanderies of other States and their Subordinates. Worshipful Jamk.s M. Taylor, Grand Tiler, with Drawn Sword, and Brother Jamks E. Riddick, Grand Pursuivant. Junior Wardens, six abreast. Senior W^ardens, six abreast. Past Masters, six abreast. Present Masters, six abreast. District Deputy Grand Masters, six abreast. Medical Statf. Golden Vessel with Corn, by the Most Worsliipful Samukl C. Lawkknce, Grand Master of Massachusetts. Square, Level, and Plumb, by the Most Worshipful Grand Masters Horace S. Taylor, of New York, Jo:-iN S. Tyson, of Maryland, and Samuel B. Dick, of Pennsylvania. The Golden Vessels, with Wine and Oil, by ilost Worshipful Grand .Masters Josiaii J. Wright, of Georgia, and JosEi'ii W. Martin, of New Jcrse}'. Right Worshipful Oscar M. Marshall, Grand Treasurer, and Right Worshipful W. Bryan Isaacs, Grand Secretary. Tuscan and Composit Orders of Architecture, by the Worshipful Masters of Lodges Nos. 19 and 18, of Virginia. Doric, Ionic, and ('orintbian Orders, by the Worshipful Masters of Lodges Nos. l.j, 14, and 13, of Virginia. One Large Light, by the Worshipful Master of Lodge No. 10, of A'irginia. ORDER OF EXERCISES. Holy Bible, Square, and Compass, by the Worshipful Master of Lodge No. 5, of Virginia. Two Large Lights, by the Worshipful Masters of Lodges Nos. 4 and 3, of Virginia. Grand Masters of States other than of the Thirteen Original States, in charge of the Committee on Reception. Right Worshipful Reuben Mtjrrel Page, Deputy Grand Master, Accompanied b}' the Most Worshipful Grand Masters of States of South Carolina, North Carolina, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Delaware. Grand Chaplain, Right Worshipful George W. Dame, D. D. Grand Orator, Most Worshipful Beverley R. Wellford, Jr., Past Grand Master. R. W. Mayo B. Carrington, Grand Senior Warden, and R. W. Henry W. Murray^, Grand Junior Warden. Book of Constitutions, by the Worshipful Master of Lodge No. 1. Right Worshipful F. H. Hill, Grand Senior Deacon, and Right Worshipful W. F. Drinkard, Grand Junior Deacon, on the right and left of Most Worshipful PEYTON S. COLES, Grand Master. Wearing the Sash and Apron Presented to Brother George Washington by Brother La Fayette. Two Stewards with White Rods, Grand Sword- Bearer, with Drawn Sword, 12 M. I- The Chairman of the Joint Commission of Congress, Hon. John W. Johnston, United States Senator from the State of Virginia, will call the assembly to order at 12 o'clock noon, at the Monument site. II. PRAYER BY THE REV. ROBERT NELSON, Grandson of Governor Nelson of Virginia, who commanded the Virginia militia during the siege of Yorktown. ORDER OF EXERCISES. III. 'THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER" by three hundred voices, under the leadership of Prof. Ciiarlk.s L. Seioel, of Richmond, Virginia. The accompaniment b\- the Marine Band. At its conclusion the United States flag will be unfurled, and saluted by the land batteries and war vessels in the harbor. IV. ADDRESS OF WELCOME by His Excellency F. W. M. Hollid.vy, Governor of Virginia. V. - THE MARSEILLAISE HYMN " by the chorus of voices under the leadership of Prof. Skiokl. The accompaniment by the Marine Band. VI. REMARKS by the Chairman of the Commission, Hon. .J. W. Johnston, of Virginia. VII. "HAIL COLUMBIA," by tiie chorus of voices led by Prof. Seigel. The accompani- ment by the Marine Band. VIII. LAYING THE CORNER STONE OF THE MONUMENT, HY THE Masonic Grand Mastkr of Virg[.via, assisted by the Grand Masters of tlie Thirteen Original .VEasters. IX. GRAND FANTASIA. ''■ Intei'national Congress," ".S'oMsa,"' by the Marine Band, conducted by Mr. .T. Piiii.ip Sousa. ORDER OF EXERCISES. 4 P. M. CONCERT. AT GRAND STAND. MONUMENT SITE, JfY TIIK FIRST U, S. ARTILLERY BAND, Carl Kreykr, ------ Leader. 1. March — " Adjutant Davis" Krcyer. 2. Overture — " Der Tambour du Garde " Tilt. 3. Waltz— Pluie d'Or Waldtenfel. 4. Cornet Solo — De Beri.st's 5th Air Price'. 5. Paraphrase — " How Fair Thou Art " Nesvadha. 6. Selection — Trovatore Verdi. 7. Danse — Des Sultanes Polak Daniels. 8. Waltz— Flots de Joies Wnldienfel. 9. Overture — " Lespoir de L'Alsace " Herman. 10. Galop — Maraschino Lee. 4 P. M. AT STAND, MILITARY CAMP, BY THE COLUMBIA (SOUTH CAROLINA) SILVER CORNET BAND, A. D. Palmer, - Leader. 1. Quickstep — "Thirteenth Eeginient " Cogswell. 2. Andante and Waltz — " Emma" Boyer. 3. Overture — "Rip Van Winkle " Brooks. 4. Polka — " Chxrinda '' Keller. 5. Quickstep — " Eighth Regiment" Cliambcrs. 6. Waltz—" Blue Danube " Sti-auss. 7. Overture — " Mixed Candy " Caywood. 8. Galop — Inauguration Ripley. 9. Overture— " Pea Nuts" Southwell. 10. "Washington Grays" Graffula. ORDER OF EXtlRCISES. 7: 30 P. M. PYKOTECUNIC DISPLAY From a boat moored in tlie York Kiver, J. W. Bond, Pyrotechnist, Baltimore. 1. Aerial Shells, Colored. "2. Flight of Heavy Colored Rockets. 8. " Welcome." 4. Shells and Rockets. •'>. Battery. 6. Flight Rockets. 7. Shells. 8. Pyramid. 9. Battery. 10. Chinese Sun. n. Polka Dance. 12. Shells and Rockets. 13. Blooming Dahlia. 14. Battery. 15. Dancing Devils. 10. Rockets and Shells. 17. Cascade. 18. Rockets and Shells. lit. Tableau. " Tribute to rii k Tiiiktkkn." 8:30 P. M. PROMENADE CONCERT AND HOP, RECKl'TION HALL, SECOND U. S, ARTILLERY BAND, LuiGi Ferrari Loader. 1. Grand March Grofulo. 2. Overture — " Masaneillo " Auber- 3. Waltz—" La Plue d'Or " Waldtenfel. 4. PoTi'OURl — Liederkranz Carl. 5. Lanciers — "New York" Weingarten. G. Quartette — " Lucie de Lammermoor ' Donizetti. 7. Galop — " Racquette " Siinons. 8. PoTPOURi — " Boccacio " Suppc. !». Waltz— " To Thee " Waldtenfel. 10. PoTi'ouRi — Martha Flotoic 11. Polka— " Levy-Athen " (Cornet Solo) Leiy. ORDER OF EXERCISES. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19. 9 A. M. OPEN-AIR CONCERT, AT GRAND STAND, MONUMENT SITE, HY THE MARINE BAND, WASHINGTON. Mr. J. Philii^ Sousa, - . - - Conductor. Mr. S. Pktrola, . . . - . Assistant. Overture — " Les Dragoons de Villars " Maillart. Selection — " Billee Taylor " Solomons. Duett for Two Corxets^" Swiss Boy " Bent. Performed by Messrs. Jaeger and Petrola. Potpourri — " Madams Favart" Off'enhach. Waltz — "Pastoral Songs". Basquit. Caprice — " Turkish " Bendel. Garotte — " Myrrha '" -. Sousa. Fantasia — " Grand Duchess " Offenbach. Galop — "Tout a la Joie " Fahrhaeh. ORDER OF EXERCISES. AT STAND, MILITARY CAMIV BY THE FIFTH REGIMENT MARYLAND N. G, BAND. A. Itzel, ------- Leader. 1. March — " Yorktown CentenniHl " Hzel. Dedicated to the Yorktowu Centennial ( onimission. 2. OVEKTUKE — " Yubel ' Baclt. 3. Turkish Patrol—'- The Night Watcli " Gretry. 4. HuMOREsKA — (An old German song, as it would have been treated by Bach, Strauss, Lullj', Verdi, Weber, and Wagner) Scherz. 5. "The Hussars' Raid" Spindler. 6. Overture — "Comique" Kelcr Bela. 7. Valse — " Talisman " Lannor. 8. Introduction and Bridai, Chorus — " Lohengrin " Wagner. 9. Overture — " Crown Diamonds " Auber. 10. Galop^" Turque " Poloc-Daniels. 11 A. M. I. The assembly will be called to order by Hon. John W. John- ston, Chairman of the Yorktown Centennial Commission. II. OVERTURP]. '^ Fes(." -^ Leutner," by the Marine Band conducted by Mr. J. riiii.ri' Sousa. III. PRAYER BY BISHOP HARRIS. of the M. E. Church of New York. IV. "CENTENNIAL HYMN." Words by Chas. Poindexter; Music by J. E. Schmolzer, rendered by the chorus of three hundred voices, under Prof. C. L. Skigel, accompanied by the Marine Band. CENTENNIAL HYMN. Our fatlier.s" God, who on these ))lains Of old gave victory to our land, This day in gracious favor deigns To bless the labor of our hand. To Him let us our voices raise. In lofty hymns and notes of praise Onr grateful homage pay. His was the strength that nerved their heart In faith of battle for the right, He did the wisdom high impart That battled all the foeniau's might, And gave our land in days of yore Deliv'rance strong from trouble sore Of war and bitter strife. Built on foundation strong and deep The starry pointing shaft we rear. The form of mighty deeds to keep And tell to every coming year. So let us in our hearts upraise A monument of those brave days Of faith and victory. V. ADDKESS By thk president OF THE UNITED STATES. YI. Responses by Representatives of our FRENCH AND GERMAN GUESTS. VII. "CENTENNIAL ODE." Words by Paul H. Hayne, of South Carolina; Music by J. MosENTHAL, rendered by the chorus under Prof. Seigel, the accompaniment by the Marine Band. CENTENNIAL ODE. 1. Hark, hark : dowvi the century's long reaching slope To those transports of triumph, those raptures of hope. The voices of main and of mountain combined. In glad resonance borne on the wings of the wind The bass of the drum and the trumpet that thrills Thro' the multiplied echoes of jubilant hills. ORDER OF EXERCISES. And mark '. how the years melting upwaidlikj' mist Whicli the breath of some splendid enchantress lias kissed, Reveal on the ocean, reveal on the shore, The proud pageant of conquest that graced them of yore. Where blended forever in love as in fame See! the standard which stole from tlie starlight it-^ tiatne. And type of all chivalry, glory, romance. The fair lilies, the luminous lilies of France. II. O ! stubborn the strife in the conflict was won ! And the wild whirling war-wrack half stifled the .^un. The thunders of cannon that boomed on the lea. But re-echoed far thunders pealed up from the sea — When guarding his sea-lists, a knight on the waves Bold De (irasse kept at bay the bluff Vmll-dogs of Graves, The day turned to darkness, the night changed to fire , Still more tierce waxed the combat, more deadly the ire, L'ndimmed by the gloom, in majestic advance. Ah! behold when they ride, o'er the red battle tide. Whose banners united in love or in fame The brave standard which drew from the star-beams their tiame. And type of all chivalry, glory, romance. The fair lilies, the luminous lilies of France. 