3. America’s Birth and the Death of Black Americans’ Hopes of Freedom

In October, 1781, an allied Franco-American force trapped, besieged, and eventually forced the surrender of general Cornwallis’ British army at Yorktown. It was the war’s final major pitched battle, as the British, exhausted by years of fruitless fighting and the mounting costs in blood and treasure, threw in the towel. Defeat at Yorktown led to the fall of the pro-war government in London, and its replacement with one that sued for peace.
From the Black Loyalists’ perspective, that was calamitous news. It meant that the side that had offered them freedom had lost, and their former masters had won. Thousands of slaves-turned-freedom-fighters found themselves bottled up with the British in enclaves such as Charleston and New York, unsure whether the Crown would actually honor its promises to them.



