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1757–1834

Marquis de Lafayette

Continental Army Major GeneralFrench VolunteerVirginia Campaign Commander

Biography

Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette, was born in 1757 into the French nobility and grew up with both the privilege of his rank and a romantic attachment to the ideals of liberty that the American cause represented. He sailed to America in 1777 against the explicit wishes of the French government, motivated by idealism and a desire for military distinction. Washington received him warmly, and Lafayette was commissioned a major general in the Continental Army, serving on Washington's staff before being given independent command. He proved himself capable of both the political skill necessary to navigate the alliance between French and American forces and the tactical competence required in the field.

In 1781, Lafayette was assigned to command American forces in Virginia, where Cornwallis's army had moved after its campaigns in the Carolinas. His mission was extraordinarily difficult: he had too few men to confront Cornwallis directly, but he needed to prevent the British general from freely ravaging the Virginia interior and to keep him contained in a way that would allow Washington and Rochambeau to bring their armies south. Lafayette maneuvered skillfully throughout the summer, shadowing Cornwallis, avoiding decisive engagement on unfavorable terms, and staying close enough to keep the British off balance. His successful execution of this strategy of strategic patience was the condition that kept Cornwallis in Virginia long enough for the allied armies and de Grasse's fleet to converge on Yorktown.

Lafayette returned to France after the war and became a significant figure in French politics, attempting to apply the principles of American constitutionalism to the very different circumstances of French society. He served in the French Revolution and in subsequent political upheavals across decades of French history. He visited the United States again in 1824, received as a hero by a nation that remembered his contribution to its founding. He died in 1834, his life spanning the age of democratic revolution on both sides of the Atlantic.

In Yorktown

  1. Aug

    1781

    De Grasse's Fleet Arrives in Chesapeake Bay

    Role: Continental Army Major General

    # De Grasse's Fleet Arrives in Chesapeake Bay By the summer of 1781, the American Revolution had dragged on for six grueling years, and the patriot cause was far from assured. The Continental Army was stretched thin, its soldiers weary and poorly supplied, and George Washington, the Commander-in-Chief, had long understood that American independence could not be won without decisive assistance from France. For months, Washington had been contemplating an attack on the British stronghold in New York City, but a different opportunity was taking shape to the south — one that would depend entirely on the movement of ships across hundreds of miles of open ocean. In Virginia, British Lieutenant General Charles Cornwallis had marched his army to the coastal town of Yorktown, where he established a fortified position on the York River and awaited reinforcements or further orders from his superiors. Continental Army Major General the Marquis de Lafayette, the young French nobleman who had become one of Washington's most trusted officers, shadowed Cornwallis with a smaller American force, keeping watch but lacking the strength to mount a serious attack. Cornwallis felt relatively secure in his position, confident that the Royal Navy's dominance of the Atlantic seaboard would allow him to be resupplied or evacuated by sea if the situation demanded it. That confidence was about to be shattered. Far to the south in the Caribbean, French Admiral de Grasse commanded a powerful fleet that had been operating against British interests in the West Indies. In response to urgent appeals coordinated between Washington and French General Rochambeau, de Grasse made a momentous decision: he would sail his entire fleet northward to the Chesapeake Bay, carrying with him 3,000 additional French troops and committing his naval power to a joint operation against the British in Virginia. It was a bold and risky gamble, as de Grasse could not remain indefinitely on the American coast. His obligations in the Caribbean and the broader demands of France's global war against Britain meant that this commitment would be temporary, measured in weeks rather than months. On August 30, 1781, de Grasse's fleet of 28 ships of the line appeared at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, and the strategic landscape of the war was transformed in a single stroke. The French admiral moved quickly, landing his troops to reinforce Lafayette's forces on land while positioning his warships to establish uncontested naval control of the bay. Cornwallis, who had counted on the sea as his lifeline, was suddenly cut off. No British reinforcements could reach him, and no evacuation fleet could extract his army. The trap was closing. The arrival of de Grasse's fleet was the essential precondition for everything that followed. When Washington learned that the French navy would be at the Chesapeake, he abandoned his plans against New York and began a rapid, secretive march southward with his Continental troops and Rochambeau's French forces. It was one of the most daring strategic pivots of the entire war, covering hundreds of miles in a race against time. Had de Grasse not been waiting in the bay, Washington's march would have been for nothing — an exhausting gamble with no payoff. But with the French fleet sealing off the waters around Yorktown, the allied army could converge on Cornwallis from land while the navy denied him any escape by sea. In early September, de Grasse's fleet fought off a British naval force at the Battle of the Capes, ensuring that control of the Chesapeake remained firmly in French hands. This naval victory, though often overshadowed by the land siege that followed, was arguably the most consequential naval engagement of the entire Revolution. With the bay secured, Washington and Rochambeau arrived with their armies and began the formal siege of Yorktown in late September. Cornwallis, surrounded and outgunned with no hope of relief, surrendered his entire army on October 19, 1781. The defeat was catastrophic for Britain and effectively ended major combat operations in the war, paving the way for American independence. None of it would have been possible without Admiral de Grasse's decision to bring his fleet north during that narrow, fleeting window of opportunity in the late summer of 1781.

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