111. \o respite, no pause! By the York's tortured flood The gray lion of England is writhing in blood ! Cornwall is may chafe, and coarse Tarleton aver, .Vs he sharpens his broad sword and buckles his spur, " This blade, which so oft has reaped rebels like grain. Shall now harvest for death the riule yeomen again." Vain boast! for ere sunset he is flying in fear With the rebels he scouted close, close in Ins rear! The French on his flank hurl such volleys of shot That e'en Gloucester's redoubt must be growing too hot. (), wedded in love, as united in fame, See I the standard which stole from the starlight its flame. And type of all chivalry, glory, romance. The fair lilies, the luminous lilies of France. IV. <) ! morning superb when the siege reached its close ! See the sun dawn outbloom like the alchemist's rose ! The last wreaths of smoke from the trenches upenrled ,\re transformed to a glory that smiles on the world. .loy, joy ! Save the wan, wasted front of the foe. With his battle-flags furled and his arms trailing low , Respect foi- the brave' In grim silence they yield, .Vnd in silence they pass with liowed heads from the tiell. Then triumph transeendaut ! So Titan of tone That some vowed it must startle King (ieorge on his throne. V. When Peace to her own timed tlie pulse of the land, And the war-weapon sank from the war-wearied hand, Young Freedom, upborne to the height of tlie goal She had yearned for .so long with deep travail of soul, A song of her future raised, thrilling and clear. Till the woods leaned to hearken, the hill-slopes to hear. Vet fraught with all magical gramieurs that gleam On the hero's high hope or the patriot's dream, ]yitat Future, tho' Isriglit, in cold shadow shall east The stern beauty that halos the brow of the past. O I wedded in love as united in fame See the standard wliieh stole from the starlight its flame, And type of all chivalry, glory, romance. The fair lilies, the luminous lilies of France. VIII. SONG by Hakrison Millard, the composer and author of " God Save our President from Harm." IX. ORATION by Hon. Eobert C. Wixthrop, of Massachusetts. X. "THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER," by the chorus under Prof. Seigel, accompanied by Marine Band. XI. CENTENNIAL POEM by James Barkox Hope, of Virginia. XII. OVERTURE by Dodworth's 13th Regiment Band, of the National Guard of the State of New York. 2 P. M. Or at the conclusion of the Ceremonies. Reception by tiie PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, and his Cabinet, the Guests of the Nation, and the Congressional Commission to the Military and public at La Fayette Hall. ORDER OF EXERCISES. 4 P. M. GRAND CONCERT. AT GKAND STAND MONUMENT SITE, UY DODWORTH'S THIRTEENTH REGIMENT BAND, NEW YORK, Harvey B. Dodworth, - - . Conductor. PART 1. 1. March — " Virginia " Dodworih. 2. Overture — " Rienzi ' Wagne?-. 8. MoRCEAU — "The Nightingale" Bartcns. (An Idyl for the Piccolo.) Signer A. Noziglia. 4. Solo (Cornet) — " Casta Diva " — Norma Bellini. Signer A. Liberati. 5. Collocation — " A Day in Camp " Dodworih. Being an adaptation of the following .\imy songs and calls: "All's Well," "Tenting on the Old Camp Ground," " Oft in the Stilly Kight," " Reveille," " Tlie Battle Cry of Freedom," " The Assembly," " Benny Havens, Oh," "Glory Hallelujah," "Breakfast Call," "Kingdom Coming," "Various ('amp Calls," "Tramp, Tramp, Tramp," Me.ss Call — "Roast Beef," " In the Louisiana Lowlands," " Dre.ss Parade and Review," " Retreat," "Marching Through Georgia," " Tattoo," "Annie Laurie," "Lights Out." Finn'c — "When Johnny Comes JLirching Home," "Three Cheers for the lied, White, and Blue," S. Haxcock, U. S. Army. Commander of the Fleet. Kear Admiral R. H. "Wyman", U. S. Navy. COMMISSIONERS APPOINTED BY GOVERNORS OF STATES. Hon. Moses White Tennessee. Majors. P. Hamilton South Carolina. Hon. Milo P. Jewett. L.L. D. Wisconsin. Hon. Irving W. Stanton Colorado. Capt. John Milledge Georgia. Hon. B. F. Hart Iowa. Hon. James W. Farley, U. S. S. California. Hon. W. D. Washburne, M. C. Minnesota. Hon. H. G. Blasdel Nevada. Col. Thos. Snell Illinois. Hon. Samuel B. Churchill Kentucky. Gen. D. B. Fry Alabama. Hon. R. B. Peebles North Carolina. Hon. Philo Parsons Michigan. Gen. Lewis Perrine New Jer.ii SUFFOLK GRAYS. Sujfolk, Va. Captain: Thos. W. Smith. First Lieutenant: Benj. F. Cutchins, Jr. Second Lieutenant : John T. Riddick. Junior Second Lieutenant : Geo. T. Parker. PENINSULA GUARDS. Hampton^ Va. ' Captain: S. B. Wood. First Lieutenant : Wm. T. Daughert}-. Second Lieutenant : G. M. Richter. Junior Second Lieutenant: W. J. Stores. Organized January 13, 1877. Uniform: Dark blue, gold trimmings helmet with white plume. 40 enlisted men. OLD DOMINION GUARD. Portsmouth, Va. Captain: H. C. Hudgins. First Lieutenant: James H. Walker. Second Lieidenaiit : James M. Binford. Junior Second Lieutenant: John W. Wood. RICHMOND LIGHT INFANTRY BLUES. Captain: John S. Wise. First Lieutenant : Thomas M. Page. NORFOLK CITY GUARD. Captain: C. A. Nash. First Lieutenant: H. Hodges. Second Lieutenant : C. C. Lee. Junior Second Lieutenant: T. B. Jackson. 50 men. Uniform, dark blue; shakos. Arms, Springfield breech-loading. UNATTACHED COMPANIES. FARMVILLE GUARDS. Farmville, Va. Captain: S. W. Paulett. First Lieutenant: P. H. C. Rice. Second Lieutenant : W. T. Dovne. 84 VISITING MILITARY. KEMPER GUARD, (CAVALRY.) Amelia County. Captain: J. M. Gills. First Lieutenant: J. A. Bhinton. Second Lieutenant: J. H. Haskins. Third Lieutenant: A. W. Miller. 50 sabres. Note. — It is understood that two additional companies of Cavalry are forming, and will be present at Yorktown. They have not reported at date of going to press. FIRST BATALLION VIRGINIA ARTILLERY. HEADQUARTERS, RICHMOND. Major: Henry C. Carter, Commanding. Ad.jutant: C«/)tom Carlton McCarthey. Surgeon : Major Christopher Tompkins. Assistant Surgeon : Captain W. E. Harwood. Ordnance Officer: First Lieutenant W. H. Aborn. Quartermaster: First Lieutenant R. C. M. Wingtield. Commissary : First Lieutenant J. Herbert Stiff. Chaplain: First Lieutenant J. William Jones. NORFOLK LIGHT ARTILLERY BLUES. Captain: James W. Gilmer. First Lieutenant: H. C. Whitehead. Junior First Lieutenant: J. A. Walton. ■ Second Lieutenant : George W. Gordon. Battery of four three-inch rifled guns. PETERSBURG ARTILLERY. Captain: J. S. Clary. First Lieutenant : G. W. Vaughan. Second Lieutenant: John Treshein. Battery of four 12-pounder Napoleons. RICHMOND HOWITZERS. Captain: E. J. Bosher. First Lieutenant : W. E. Simons. Junior First Lieutenant: F. H. McGuire. Batterv of four three-inch rifled guns. VISITING MILITARY. 85 UNATTACHED BATTERY. LYNCHBURG LIGHT ARTILLERY BLUES. Captain: Frank T. Lee. First Lieutenant: Charles Munclay. Junior First Lieutenant: Mosby H.Payne. Second Lieutenant: William H. Dudley. Battery of four 6-pounder bronze guns. THE CADETS OF ST. JOHN'S ACADEMY. Alexandria. Major: Wilfred C. Potter, Commanding. Adjutant: Bullard E. Dodd, of Norfolk. .Seroeant-Major: Beauregard Clarke, of Anne Arundel County, Md. Color-Sergeant: H. B. F. Heath, of Washington, D. C. Quartermaster-Sergeant: J. J. Walsh, of Washington, D. C. Commissary-Sergeant: J. E. Swaine, of Alexandria, Virginia. COMPANY A. Captain: D. H. Jones, of Shenandoah County, Virginia. First Lieutenant: F. T. Chamberlin, of Washington, D. C. Second Lieutenant: G. J. Kerby, of Alexandria, Virginia. COMPANY B. Captain : Frank F. De Lea, of Chicago, Illinois. First Lieutenant : Charles Bendheim, of Alexandria, Virginia. Second Lieutenant: F. H. Schneider, of Alexandria, Virginia. The young men composing this Cadet Battalion will number 75, and will carry to Yorktown nickel-plated breech-loaders, with bayonet. Their uniform is a West Point gray coat, with State buttons, breast braid, and black facings ; pants with broad, black stripe ; cadet cap of gray, with gold embroidered wreath, enclosing the letters " S. J. A." They are well drilled, and present a creditable appearance. FIRST BATTALION VIRGINIA COLORED INFANTRY. HEADQUAPvTERS. RICHMOND, VA. Major: R. A. Johnson. Commanding. Adjutant: J. B. Johnson. Quartermaster: Samuel Clarkson. Commissary : John Graves. Surgeon : J. C. Ferguson. The Battalion is provided with Springfield breech-loading rifles. 86 VISITING MILITARY. ATTUCKS GUARDS. Richmond. Captain : Josiah Crump. Fhst Lieutenant: Thomas W. Walker. Second Lieutenant : Samuel Sullivan. CARNEY GUARD. Ilichmo7id. Captain: John D. Booker. First Lieutenant : C. B. Nicholas. Second Lieutenant : N. P. Price. UNION GUARD. Manchester. Captain: J. H. Cunningham. First Lieutenant : J. B. Johnson. Second Lieutenant: Wm. Bailey. VIRGINIA GRAYS. Richmond. Captain: Ben. Scott. First Lieutenant : W. M. Mickens. Second Lieutenant : W. H. Banister. RICHiMOND LIGHT INFANTRY Captain: W. H. Tinsley. First Lieutenant : W. H. Bannister. Second Lieutenant : B. F. Daburv. SECOND BATTALION VIRGINIA COLORED INFANTRY. HEADQUAKTERS, NOPvFOLK, VA. Ma.jou: William H. Palmer, Commanding. Adjutant: First Lieutenant Moses F. Jordan. Quartermaster: First Lieutenant Israel E. Whitehurst. Commissary : First Lieutenant Jeffrey T. Wilson. Chaplin: First Lieutenant E. H. Boiden. LANGSTON GUARDS. Norfolk, Va. [Organized November 7. 1873.] Captain: Peter Shepherd. .Jr. First Lieutenant : S. S. Reid. Second Lieutenant : A. S. Brown. 50 enlisted men ; Springfield breech-loaders. VISITING MILITARY. 87 NATIONAL GUARDS. Norfolk, Va. [Organized June 25, 1879.] Captain: E. W. Gould. Fh-st Lieutenant : T. E. Wisher. Second Lieutenant: C. H. Robinson. 50 enlisted men. HANNIBAL GUAKDS. Norfolk, Va. [Organized October 13, 1879.] Captain: Wm. H. Mills. First Lieutenant : J. H. Smith. Second Lieutenant : A. A. Miller. 55 enlisted men ; Springfield muzzle-loaders. VIRGINIA GUARD. Portsmouth. [Organized May 19, 1875.] Captain: J. E. Manning. First Lieutenant: G. W. Gordon. Second Lieutenant: J. T. White. 50 enlisted men ; Springfield breech-loaders. SEABOARD ELLIOTT GRAYS. Portsmouth. [Organized March 12, 1875.] Captain: J. O. Corprew. First Lieutenant: L. L. Rooks. Second Lieutenant: W. H. Ackis. Third Lieutenant: G. L. Blunt. 