American Revolution
1781
Greene
crosses the Yadkin with Kosciusko’s boats
On the evening of
February 3, 1781, American General Nathanael Greene and his troops successfully
cross the Yadkin River to evade General Charles Cornwallis. The crossing
followed consecutive Patriot losses at the Catawba River and at Tarrant’s
Tavern, as well as heavy rainfall on February 1, which Greene feared would soon
make the river impassable.
Although contradictory
evidence exists, it is likely that the efforts of Polish engineer and military
advisor Thaddeus Kosciusko made the crossing possible. Kosciusko had made a
canoe expedition up the Catawba and Pedee Rivers, assessing Greene’s options,
in December 1780. He then built a fleet of flat-bottomed boats for General
Greene to use as a means of transporting his men across the water without
having to waste time on manual portage, which would have involved soldiers
removing the boats from the water and carrying them on their shoulders over
land. The boats could be loaded into the Southern Army’s wagons for transport
between river crossings. Kosciusko’s study of the rivers also allowed Greene to
accurately predict the two-day interval between a heavy rainfall and rising
river water.
Greene had ordered the
Kosciusko-designed boats to be waiting for his men at the Yadkin. Thus, despite
the flood of refugees clogging North Carolina’s roads in a desperate rush to
leave before notoriously cruel British Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton
arrived, Greene was able to move his troops to the river and cross it. Although
Cornwallis caught the tail-end of the Patriot crossing and shelled Greene’s
camp on the far side of the river on February 4, he was not able to cause major
damage or disruption.
Greene’s timing was
impeccable–Cornwallis was unable to ford the quickly rising Yadkin behind him.
Instead, Cornwallis was forced to march his men to the aptly named Shallow Ford
and did not finish crossing the Yadkin until the morning of the February 7, by
which time Greene and the Southern Army had a two-day lead in the race towards
the Dan River and safety in Patriot-held Virginia.
Courtesy: HISTORY.com
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