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With Cornwallis At Yorktown

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Authors: The Editors

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October 1961 | Volume 12, Issue 6

While the French fleet was preventing the evacuation of Cornwallis by sea, French and American troops laid siege to his land positions. Some idea of the rigors of that siege has come down to us in the diary of a German corporal named Stephan Popp. The document, recently found in the library of the Historical Society in Bayreuth, Germany, Stephan’s native town, has been translated by the Reverend Reinhart J. Pope of Racine, Wisconsin, the corporal’s great-great-great grandson, and edited by Merle Sinclair of Milwaukee. In this excerpt, we join the good soldier Popp on July 31, when he and his fellow mercenaries arrived to aid in the defense of Yorktown.

—The Editors

 

We were put ashore and at once camped beyond the city. Lord Cornwallis was already here with the greatest portion of his troops … Fortification began in Gloucester, also in Yorktown, for no one could know what we would experience here....

August 26. A French war fleet appeared out on the sea which was said to come from the West Indies with many transport ships and troops. Therefore the fortifying went on strongly day and night, and we hardly had time for eating. Often we had to eat [raw] meat.

August 31. The French ships now showed clearly before the harbor. They drew up in a line on the sea, occupied the straits, and placed troops ashore at Hampton. Many transport ships were said to be standing in the James River....By land a great number of rebels and French approached from Williamsburg. Therefore we had to look forward to an attack by the foe daily by land and by sea....

September 4. Today we changed our camp, because, if the enemy should sail into the harbor, they might do much damage … with their heavy guns....

September 19. We saw the enemy was transporting many troops across from Baltimore on sloops. Many houses of the city were broken down and taken away, because a strong line was being made there …

September 29. This morning the first one of our regiment was shot and wounded. Also many of the English and Hessians were shot and wounded at the outposts by the riflemen. At night about 1:00 all the regiments in the line moved back to the city, all in silence, because the enemy always came nearer …

September 30. The enemy at times tried an attempt upon our left bank, charged three times upon our redoubt, but was driven back into the woods … This month we had hard work and poor provisions.

October 1. The enemy began to fortify heavily to really block us up. They threw no shots against us, because they had no cannon yet. But we fired steadily upon them and destroyed much of their labor again. We … had no rest day or night....

October 2. The enemy still did not give fire, in spite of the fact that we bombarded them all the time, night and day, without cease.