50 men ; Springfield muzzle-loaders. UNATTACHED COMPANIES COLORED INFANTRY. STATE GUARD. Richmond. Captain : R. A. Paul. First Lieutenant: H. C. Gilliam. Second Lieutenant: D. W. A. Frazer; Junior Second Lieutenant : Scott Emmett. .50 men ; Springfield breech-loaders. 88 VISITING MILITARY. HILL CITY GUARD. Lynchburg. Captain: Z. A. Langley. First Lieutenant: Samuel. Campbell. DOUGLASS GUARD. Danville. Captain: AV. .J. Keid. First Lieutenant : W. H. Jones. SeQond Lieutenant: Archie Robinson. Jwiior Second Lieutenant : D. D. Williams. 50 men; Springfield muzzle-loaders. LIBBY GUARD. Hamilton. [Organized May 16, 1877.] Captain: James A. Fields. First Lieutenant: J. M. Simpson. Second Lieutenant: William Randall. 50 men; Springfield muzzle-loaders. LYNCHBURG VIRGINIA GUARD. Captain: J. H. Merchant. First Lieutenant : Marcellus Isbell. Second Lirjitenant: .John W.Johnson. 50 men ; Springfield muzzle-loaders. PETERSBURG GUARD. Captain: J. H. Hill. First Lieutenant: C. C. McKenzie. Second Lieutenant : W. F. Jackson. 60 men ; Springfield muzzle-loaders. FLIPPER GUARDS. Petersburg. Captain : James E. Hill. F^rst Lieutenant: Edward Randolph. Second Lieutenant: E. J. Archer. 62 men ; Springfield muzzle-loaders. PETERSBURG BLUES. Captain: P. L. Farley. First Lieutenant: Jacob .Johnson. Second Lieutenant: James M. Farley. 65 men ; Springfield muzzle-loaders. NoTK. — As regards the unattached companies from the State of Virginia, it is probable that some of them may., from various reasons, be unable to be present. It is the intention of the authorities that the whole State militia shall be assembled at Yorktown, and, at date of going to press, all but one or two companies had reported to the Master of Ceremonies. It was ac- cordingly deemed best to give all the benefit of the doubt, and report them in the Programme. NORFOLK, FORTRESS MONROE, NEWPORT NEWS, and the South. LADY OF THE LAKE I JANE MOSELY, THESE NEW AND ELEGANT STEAMERS OF THE Leave Washington, from Sixth St. wharf, every Monday, Wednesda}*, and Friday, at 5 : 30 P. M. Returning, leave Norfoli< every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday at 4 : 00 P. M., touching Piney Point and Point Loolcout, going and comint:. During the Centennial, this Company will put into service in addition THEIR NEW IRON STEAMER which will make daily trips to Yorktown, Va. Leave Pier 41 East River, New York, every Saturday at 4 P. M., and Georgetown every Friday at 7 A. M., and Alexandria, Va. , same day. ALFRED WOOD, Secretary. WM. THOMPSON, President. General Office, 613 15th St.; Washington, D. C. »' OLD ESTABLISHED LADIES' m GENTLEMENS OYSTER SALOON | RESTAURANT, No. 1016 PENNA. AVE., COR. ELEVENTH STREET. BRANCH HOUSE, Cor, 7th and E, f ¥ U«w'|# 0|#®P Jtipe 11 tfc® Ifiiki ^hU$, Most CoiBplete Reslanrant at the Natioial Capital. All brands of the Finest Oysters that the briny deep can produce are served with every imaginable dish that can be called for. is one of the handsomest in all its appointments, and is conducted especially for them. Open from G a. m. until midnight. OYSTERS, TERRAPIN, AND GAME A SPECIALTY. HARV£Y & HOLD£N, Props "HARVKY" the Orig^iuator of tbe Steamed Oyster. FRAIVGIS B. MOHUnr, BOOKSELLER AND STATIONER, 1015 I*enna. Ave., Washington. D. C. ROD&EES' AND WOSTENHOLM'S FEN-fflI?ES. Russia Leather and Calf-Skin Pocket Books ^ Wallets, A SUPERB STOCK. A FULL LINE OF PLAYING CARDS. WRITING DESKS, LIBRARY INKSTANDS, GLOVE AND HANDKERCHIEF BOXES, PORT-FOLIOS, M eyerytMiig ttiat a First-Class Boot aiitl Stationery Store keeps. All new Books received as soon as issued and sold at the Publisher's lowest price. The leading Magazines and Reviews for sale and delivered promptly to subscribers. Card, Wedding, and Reception Engraving executed in the most elegant styles. FASHIONABLE STATIONERY A SPECIALTY. A FULL LINE OF AND ENOLISH JEDIXXONS OF THE BIBLE. An assortment of CATHOLIC PRAYER BOOKS. Special attention is invited to this stock of Books and Stationery. In lots of |oO and upwards a discount of 20 per cent, will be allowed from the list of prices. An inspection and examination is requested. W. H. SELDEN, Lynchburg, Va. S. B. ROB BINS, Memphis, Teiin, mmwi PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, BET- 6th AND 7th STREETS, AATj^^SKinsra-Tonsr, id. o. The undersigned beg leave to announce to the public, and their old patrons of the Arlington and Norvell, Lynchburg, Va., Arlington, Danville, Va., Kimball House, Atlanta, Ga., Planter's Hotel, Augusta, Ga., and Overton Hotel, Memphis, Tenn., that they have leased for a term of years (Formerly BROWN'S HOTEL,) Situated on Pennsylvania Avenue, midway between the Capitol and the Executive Mansion, and within one block of the Uailroad Depot. The house has been painted, re-furnished, and refitted in everv depart- ment, is thoroughly heated with steam, and is in every respect Our charges will be moderate, and no pains spared to give entire satisfac- tion to our guests. One of Oris Brother's Elevators carry the guests to every floor, and runs day and night. l::jtreet Railways to all parts of the city pass the door. SELDEN & ROBBINS, Proprietors. ®lie ^ieje of ^ottowtt. The siege and surrender of Yorktown, whereby at one and the same lucky moment the career of the boldest, and, perhaps the ablest general sent by the British Government to crush the rebellion of the American Colonies, was arrested, and the Revolution itself brought to a successful and brilliant culmination, is among the surprises of history. It is, perhaps, too much to say that but for the fortunate issue at Yorktown the British arms would in the end have been triumphant, for a spirit as determined and self-sacrificing as that which had emerged from Valley Forge could not have been suppressed, and was fated, from the very conditions of civiliza- tion in a progressive age, to exist as free and independent as the air which surrounded its limitless forests and fields. Yet the strange and unforeseen necessities which compelled a victorious general with a disciplined army to coop himself up behind entrenchments at a questionably strategic point in southeastern Virginia, and the equally unexpected development of military strategy upon the part of Washington, which involved the abandonment of a strong position, a rapid march of four hundred miles, from the Hud- son to the Rappahannock, and the crushing of a famous foe at a point where no assistance could reach him, forms the most positive and absorbing act of the whole .struggle. Cornwallis's southern campaign had been as brilliant as his success was pronounced. Savannah had been taken, and Georgia restored to the crown. Charfeton had fallen, and South Carolina occupied at every important point. Gates had been crushed at Camden, and Greene at Guilford Court-House, and North Carolina in turn had fallen a prey to the enemy. King's Mountain and the Cowpens stand out as the only compensating features in a campaign that contemplated and seemed to promise the subjection of the South. Cornwallis had retired to Wilming- ton, where reinforcements from Clinton were expected to meet him, ere entering upon a foray which would include Virginia among the trophies of his renown. Washington, with a wretchedly clothed and half-fed army, worn out with the fluctuating struggle of six long years, was maintaining a skirmishing and predatory conflict on the flanks of Clinton's works on New York island and along the Hudson, while awaiting the advance of Rochambeau, and, disappointed by a letter from De Grasse, announcing his intention to remain in the West Indies, which forced him to abandon even the movement for which Rochambeau was then en route., was, for the last time, wholly discouraged at the thought that another year would close (93) 94 THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. with the patriot cause still undecided. The moment was one wherein dis- aster seemed imminent, and nothing certain except the triumphant progress of the boldest and most dangerous of the British leaders, whom Greene had styled " the modern Hannibal," and whom even the enthusiastic La Fayette was forced to refer to as "the formidable general who made no mistakes." Such was the situation in the middle of August, 1781. Uncertainty, anxiety, indecision, and dread among the patriots ; enthusiasm, triumph, and confidence with the enemy in the field ; increasing hopes and spirits of the home ministry that the rebellion was about to succumb to the courage and prowess of the British arms. Two months later, as if bj' magic, the scene had changed as suddenly and completely as though an unsefen and irresistible hand had reached out, and overturned and revolutionized the situation. The most famous of the British commanders had surrendered his whole armj', and was a prisoner in the hands of Washington; Vir- ginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia were restored to the patriot cause; and a victory had been gained, which was hailed in Paris by a general illumination and a Te Deum in the churches, and in England by a change of public opinion, which six months later impelled the Commons to authorize the king to make peace with America. The surrender of Cornwallis secured the independence of the United States, and made the wildest dreams of the patriots a delightful reality. CORN-WALLIS. Charles Cornwallis, second Earl of Cornwallis, was born at Culford House^ Suffolk, on the 31st of December, 1738. He was educated at Eton and St. John's College, Cambridge; entered ihe army in 1759, and succeeded to the title and estate in 1761 ; served during the Seven Years' War as aide- de-camp to the Marquis of Granby ; was made a colonel in 1770, and, four years later, appointed Governor of the Tower of London. Though per- sonally opposed to the war with the colonies, he accompanied his regiment, the 33d Foot hither, — and was the most competent and energetic of all the British generals sent here during the war; but the cruelties practiced by his orders have left an indelible stain on his character. " The conduct of Lord Cornwallis during his march of over fifteen hundred miles through the Southern States," says Lossing, " was often disgraceful to the British name. He sufiered dwelling-houses to be plundered of everything that could be carried oft', and it is well known that his lordship's table was fur- nished with plate thus obtained from private families. ■ His march was more frequently that of a marauder than of an honorable general. It is estimated that Virginia alone lost, during Cornwallis's attempt to reduce it, thirty thousand, slaves. It was estimated at the time, from the best in- formation that could be obtained, that during the six months previous to the surrender of Yorktown, the devastations of his army amounted in value THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. 