Siege of Yorktown (continued)
FIRST ALLIED SIEGE LINE. By the evening of October 6
all was in readiness for the opening of the First Allied Siege
Linea series of positions which, together with terrain advantages,
completely encircled the British works and brought men and artillery
within firing range of the enemy. The first line was based on the York
River southeast of Yorktown and extended westward just above the
headwaters of Wormley Creek, across the York-Hampton Road, to Yorktown
Creek, which in a real sense functioned as a continuation of the line.
The first line was about 2,000 yards long and was supported by four
redoubts and five batteries. Its average distance from the main British
works was about 800 yards, although, on the right, this was somewhat
greater because of two detached British Redoubts, Nos. 9 and 10. About
half of this line, the right or York River end, was assigned to American
units; the left was built and manned by the French.
At dusk on October 6, more than 4,000 allied troops
paraded and marched to their assigned stations. The entrenching party,
1,500 strong, carrying knapsacks, guns, and bayonets, as well as
shovels, found a line of split pine strips already on the ground. They
had been placed by the engineers to mark the line where the digging was
to begin. Twenty-eight hundred soldiers lay under arms close at hand to
repel attack should it come. Evidently the British were caught unawares,
for their guns were not particularly active. The night was dark and
cloudy, with a gentle rain fallinga factor which may have aided
the troops who were being directed by General Lincoln and the Baron de
Viomenil. By morning, the work was well advanced, enough to give those
in the trenches protection from British gunners.
During the next few days, with precision and
dispatch, unit followed unit on fatigue duty as the trenches, redoubts,
and batteries were brought to perfection. Major General von Steuben, one
of the few veterans of siege warfare in the American wing, had a leading
role in planning and constructing the siege works. Brigadier General
Knox, with the American artillery, played a significant part, too, since
effective gunnery was a prime prerequisite to success in the
operation.
While the main line was taking form south of
Yorktown, the French constructed a trench and battery between the York
River and one of the branches of Yorktown Creek west of town. This
closed a possible point of break-through for the enemy, partly encircled
the Fusiliers Redoubt, and permitted the installation of ordnance at a
point where it could, and did, sweep the British ships anchored in the
river. This French battery on the left, with its four 12-pounders and
six mortars and howitzers, was the first to go into action, firing about
3 o'clock on October 9. Two hours later, an American battery southeast
of Yorktown added its six 18- and 24-pounders, four mortars, and two
howitzers to the bombardment. Washington, seemingly, fired the first
round from this battery with telling accuracy. On October 10, other
batteries, including the Grand French athwart the York-Hampton Road,
were completed and began firing. For the next 2 days there was no let-up
in the concentrated and methodical bombardment of Yorktown, with Gen.
Thomas Nelson, reportedly, even directing fire against his own home.
The effect was terrible as charge after charge was
sent pounding into the British works or went ricocheting or skipping
along the ground. Enemy batteries were knocked out or were slowly
silenced. Cornwallis' headquarters were all but demolished and he
himself narrowly escaped with his life at one point. All the while, the
tempo of the cannonade mounted. Johann Conrad Doehla, a soldier in the
British Army, wrote:
Tonight [October 9] about tattoo the enemy began to
salute our left wing and shortly afterward our entire line with bombs,
cannons, and howitzers. . . . Early this morning [October 10] we had to
change our camp and pitch our tents in the earth works, on account of
the heavy fire of the enemy. . . . One could . . . not avoid the
horribly many cannon balls either inside or outside the city . . . many
were badly injured and mortally wounded by the fragments of bombs which
exploded partly in the air and partly on the ground, their arms and legs
severed or themselves struck dead. . . . [October 11] One saw men lying
nearly everywhere who were mortally wounded. . . . I saw bombs fall into
the water and lie there for 5, 68 and more minutes and then still
explode . . . fragments and pieces of these bombs flew back again and
fell on the houses and buildings of the city and in our camp, where they
still did much damage and robbed many a brave soldier of his life or
struck off his arm and leg.
Such was the bombardment of Yorktown as described by
one participant and testified to by others who witnessed it. The fire
had been devastating. Its effect was reported first-hand to the allied
leaders by Secretary Thomas Nelson, who, "under a flag of truce," was
permitted by the British to leave Yorktown and seek the allied
lines.
The bombardment was directed, too, against the
British ships in the harbor with equal effect. Here "red hot shot" were
used to ignite the heavily tarred rigging and ship timbers. On the night
of October 10, artillery "set fire to two transport vessels and to the
ship of war Charon . . . [44 guns], which burned completely. The
other ships anchored under York set sail in the night and went over to
anchor at Gloucester, to put themselves under shelter and out of range
of our fire." Other boats, large and small, including the
Guadaloupe (28 guns), were hit and burned. On the night of the
11th, a British "fire ship," designed for setting fires to enemy
vessels, was struck and burned with a brilliant blaze. Against such
heavy artillery fire, Cornwallis found it difficult to keep his own
batteries in operation, and even the sailors and marines from the
English vessels added little strength.
SECOND ALLIED SIEGE LINE. The destruction caused by
the superior French and American artillery, firing at ranges from 800 to
1,200 yards, was so great and the enemy batteries were so completely
overpowered that Washington was soon ready to open the Second Allied
Siege Line, which would bring his troops within storming distance of the
enemy works. An "over the top" charge by the infantry would be the final
stage of the siege should Cornwallis continue to hold out.
Work on the second line began on the night of October
11-12, about midway between the first siege line and the left front of
the British works. By morning, the troops had wielded their shovels,
spades, and "grubbing hoes" so effectively that the work was well
advanced and casualties were few. For the next 3 days the construction
continued and artillery was moved from the first line into the new
positions where it could be even more deadly. The British gunners did
all they could with "musketry, cannon, cannister, grapeshot, and
especially, a multitude of large and small bombs and shells" to delay
the work, but, although they exacted some casualties, they were not
particularly successful.
At this time, however, only half of the second siege
line could be undertaken. British Redoubt No. 10 near the river, a
square position manned by about 70 soldiers, and Redoubt No. 9, a
5-sided strong point held by approximately 125 troops, near the road
from Yorktown to the Moore House, blocked the extension of the second
line on the allied right. Before work could proceed, these would have to
be reduced.
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