11 battles
April 19, 1775 Β· Northern Theater
British regulars marched from Boston to seize colonial militia supplies at Concord. At Lexington, a small band of Minutemen faced them on the common β 'the shot heard round the world' was fired, scattering the militia. Reaching Concord, the British found little powder, but at the North Bridge they were repulsed by colonial farmers. The march back to Boston became a running gauntlet as thousands of militiamen fired from behind trees, walls, and houses.
Total casualties
368
Commanders
Barrett vs Smith
June 17, 1775 Β· Northern Theater
After colonial forces fortified Breed's Hill (adjacent to Bunker Hill) overlooking Boston Harbor, British General Howe ordered three frontal assaults up the slope. Twice the redcoats were driven back with devastating losses. On the third charge, colonial powder ran out and the Patriots were forced from the hill with bayonets. The famous order 'Don't fire until you see the whites of their eyes' epitomized the disciplined American defense.
1,495
Prescott vs Howe
December 26, 1776 Β· Middle Theater
With the Continental Army disintegrating from desertion and expiring enlistments, Washington made a desperate gamble. On Christmas night 1776, he led 2,400 soldiers across the ice-choked Delaware River in a blinding sleet storm, marching nine miles to attack the Hessian garrison at Trenton at dawn. The surprised Hessians were overwhelmed in less than an hour. Colonel Rall was mortally wounded; nearly 900 Hessians were captured.
924
Washington vs Rall
January 3, 1777 Β· Middle Theater
Days after Trenton, Washington slipped away from Cornwallis's larger army at night and struck the British rear guard at Princeton. Washington himself rode forward to rally retreating troops, reportedly to within 30 yards of British muskets, before the redcoats broke. The twin victories of Trenton and Princeton sent British and Hessian forces retreating into winter quarters.
518
Washington vs Mawhood
September 19, 1777 Β· Northern Theater
Burgoyne's army, advancing south from Canada to cut off New England, collided with Gates's Continental forces at Freeman's Farm along the Hudson River. Daniel Morgan's riflemen and Benedict Arnold's aggressive counterattacks inflicted heavy casualties. Despite holding the field, Burgoyne suffered losses he could not replace, far from his supply lines.
920
Gates vs Burgoyne
October 7, 1777 Β· Northern Theater
Burgoyne made a final desperate reconnaissance in force, which American forces turned into a decisive defeat. Benedict Arnold, who had been relieved of command by Gates, rode onto the battlefield without orders and led a furious attack that stormed the Breymann Redoubt. Burgoyne's army, surrounded and out of supplies, surrendered 5,895 men on October 17th β the largest British surrender of the entire war.
750
Arnold vs Burgoyne
December 19, 1777 β June 19, 1778 Β· Middle Theater
Washington's Continental Army spent the brutal winter of 1777β1778 encamped at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, just 18 miles from British-occupied Philadelphia. Without adequate food, clothing, or shelter, approximately 2,500 soldiers died from disease, exposure, and starvation. Yet the army that emerged was transformed β Prussian drillmaster Baron Friedrich von Steuben trained the ragged troops into a professional fighting force.
2,500
Washington vs N/A
June 28, 1778 Β· Middle Theater
When the British evacuated Philadelphia after France entered the war, Washington pursued. General Charles Lee ordered an inexplicable retreat just as battle was joined. Washington rode furiously to the front and, reportedly furious, relieved Lee on the spot and turned the retreat into a battle. The Continental Army fought the British regulars to a standstill in 100-degree heat β the professional army Valley Forge had created proved itself equal to the redcoats. Molly Pitcher legend originates here.
720
Washington vs Clinton
January 17, 1781 Β· Southern Theater
Brigadier General Daniel Morgan devised a tactical masterstroke against the feared Colonel Tarleton. Morgan positioned his militia in two lines in front of his regulars, ordering them to fire two volleys then deliberately fall back β feigning retreat. Tarleton's cavalry charged in pursuit, only to find the Continental regulars waiting. Morgan then executed a double envelopment β the militia rallied, the regulars held, and Tarleton's entire force was destroyed. Tarleton barely escaped with 200 cavalry.
973
Morgan vs Tarleton
March 15, 1781 Β· Southern Theater
Cornwallis won the field but at catastrophic cost β over 25% of his force. Greene used the same layered defense as Cowpens. Cornwallis fired his artillery into a melee of both armies to halt the American attack β a ruthless decision that shocked even his own officers. Cornwallis won the battle but lost the campaign: his army was too crippled to hold the Carolinas.
793
Greene vs Cornwallis
September 28 β October 19, 1781 Β· Southern Theater
Washington and the French General Rochambeau marched their combined armies 400 miles south from New York in secret. The French fleet under de Grasse defeated the British navy at the Battle of the Chesapeake, cutting off Cornwallis by sea. Surrounded by 16,000 Franco-American troops and pounded by French siege artillery, Cornwallis's position became untenable. On October 19, 1781, 8,000 British soldiers marched out to surrender β their band playing 'The World Turned Upside Down.'
8,476
Rochambeau vs Cornwallis