95 to about fifteen millions of dollars." His engagements with the Americans were generally successful. Landing in New York, in 1776, he defeated Lord Sterling on Long Island on the 27th of August, captured Fort Lee in November, was present at Trenton a year later, when he was repulsed by Washington, and participated in the campaign of 1777-'78, in and about New Jersey and Pennsylvania. In 1780 (April 18) he arrived at Charles- ton, South Carolina, with 3,000 men, where he reinforced Clinton, then engaged in the siege of Charleston, and subsequently entered upon his famous raid through the Carolinas, where, although baffled by LaFayette^ he defeated Gates at Camden and Greene at Guilford Couri-House, and fell back upon Wilmington, (April 7, 178'4,) where our narrative finds him about to enter upon the conquest of Virginia. After his surrender — for which he was censured, but, being high in favor at court, escaped serious reprimand — he returned to England, and was ap- pointed Governor-General of India, which he held six years, during which period he'conquered the renowned Tippoo Saib, for which service he was created a Marquis, and made Master of Ordnance. From 1798 to 1801 he was Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland, and was instrumental in restoring peace to that unfortunate country, then, as usual, distracted by rebellion. As plenipotentiary to Paris, in 1802, he negotiated and signed the treaty of Amiens, and, two years later, was again made Governor-General of India. He died in October, 1805, at Ghazepore, in Benares, at the age of sixty- seven, having accomplished a career of which any Englishman may well be proud. THE BRITISH INVADE VIRGINIA. • In the spring of 1781 Cornwallis left Wilmington, North Carolina, with his army of about eight thousand strong, and crossed into Virginia to enter upon a campaign the most disastrous in his eventful career, and one that was fated in its results to secure forever the independence of the United Colonies. After raiding through the heart of Virginia, and finding the- forces of La Fayette, Steuben, and Wayne too formidable to play with, the Earl deemed it prudent to withdraw toward the sea-shore, where commu- nication with, and, possibly, reinforcement from Clinton would be more certain. He accordingly retreated to Kichmond, thence crossed the Chick- ahominy to Williamsburg and Jamestown, at both of which points he had a brush with the Americans, and then down the James to Portsmouth, (opposite Norfolk,) where he went into camp about the 12th of July. In his retreat he wasirlosely pursued and annoyed by Wayne and La Fayette,- and was still further discomforted by having received a requisition from Clinton to send a portion of his troops immediately to New York. This requisition, however, was countermanded, and Cornwallis directed to secure some strong position on the Chesapeake, and continue his harassing. // '96 THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWX. warfare in Virginia and Maryland. In pursuance of these tactics, the bluffs of the York about Yorktown and Gloucester — about twenty-four miles from Old Point Comfort — appearing tiie most eligible for offensive and defensive operations, he evacuated Portsmouth on the 20th of September, and on the 22d, his whole army, about 7,000 strong, was concentrated at these points, and immediately entered upon the work of fortification. His line of works, which completely surrounded the village of Yorktown, consisted of seven redoubts and six batteries on the land side, connected by intrenchments ; a line of batteries on the river bank commanding the channel ; seven redoubts on the outworks, and some field works at a communicating distance to im- pede the approach of an enemy. A line of intrenchments were also extended across the peninsula in the rear of Gloucester. Yorktown then contained About sixty houses and not exceeding four hundred inhabitants. La Fayette in the meantime was within observing distance, but not sufficiently strong, and strategically indisposed, to impede the progress of fortification. Thus the two forces confronted each other until about the 1st of 8eptember, 1781, each awaiting reinforcements, as both Washington and Clinton had arranged to transfer the campaign to Virginia soil. THE SCENE OF ACTION. Yorktown had been an important town of the Old Dominion. Estab- lished in 1705, twenty years later it was the centre of a thriving country — an Episcopal parish of sixty communicants, and for a period vied in import- ance even with Williamsburg, the capital. It was, and is, situated upon a high bluff of stone marl, on the south bank of the York, about twelve miles from its mouth, on a level plateau, embraced by deep ravines on either side, which nearly meet in its rear. The river, which has an average width, above and below, of some two miles, is narrowed by a projecting cape, on which stood the settlement of Gloucester, a thriving place of a considerable com- merce, from which most of the tobacco grown on the north bank was shipped to England. The surrounding country is quite level ; but between it and Williamsburg a pine forest lines the most of the roadwaj', relieved here and there by occasional clearings, which increase as they reach the Chicka" hominy. In many respects the point was strategic. Magruder so regarded it in 1861, when, having been assigned by the Confederate Government to the command of the District of Henrico, his earliest efforts were devoted to for- tifying the point, to defeat which, Butler sent out the ill-fated reconnoissance which met its disaster at Great Bethel on the 10th of June, 1861. The time gained by this engagement enabled Magruder to erect works from York- town across to the James, and to connect them by damming up the War- wick river, and thus, with a mere handful of from ten to fifteen thousand jnen, held McClellan in check long enough for Joe Johnston to move out THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. 97 frorn Richmond, when the two bewildered and confused him, until the Con- federate authorities at Richmond had organized that army which prevented him from ever capturing the rebel capital. Cornwallis claimed, after the surrender, that he never regarded Yorktown as a favorable point for fortifi- cation, but that he occupied it in obedience to the wishes of Clinton. Clin- ton, in his defense, asserted that Cornwallis's instructions were discretionary, and the controver.sy. growing out of the attempt of both to defend their positions, continued until both had gone down to their graves, to the infinite amusement of a select circle of admirers, who long held ■' Yorktown " as an aggravating nom de guerre with which to stir up the two never reconciled generals. Looking at the question, however, from a military point of view, wholly devoid from the fact that DeGrasse's fleet had solved the problem without the knowledge of either Clinton, at New York, or Cornwallis, at Yorktown, it must be admitted that the latter 's selection of that point was judicious and defensible. THE FRENCH FLEET ENTERS THE CHESAPEAKE. On the 31st of August the Count De Grasse, with twenty-eight ships and 3,200 troops, under the command of the Marquis De St. Simon, arrived off Cape Henry, and reported to La Fayette. The troops were borrowed from the garrison at St. Domingo, with the promise to return them by the 15th of October, and consisted of detachments from the regiments of Agenois, Tourraine, and Gatinois, 100 artillery, 100 dragoons, ten pieces of field ord- nance and several of seige artillery and mortars. Informed of the situa- tion, De Grasse immediately dispatched four ships of the line and several frigates to blockade the mouth of the York, and landed the troops to join La Fayette. Cornwallis'ssituation was now critical, and he Was not slow to perceive it. He conceived a plan for escaping to North Carolina, but the vigilance of La Fayette prevented it; and, consoling himself with the hope that Clinton would send him timely aid, settled himself down to await the progress of events. At sunrise, on the morning of the 5th of September, the French fleet lay in Lynn Haven bay, near Cape Henry, and within the inclosure now so familiarly known as Hampton Roads, when the British fleet, under Admiral Graves, consisting of seventeen sail of the line, appeared oil' Cape Charles. The wind was fair, and the British fleet sailed directly to the attack. De Grasse, desiring more room for the conflict, slipped his cables and put to sea, followed by Graves, and both fleets, in attempting to gain the wind- ward, slowly moved eastward, clear of the Capes, upon the broad Atlantic. At four o'clock in the afternoon a partial action commenced, which con- tinued until sunset, without much damage to either side. For five succes- sive days the hostile fleets were in sight of each other, neither desirous of renewing the conflict, until, on the 10th, De Grasse returned to the Chasa- 98 THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. peakc, and anchored in Lynn Haven bay, where he found De Barras with his squadron, and a considerable land force under M. De