Southern Theater of The American Revolutionary War - Consequences

Consequences

With the surrender at Yorktown, the full participation of French forces in that battle, and the resulting loss of Cornwallis' army, the British war effort ground to a halt. The sole remaining British army of any size remaining in America was that under Sir Henry Clinton in New York. Clinton, paralyzed by the defeat, made no further action until his eventual replacement by Guy Carleton in 1782. Such a shocking reversal in fortune, coming as it had on the back of a rare naval defeat, served to increase the shift in British popular opinion against the war. The North Ministry collapsed, and no further major operation on the American continent occurred for the rest of the war. Many historians contend that while Saratoga had started the decline of British fortunes in the Revolution, Yorktown was its death knell.

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