978-1-4222-3353-5

44

The American Revolution

However, the British fleet eventually sailed up the Chesapeake Bay. On August 25, some 17,000 troops under the command of General Howe landed at Head of Elk, Maryland. They were just 45 miles southwest of Philadelphia. Washington moved to block the British advance in southeastern Penn- sylvania, at Brandywine Creek. He deployed troops on the eastern bank of the Brandywine, at every place he thought the British could cross. He expected the fighting to occur at Chad’s Ford (today spelled Chadds Ford). On the morning of September 11, several thousand Hessians and red- coats did attack around Chad’s Ford. But the main body of Howe’s army crossed the Brandywine about eight miles to the north, at a ford Washing- ton didn’t know about. In the afternoon, 8,000 to 10,000 British troops bore down on the American right flank. The American right and center gave way amid fierce fighting. But a reserve division was rushed forward under General Nathanael Greene. Greene’s division slowed the British advance. Washington’s army was able

to disengage without being destroyed. Casualties, though, had been heavy. After the Battle of Brandywine, Washington tried to keep his forces between the British army and Phila- delphia. But the British managed to maneuver around the thinly spread Continental troops. On September 26, Howe’s army marched unopposed into Philadelphia. The Continental Con- gress had fled the city a week earlier. Washington didn’t wait long before trying to dislodge the British from Philadelphia. Early in the morning on October 4, about 11,000 American troops converged on Germantown, a

During the Battle of Germantown, near Philadel- phia, British troops occupied this stone mansion and thwarted an American attack. The Continen- tal Army was unable to prevent British troops from capturing and occupying Philadelphia, the colonies’ largest city, in the fall of 1777.

American_Rev_Interior_7.indd 44

1/7/15 9:37 PM

Made with