Clioise, with heavy artillery and military stores for the siege of Yorktown. Graves approached the Capes, but finding a force with which he was unable to contend, bore away and returned to New York. While the allies are e?i route to i)articipate in the final act of the drama of revolution, and Cornwallis is arrangins; the scene upon which the cur- tain is about to fall before the grand tableau of a free and independent nation, let us glance a moment at the actors who assisted in rendering it so magnificent a spectacle. THE AMERICAN LEADERS. Of the American leaders it is scarcely necessary to s]>eak. Their lives are the glorious memory and heritage of their countrymen ; their deeds the glorv and pride of the Republic. Lincoln, the sturdy Hingham farmer, who abandoned the plow to grasp the sword at Bunker Hill, and wore it bravely and without ceasing to the end ; Knox, the Boston bookseller, who commanded the American artillery throughout the long conflict and suc- ceeded Lincoln as Secretary of "War ; Muhlenberg, the Pennsylvanian pastor, who laid aside his sacerdotal gown at the altar to reveal beneath, the regimental dress of a colonel; Wayne — "Mad Anthony" — the hand- some, valiant hero of Monmouth and the Brandywine; Clinton. Hamil- ton, Laurens, Nelson, Stevens, Schammel, Tighlman, and at their head the grand and irreproachable Washington, whose life and renown are as dear and imperishable to an American as his own. Few of the chiefs who had struggled through the long conflict, and were destined to honor in the councils of the new nation were absent from Yorktown. It was as if the caprices of fate had ordered that those who had fought so long and so bravely should unite to participate in the magnificent reward. Of the for- eign leaders, less is generally known concerning their earlier and later lives, and none the less deserving, are they entitled to brief mention. De ROCHAMBEAU. Jean Baptiste Donatien de 'S'imeur, Count de Kochambeau, was born at Vendome. in 1725, and entered the army at the age of sixteen. In 1746 he was an aide-de-camp to Louis Phillipe, Duke of Orleans, and soon after- wards wa8 appointed to the command of the regiment of La Marche. Hedis- tinguishedhimselfatthebattleofLafeldt. where he was wounded ; at Creveldt, Minden,Corbach, and Clostercamp, and was made lieutenant-general in 1779. He came to America in 1780, in command of a French army of 6,000 men. and by this timely intervention contributed in an eminent degree to the final success of the cause. Returning td France, after the Revolution, he was raised to the rank of a field marshal, and. during the French Revolu- THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. 99 tion, commanded the army of the north. He was superceded, and suflTered the persecutions of calumny, hut a decree of approbation was passed in 1792, when he retired to his Vendome estates. Under the tyrannous gov- ernment of Robespierre he was arrested, and narrowly escaped death ; but, during the Empire, Bonaparte granted him a pension and the cross of grand otBcer of the Legion of Honor. He died in 1807, at the age of eighty-two. De GRASSE. Francois Joseph Paul, Count de Grasse, was born in France, in 1723, and came to America in 1781, in command of the French fleet, with the title of lieutenant general, and although the junior of the Admiral Count dc Barras, was made his superior in command. His cooperation was made valuable to the Americans, and for his services at Yorktown he received the thanks of Congress in equal conjunction with Washington and Rocham- beau. His domestic relations seem to have been very unhappy ; his second wife, whom he married after returning from America, proving a very un- worthy woman. His life became a burden, particularly after losing the favor of the king in consequence of an unfortunate military movement, and he died early in 1788, at the age of sixty-five. Alluding to the unhappi- ness of his latter days, "Washington, in a letter to Rochambeau, in April, 1788, on hearing of his death, said : " His frailties should now be buried in the grave with him, while his name will be long deservedly dear to this country on account of his successful cooperation in the glorious campaign of 1781. The Cincinnati in some of the States have gone into mourning for him." La FAYETTE. Marie Paul Joseph Rochyves Gilbert-Mottiers, Marquis de La Fayette, was born on the 6th of September, 1757, and in 1774, when but seventeen years of age, married the Countess Anastatic de Noailles, daughter of the Duke de Noailles, a young lady of immense fortune. He came to America in 1777, and, with his great influence at the French Court, united to a gen- erous purse, a valiant sword, and excellent counsel, rendered the most em- inent'-ftid in our struggle for independence. He returned to France a year later, where his large influence was directed to securing that invaluable assistance of his nation, both in men and means, which so fortunatelj- turned the tide in our favor ; and, although present, and performing a conspicuous part at Yorktown, he, for the second time, returned home, and by his per- sonal exertions was raising a large army for our aid when the intelligence of peace reached him. Returning to America in 1784, he was received everywhere with unbounded enthusiasm, and again called home by the emergency of pressing political events, bore with him the honors and bless- ings of a free people. 100 THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. His services to his own King and country were no less eminent. During- the stormy period of the first Revolution he was an active member of the Assembly; always the advocate of civil liberty, but conservative and just, so that because of his moderation he was obliged to flee from France during the height of the revolution, and, being captured, was confined for three years in a dungeon at Olmutz. He suff"ered greatly in person and fortune during the reign of Napoleon, but, on his downfall, returned to public life, and became a member of the Chamber of Deputies. In 1824 he again came to America, as the agent of the nation and the people, and his journey through the land was one continued ovation, showing his name next to that of Washington to be dearest to the great American heart. Greater honors were yet in store for him, for at the Revolution of 1830 he was proffered and refused the constitutional crown of France, but designated Louis Phillippe, Duke of Orleans, as the proper recipient — a most unworthy trust,, involving not alone a betrayal of the confidence of the people, but the basest ingratitude to La Fayette. He died in 1834, at the age of seventy-seven, and hi? remains rest in the beautiful and aristocratic cemetery of Pigpers, near Paris. STEUBEN. Frederick William Augustus, Baron de Steuben, was born at Magdeburg, Prussia, November 17, 1730; was educated at the college of Niesse and . Breslau, and at the age of fourteen served at the siege of Prague. He wa* appointed a cadet at seventeen, and at the early age of twenty-eight had risen to the rank of Adjutant General. Four years later he was Adjutant General to Frederick the Great, who appointed him Grand Marshal, and recommended him to Prince Charles of Baden, in whose service he entered with the rank of Lieutenant General. From this hour honors showered thick upon him. He was made Grand Marshal and General of the Guard of the Prince of Hohenzollern-Hechingen, Knight of the Order of Fidel- ity by the Prince Margrave of Baden, and refused tempting and brilliant offers from the Emperor of Austria and the King of Sardinia. While hesitating at Paris, in 1777, he was invited by the Count St. Germain to go- to America, and, fired by an ardent love for the cause in which the Col- onies were embarked, he immediately sailed, landed at Portsmouth, Vir- ginia, December 1, 1777, and tendered his services to Washington as a volunteer. He joined the army at Valley Forge, then in its most distressing condi- tion, and, having been appointed Inspector General, devoted his whole attention to a reorganization of the army, and prepared a manual of tactics and regulations for its government and discipline. He was present in action at Monmouth Court House, was a member of the court-martial for the trial of Major Andre, and otherwise performed most eminent services in the revolutionary cause. He was an officer of marked ability, and gen- THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN, 101 erous to a fault, spending his whole fortune in clothing the soldiers, and giving his last dollar to the man who needed it. For this unexampled gen- erosity Congress made tardy reparation, and it was left for the State of New Jersey to make the first offer in the shape of a small farm, which was fol- lowed by the State of New York with the gift of 1,600 acres of wild land in Oneida county. Generous to the end he divided this land among his aides and servants, reserving a mere parcel for himself, on which he erected a log-house, where he resided until his death, of apoplexy or paralysis, on the 28th of November, 1795. Congress finally granted him a pension of $2,500, but never repaid its principal indebtedness. His remains now lie in a modest cemetery in the town of Steuben, about seven miles from Trenton Falls. WASHINGTON MOVES SOUTH. On the Gth of July, 1781, Rochambeau joined Washington at Dobb's Ferry, on the Hud.son, and the two generals conferred respecting an attack by the allied armies on the city of New York, which was soon abandoned, owing to intelligence from Virginia regarding the movements of Corn- wallis, the unexpected arrival of reinforcements to Clinton, and the receipt of a letter from De Grasse announcing his intention to remain in the West Indies. "It is related," says Lossing, "that7 when Washington received the letter froni De Grasse, Robert Morris, the Superintendent of Finance, and Richard Peters, the Secretary of the Board of War, were at the head- quarters of the General, at Livingstone house, and were present. Washing- ton was bitterly disappointed, for he saw no fair hope of •success without the aid of a fleet. The cloud upon his brow was but for a moment. He instantly conbeived the expedition to Virginia, and, turning to Judge Peters, asked, 'What can you do for meV' 'With money, everything — without it, nothing,' was his brief reply, at the same time turning an anxious look toward Morris. ' Let me know the sum you desire." said the patriot financier, comprehending the expression of his eye." Before noon Washington completed his estimates, and arrangements were made with Morris for the funds. Twenty thousand hard dollars wore loaned from Count De Rochambeau, which Mr. Morris agreed to replace by the 1st of October. The arrival of Colonel Laurens from France on the 25th of August, with two millions and a half of livres, a part of a dona- tion of six millions by Louis XVI to the United States, enabled the Super- intendent of Finance to fulfill his engagement without difflcuHy." Thus, about the last of August, the allies crossed the Hudson and marched southward to co-operate with La Fayette, in Virginia. When they reached the head of the Elk there were not sufficient vessels to trans- port them, and accordingly all of the French and a large portion of the Americans made their way to Annapolis and Baltimore by land. Wash- 102 THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. ingtoii, with liochainbeau and the Marquis De Chastellux reached Balti- more on the 8th of September, where the General left his associates and proceeded to M'ount Vernon, which he visited for the first time since he had left it to attend the Continental Congress in 1775, a period of nearly six years and a half. On the evening of the 14th he arrived at Williamsburg, where the columns were directed to rendezvous, and on the 28th the com- bined armies, about 12,000 strong, left Williamsburg by different roads, and marched toward Yorktown. CORNWALLIS S DANGER. When Clinton awoke to the fact that Washington had slipped away front him, and was en route to Virginia, Cornwallis's danger suddenly loomed before him as a gaunt spectre. With a duplicity that liad four years before- lured Burgoyne to his fate-, he sent ready dispatches to the York, advising Cornwallisof his danger, and promising a relief of 5,000 troops that would certainly sail on the 6th of October. Had not this promise been made Cornwallis might have easily abandoned his position, and retreated to North Carolina, instead of withdrawing, as he did, within his interior works, confident that he could hold them against any force until the arrival of his reinforcements. His position proved to be as weak as it was unfortunate. Beside throwing up works about the town, which were protected on the- right by a ravine, and on the left by the head of Wormley creek, he had occupied the high ground on the Williamsburg road, about a half mile from town, then, as now, known as "Pigeon Quarter," where Magruder's redoubts stood in 1862, and awaited developments. La Fayette's little army had been engaged in dodging Cornwallis ever since he had entered the State, and the arrival of AVashington was received with unbounded enthusi- asm. The arrival decided Cornwallis to abandon the works at Pigeon Quarter, which the allies promptly occupied, and thus found themselves in an unexpectedly favorable position for advancing the siege. THE FORCES ENGAGED. On the 30th, Yorktown was completely invested by the allied armies, their line extending in a semi-circle at a distance of two miles from the British works, each wing resting upon the York. The disposition was as follows : The Extreiue Left. — The French regiments of Catenois, Touraine and ArgenOis, under the Marshall De St. Simon, about 3,200 officers and men. Left Centre. — The French light infantry regiments of Santange and Sois- sonnois, under the Viscount Viomenil, and of Deuxponts and Bour- bonnois, under the Baron Viomenil, about 2,000 officers and men. THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. 103 Centre. — The Frencii Artillery, under Adjutant-General the Count De Deuxponts, and the American artillery, under General Knox, about 200 men, behind which were the headquarters of Rocham- BEAU and WASHINGTON, the former slightly advanced. Rigid Centre. — The First Division of the Continental Army, under General the Baron Steuben, composed of the First Brigade, General Wayne, comprising the Pennsylvania regiments commanded by Colonels Richard Butler and Walter Stewart, and a Virginia Continental regiment under Lieutenant-Colonol Gaskins; the Second Brigade, General Gist, composed of the two Maryland regiments commanded by Colonel Adams and Major Roxburgh. Right. — The corps of light infantry known as the Second Division, under General the ^Marquis La Fayette. This was made up of the First Brigade, General Muhlenberg, comprising the First Battalion under Colonel Vose, of Massachusetts; the Second, Lieutenant-Colonel Gimat, aide to La Fayette; Third, Lieutenant Colonel Barber, of New Jersey; the Second Brigade, General Hazen, comprising the First Battalion under Lieutenant Colonel Huntington, of Connecticut; the Second, Lieutenant-Colonel Alexander Hamilton, of New York; the Third, Lieutenant-Colonel Laurens, of South Carolina, together with Hazen's old Canadian regiment. Tlie Extreme Right. — The Third Division, under General Lincoln. This included the First Brigade, General James Clinton, comprising the New York regiments, commanded by Colonels Van Cortlandt and Van Schaik ; the Second Brigade, Colonel Dayton, comprising Olney's Rhode Island regiment, and Ogden's and Dayton's New Jersey battalions. With this division was the Virginia Militia, Governor Nelson commanding, with Brigadiers Weeden, Stevens, and Lawson. The three divisions numbered not far from ten thousand officers and men, of which between three and four thousand were militia. This, with the French left wing, made up an aggregate allied force of nearly fifteen thousand before Yorktown. At Gloucester, where Lieutenant-Colonels Dundas and Tarleton were entrenched, the investing force consisted of the Duke de Cawzan, with his legion of cavalry, the marines from the squadron of Barras, and a brigade of Virginia militia, under General Weeden ; the whole commanded by the French General M. de Choise, aggregating about one thousand officers and men. 104 THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. THE BRITISH. The total British force, as near as can be ascertained, was not far from twelve thousand, but how many of these were non-combatants cannot be exactly determined. A close calculation is as follows : Surrendered, 7,247 : killed, 156; wounded, 326; sailors embraced in the capitulation, 2,(X)0; negroes, 1,800; tories, 1,500; giving a total strength to the enemy of 13,030. Cornwallis's command included the King's Guards, 527 ; the Light Infantry, 671; Seventeenth Foot, 245; Twenty-third, '233; Thirty-third. 260; Forty-third, 359 ; Seventy-first, 300 ; vSeventy-sixth, 715; Eightieth, 689; Tarlton's Legion, 241; Simcoe's Queen's Rangers, 320; Auspach and Bayreuthian Regiments, 1,017; the regiment of De Bose, 349; the reg- iment of the Prince Hereditarj', 484; Yager's 74; North Cai-olina Volun- teers, 142 ; Pioneers and Engineers, 69; the artillery corps. 233 ; stall* de- partments, 321. The figures are the number surrendered. General O'Hara was the second in command after Cornwallis, the left of the works being under command of Lieutenant-Colonel Abercombie, aftd the right under Lieutenant Colonel Dundas. The first week in October was devoted by the allies to a thorough recon- noissance of the grounds, the making of gabions, fascines, and stakes, the bringing up of heavy guns, careful survey for approaches, and other nec- essary preparations for the siege. The enemy meantime opened fire on the pickets and observing parties having shown themselves, managed by one single shot, on the 3d, to pick off four men of the Pennsylvania line. THE SIEGE OPENS. On the evening of the 6th, which was uncommonly dark and stormy, all things being in readiness, 3,000 men, with shovels and gabions, broke ground for the first parallel within 600 yards of Cornwallis's line. So silently and earnestly did they labor that by daylight of the 7th a respectable entrenchment had been completed, running from the York around to thi- works at Pigeon Quarter, and a couple hours later, with drums beating and colors flying, the troopsentered the parallel, and planted their standards. For four days and nights the work continued, and by the afternoon of the 9th several batteries and redoubts had been captured, and a general bombard- ment at once opened upon Yorktown. For nearly eight hours an incessant roar of cannons and mortars reverberated along the river blufi's, and hun- dreds of bombs and tons of red shot were poured upon the British works. It is a matter of historic doubt as to whether Washington fired the first shot, the best information asserting that the first to fire at three o'clock on the afternoon of the 9th was a French battery on the extreme left. It is still possible to conceive that Washington was present even at that point, and there is irood reason to believe that this first shot crashed into a house THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. 105 in Yorktown, and that its results were singularly fatal, killing Cornwallis's Commissar J' General, and wounding the Quartermaster and Adjutant of the Seventy-sixth". So tremendous was this bombardment that the British soon withdrew their cannon fi'om the embrasures, and two British vessels in the river were driven from their posts, one of which, the Charon, of forty-four guns, and three large transports, were burned. All night the ■allies kept up the bombardment, during which still another British vessel was inflamed and consume^. A second parallel was commenced on the evening of the 11th still nearer to the British line, and for the three following days the entire force devoted itself to the completion of this line of trenches. A serious obstacle was en- countered in the fact that the new parallel would not form a sufficient investment unless it could be extended on the right to the river bank, where the ground was occupied by two outer British redoubts. Preparations were accordingly made on the 14th to carry them by storm. AT THE POINT OF THE BAYONET. To excite a spirit of emulation the reduction of one was committed to La Fayette with the light infantry, and the other to the French chasseurs and grenadiers under Major General the Baron de Vioraenil. Colonel Alexan- der Hamilton led the advance of the Americans, while Colonel Laurens, with 80 men, turned the redoubts to intercept the retreat. "At a given signal," says Lossing, " the troops rushed furiously to the charge without firing a gun, the van being led by Captain Aaron Ogden, of New Jersey. Over the abattis and palisades they leaped, and with such vehemence and rapidity assaulted and entered the works that their loss was inconsiderable. One sergeant and eight privates were killed ; seven officers and twenty-five men wounded. * * * Major Campbell, who commanded the redoubts, and some twenty men were made prisoners. The French were no less suc- cessful, they encountered a garrison exceeding 120, commanded by a valiant lieutenant colonel, but after a combat of about one-half hour the redoubt surrendered with forty-two prisoners. The French loss in killed and wounded was about 100 men." We are informed that Washington watched every movement of the assault through the embrasures with great anxiety, and was so highly gratified with the success that he congratulated the armies in the general orders of the next day. It was this engagement that restored to the regiment of Gatenois its original name of Royal Auvergne. So terrible had been the bombardment of the last week that the fire of the enemy had been almost entirely silenced, and some of their batteries, says Johnston, "the fascines, platform guns, and gun-carriages were all pounded together in a broken mass, while shot and shell enfiladed the town from one 106 THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. end to the other. Cornwalliss own headquarters (the Nelson house) became untenable almost from the beginning of the bombardment." During the night of the 14th these redoubts were included in the second parallel, howit- zers mounted, and a fire opened upon the British works. THE EARL TRIES TO ESCAPE. Cornwallis, thoroughly appreciating his critical position, beleaguered on all sides by superior and determined force, his defenses crumbling or pass- ing, one by one, into the possession of the besiegers, and no tidings of the expected succor from Clinton, determined to make a desperate eftort at flight. On the night of the 16th he attempted to escape across the river tO' (Gloucester, leaving his sick and baggage behind. His plans, after reaching Gloucester, were to fall upon and disperse the troops of De Choise; mount his infantry on horses to be taken from the Duke's Legion, and others that might be seized in the neighborhood ; by rapid marches across the forks of the Rappahannock and Potomac, force his way through Maryland, Penn- sylvania, and New Jersey, and join Clinton at New York. This was a most hazardous undertaking, and one that it is scarcely possible would have suc- ceeded, but flight or capture were his only alternatives. Yet so secretly was this movement performed that no knowledge of it came to the allied forces. But a power greater than that of man interposed, and scai-celj' had the first body reached Gloucester Point, when a summer tornado, sudden and fierce, as is common in these latitudes, arose, and continued with un- abated violence until morning. The troops were brought back, and the last ray of hope faded from the vision of the Earl. CORNTVALLIS GIVES IT UP. On the morning of the 17th of October, a date forever memorable in the annals of the Western nation, Cornwallis, despairing of escape and appre- ciating his defenceless situation, sent a flag to Washington requesting a suspension of hostilities for twentj'-four hours, and that commissioners be appointed to arrange terms for the surrender of Y''orktown and the army of occupation. He suggested that the meeting be held at Moore's house, on the right of the American lines, and just in the rear of the first parallel. Washington, unwilling to waste precious time, during which the Earl might escape or the expected fleet arrive in sight, and encourage a continuation of the defence, consented merely to a suspension of hostilities for two hours, to enable his lordship to submit his proposals in writing prior to the meet- ing of the commissioners. To this Cornwallis consented, and submitted the terms on which he was prepared to capitulate. These were generally acceptable, the exception being the refusal to admit the inadmissible condi- THE SIEGE OF YOKKTOWN. 107 tiou that the British troops be sent home to England and Germany, under engagement not to serve against France or America until released or ex- changed. "Within an hour the flag returned with Washington's ultima- tum, embracing the basis of terms upon which he should expect him to- surrender, and to these terms Cornwallis was forced to yield. On the morning of the 18th the commissioners met to consider the arti- cles. On the part of the allies, these were the Viscount de Noailles, a rela- tive of La Fayette; and Lieutenant-Colonel Laurens, whose father, once President of Congress, was at the moment a prisoner in the Tower of Lon- don, having been captured at sea while on his way to negotiate a loan in Holland. For the British appeared Lieutenant-Colonel Dundas and Major Ross. "Moore's house," so called by reason of being occupied by a widow Moore, was the property of Governor Nelson ; a frame building with brick foundation, situated in the midst of a level lawn, within a quarter of a mile from the river, and is, with its surrounding grounds, a part of what is now known as the " Temple Farm," from the fact that vestiges of a small temple or church, and other remains of an ancient settlement, are yet seen about a mile and a half south of Yorktown. Thirty years ago tombstones were yet standing within the "temple " ruins, on one of which was inscribed the year 1655 as the date of the death of its occupant. Moore's house is of interest to the visitor of 1881, as being the place of meeting of the commis- sioners. THE TERMS OF SURRENDER. The articles of capitulation were fourteen in number, and were as fol- lows : 1. The forces under Cornwallis, both at Yorktown and Gloucester to sur- render as prisoners of war; the military to remain prisoners to the United .States, and the naval forces to the French king. 2. The artillei'V and military stores to be delivered to officers to be appointed to receive them. 3. The redoubts captured from the allies on the 16th to be restored, and the garrison at York to march out at two o'clock of the 19th, with shoul- dered arms, colors cased, and drums beating ; to lay down their arms and return to their encampment. An hour later the garrison at Gloucester to oarr}' out a like programme. 4. The officers to retain their side arms, private papers and personal property. The property of loyalists to be respected. 5. The British soldiers to be quartered in Virginia, Maryland and Penn- sylvania, and to be subsisted by the Americans. 108 THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. 6. The officers permitted to go where they please on parole, proper ves- sels being granted to convey them to New York, if they choose, and pass- ports to such as desire to go by land. 7. Soldiers to be retained by officers as servants, and servants not soldiers not to be regarded as prisoners. 8. The " Bonetta" (sloop of war from De Grasse's fleet) to convey Corn- wallis's dispatches to New York, and to be under his entire control during the passage; after which to be delivered to the Count De Grasse. 9. Traders to be allowed three months to remove or dispose of their property, and to be considered as on parole. 10. Loyalists who joined the British army during the siege not to be punished. (To this Washington objected, and it was struck out.) 11. Hospitals to be furnished for the sick and wounded, to be attended by British surgeons. 12. "Wagons to accompany the sick and baggage of the attending surgeons. 13. The shipping and their contents, other than the property of loyalists, to be surrendered unimpaired. 14. No advantage to be taken of any doubtful or ambiguous expressions in the articles, and no infringement on pretext of reprisal. The articles were signed by Washington, Kochambeau, Barras and De Grasse, on the part of the allies, and by Cornwallis and Thomas Symonds, who commanded the naval forces, on the part of the British. THE SURRENDER. The ceremonies attending the surrender were exceedingly imposing. The ground selected was about three-quarters of a mile from Yorktown, to the west of the road leading to Hampton, on the right of which r.oad the Amer- ican army was drawn up in line, and on the left the French, the lines ex- tending more than a mile in length. Washington and Rochambeau stood at the head of their respective armies, and a vast concourse of people from the surrounding country to .participate in the joyful event assembled in numbers exceeding those of the conquerors. As the British troops, now prisoners of war, moved slowly out of the works, and. with colors furled and drums beating, marched down the road between the columns of the com- bined armies, the spectacle was as brilliant as it was humiliating to the vanquished. The French troops, in their white uniforms and standards of white silk embroidered with the golden Hrurs de his. their officers decorated THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. 109 with orders and gorgeous insignia of rank, contrasted strongly with the war-worn Continentals, whose variety of dress no less marked than its di- lapidated condition, suggested an earnestness of purpose that was fully confirmed by their soldierly bearing. The British, on the contrary, were clad in complete new uniforms, which had been issued to them in anticipa- tion of the surrender, and which inappropriate finery served to humble them the more when contrasted with the rather shabby appearance of their conquerors. Cornwallis, unwilling to submit to the public mortification which awaited him, pleaded illness, and sent his sword by General O'Hara, together with his apology. Arriving at the head of the line, where stood Washington, surrounded by his officers, among whom were Rochambeau, La Fayette, Steuben, Lincoln, Knox, and Governor Nelson, General O'Hara tendered the apologies of his chief to Washington, who pointed him to General Lin- coln as a fitting officer to receive the sword of the man to whom he had been obliged to surrender himself a year before at Charleston. Lincoln con- ducted him and his troops to the open field on the right, and there, as the British grounded their arms, General O'Hara delivered to him the sword of Cornwallis as a token of his submission. A squadron of French hussars were drawn up in a circle, within which each regiment marched, and, de- positing their arms in a pile, returned to the line which was drawn up near the road for the final and, to the soldier, the more humiliating ceremony. THE DELIVERY OF THE COLORS. Again Washington and his generals moved to the front, and Ensign Wilson, of Clinton's New York brigade, the youngest commissioned officer in the army, who had been appointed by Colonel Hamilton the officer of the day, to conduct the ceremony, advanced to the front. Opposite him, twenty-eight British captains, each bearing the flag of their regiment, were drawn up in line, which twenty-eight American sergeants were waiting to receive. When Wilson gave the order for the captains to advance two paces and deliver their colors and the sei-geants to advance two paces to re- ceive them, the former hesitated, giving as a reason that it was needlessly humiliating to compel them to surrender their flags to non-commissioned officers. To spare them this mortification, Hamilton directed Ensign Wil- son to receive them himself, and hand them to the sergeants. The scene is depicted in Trumbull's painting in the Rotunda of the Capitol at Wash- ington. Returning to their tents, in the same manner as they came, the British were surrounded by the guards of their lately despised foes, and the ceremony was complete. The artillery and military stores surrendered amounted to seventy-five brass and one hundred and sixty iron cannons, 110 THE SIE(iE OF YORKTOWN. seven thousand seven hundred and ninety-four muskets, twenty-eight standards, a large'quantity of ammunition, and eleven thousand dollars in specie. The prisoners numbered seven thousand two hundred and forty- seven officers and men. A few days later, under the escort of the A'irginia militiamen, the pris- oners were marched, bj- the way of Williamsburg, Fredericksburg and Ashby's Gap, through the Shenandoah Valley, to Winchester and Freder- ick, Maryland, where they entered prison camps prepared for their recep- tion. TELLING THE GLAD TIDINGS. The glorious news of the surrender of Corn wallis was soon spread through- out the Colonies, and was received everywhere among the patriots with joy and exultation. Washington, having congratulated both armies in gen- eral orders, mentioning, with special approbation, the gallant services of Rochambeau, De G-rasse, the Viomenils, Lincoln, Knox, Du Portail, La Fayette, and Steuben, directed Lieutenant Colonel Tilghman, of Maryland, one of his aides-de-camp, to ride express to Philadelphia with dispatches announcing the glad tidings to Congress. He reached the city at midnight, proceeding directly to the house of President McKean, on High street, near Second, whom he aroused from his sleep, and a half hour later the watch- men throughout the city, in proclaiming the hour, were adding, with un- common volubility, ^' and Cornivallis is taken!" This, with the ringing of the old State House bell, brought the entire city into the streets, and, sleep having been banished from all eyes, the night was given up to gladness and congratulations, which were enlivened by the booming of cannons, as the first blushes of morning were lighting the Jersey hills. Scarce were the •early breakfasts disposed of when Congress assembled, and, amid the scarcely repressed acclamations of the delegates. Secretary Thompson read the dispatches from Washington, announcing the surrender of Cornwallis with his whole army and munitions of war. Without debate, on the mo- tion of Edmund Randolph, it was resolved that Congress proceed in a body, at two o'clock, to the Dutch Lutheran Church, "and return thanks to Almighty God for crowning the allied armies of the United States and France with success." Later, the thanks of Congress were tendered to the conquerors, and a proclamation issued appointing the 13th day of Decem- ber as a day of thanksgiving and prayer throughout the Confederacy. Leg- islative bodies, municipal councils, and societies, from one end of the land to the other, vied in congratulatory addresses to the generals, and from almost every pulpit and public meeting place, arose the voice of praise and thanksgiving to the Lord of Hosts. When the news reached the northern wing of the army, commanded by General Heath, on the Highlands of the Hudson, the whole week was given THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. Ill up to a joyful celebration of the fortuitous event that foretokened the dawn- ing of triumph and peace. At New York, Boston, and throughout New England, the enthusiasm was unlimited. Salutes were fired, bonfires lighted on the hillsides, banquets in the cities, and the irrepressible town- meeting in the villages, while at Yale and Harvard the sober professors and the uproarious students compromised their exhuberance in orations and triumphal odes. Throughout the South the feeling was even more intense. The ardor of patriotic zeal, but little suppressed during the tri- umphant progress of Corn wallis, sprung freshly alight at the news from Yorktdwn, and men, women and children of both races united in hymns of thanksgiving and banquets, whereof, says a graphic writer of the period, "the menu was an intermingling of songs and barbecued meats, dances and corn-pone, laughter and the juice of the rye." The king and his ministers received the news of the disaster with uncon- cealed dismay and vexation. Violent debates arose in Parliament, which assembled soon after the receipt of the news in England, and the Opposi- tion, not slow to avail themselves of the opportunity to attack the Govern- ment, inaugurated measures which culminated the following March, in a decided vote to authorize the king to make peace with America. In France the generous sympathy which had prompted the loaning of men and means to secure the glorious result, manifested its joy by a general illumination of the capital, and his Majesty was pleased to order a triumphal Te Deum in the church of the Metropolitan, " to which all Paris repaired, to celebrate the great victory by land and sea. over the English, by the armies of the king, combined with those of General Washington." THE CAMPAIGN AS A MILITARY STROKE. " Viewed from a military light," said an eminent writer more than fifty years afterwards, " the short campaign of Washington against Cornwallis is a fine example of the policy which distinguished the campaigns of Napo- leon and Hannibal — celerity of movement, tenacity of purpose, and uncon- ditional diplomacy. . The sudden transplanting of an army from a secure position to a distance as remote as from Brussels to St. Petersburg; the environment of a conquering army in a position of its own careful selection ; the furious onslaught and bombardment of that enemy that gave him no time for escape or reinforcement: the firm determination which resisted a lengthened armistice, and denied the slightest suggestion of any but the most inflexible terms, alike and combinedly mark the conduct of Washing- ton as the highest example of military genius. But one mistake can be detected in the whole campaign, and to remedy that nature herself, or Nature's God, without whose aid no human arm can hope to succeed, con- tributed her fortuitous support. Cornwallis should not have been permit- 112 THE SIEGE OF YORKTOWN. ted to attempt the passage to Gloucester on the night of the 16th of Octo- ber. The moment was one when every eye should have been awake, every ship should have been vigilant, when not a movement of the besieged should have escaped detection. Yet no less did Csesar compass the defeat of the Nervii, and Marlborough win one of his greatest fields, through the aid which an unexpected freak of Nature contributed to his strategic plans. Judged from its results, no campaign of history, except that of Charles Martel against Abdul Rahman, can compare with that which culminated at Torktown.'' F. T. W. E. ^TZl (L) to ^ T-H r^ ^ 4J "ss, and a full assortment of :es 3xr TT" :e3 Xj o i» E s of every grade from the finest fancy, to the plain Manilla. All sizes in stock. Agent for CHAS. ENEU JOHNSON A CO's. PRINTING INKS. Manilla Wrapping Paper and Bags Printed at Short Notice. 805 and 807 1> St. J^. W., WAS SING TOW, D, C. YORKTOWN, VA. THE FINEST WINES AND LIQUORS, THE MOST COMFORTABLE MATTRESSES, AND THE MOST MODERATE TERMS. R. C. GLASSCOCK, Prop'r. (Caterer for the Inaugural Ball Supper, March 4, 1881. F. TENNY. W. H. CROSBY. Coruer Sixth Street and Peiiiisylrauia Avenue, •-3 Pi3 PS 7 •-•a TV^^SHIN^OTOISr, D. C. PHI€ES A -';> %. * A^^' ?.^ -bo^ ^ V V K ,, / ( ' \<^ \- '^ '■•s- ./ 7. A^^ %■ O ■4^' . ^ •^ .0<=^. . ,^ r. %<^ -<^' % %.^ ^^^. v^' ..-is^ ••^>...*^' o>' ,V * '. 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