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Battle of Brandywine

United States history
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Learn how Washington and the Continental Army defended Philadelphia against the British in the Battle of Brandywine during the American Revolution
Learn how Washington and the Continental Army defended Philadelphia against the British in the Battle of Brandywine during the American RevolutionOverview of the Battle of Brandywine during the American Revolution.
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Battle of Brandywine, (September 11, 1777), in theAmerican Revolution, engagement nearPhiladelphia in which the British defeated the Americans but left the Revolutionary armyintact. The British general SirWilliam Howe was lured to Philadelphia in the belief that its large Tory element would rise up when joined by aBritish army and thus virtually removePennsylvania from the war. That move left the forces of GeneralJohn Burgoyne in northernNew York to fend for themselves, directly resulting in the British disaster at theBattles of Saratoga on September 19 and October 11, American victories that convincedFrance to join the American war effort, marking a major turning point in the war.

Howe’s campaign to capture Philadelphia, the American capital, began in mid-1777. The forces had skirmished earlier asGeneral George Washingtonavoided committing his retrained but untested Continental Army. Confident of success, Howe hoped to draw Washington into a decisive battle. Embarking fromNew York City in July 1777, Howe’s army of about 16,000 British and Hessian troops met General George Washington’s Continental Army of about 15,000 in the vicinity of Chadds Ford, onBrandywine Creek in southeastern Pennsylvania, about 25 miles (40 km) southwest of Philadelphia. (Some sources place British strength at 10,000 troops against 11,000 Continentals.)

Using the same tactics that he had employed at theBattle of Long Island, Howe divided his army, withGeneral Charles Cornwallis leading one column while HessianLieutenant General Wilhelm von Knyphausen commanded another. Washington’s plan was to block all of the fords across Brandywine Creek, especially the north ford at Wistar and the furthest south ford at Pyle, thereby forcing Howe to engage Washington toward the middle, at Chadds Ford, where Washington controlled the high ground with two divisions with artillery. Howe, however—aided by local Loyalist scouts—had been tipped off about unguarded fordsunbeknownst to Washington further north of Wistar, where Howe’s troops could cross without incident and proceed to march south for a surprise attack on Washington’s right flank. This superior scouting and reconnaissance would be Washington’s downfall at Brandywine.

American Colonial Flag, popularly attributed to Betsy Ross, was designed during the American Revolutionary War features 13 stars to represent the original 13 colonies.
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Knyphausen’s advance guard did attack at Chadds Ford as Washington had planned, arriving early in the morning on 11 September. Intense fighting followed between the British and the well-entrenched Americans. But the main British column was now concurrently and secretly heading south on Washington’s right flight, an exhausting nine-hour march for the British. Washington at firstdisregarded a scout’s report about a pending flanking action by British troops heading south, but by 2:00 p.m. Howe’s advance was confirmed, leading Washington to divert all but one division to face Howe. But the countermeasure was too little, too late. Confused in the haste to counter the move, and with large gaps in their line, the Americans were unable to mount a coordinated defense when the British attacked around 4 pm. The fighting was ferocious; one British officer recalled “the leaves falling as in autumn by the grapeshot.” The brunt of the fight was borne by GeneralJohn Sullivan’sNew Hampshire division, reinforced by troops under the command of GeneralNathanael Greene.

With Howe’s attack from the north and Knyphausen’s push through the middle at Chadd, the Americans were soon in full retreat, pulling back to nearbyChester and leaving behind strategiccannons. The battle ended with dusk, and darkness and fatigue on the part of Howe’s troops prevented any British pursuit of the retreating Americans.

The Battle of Brandywine saw the first appearance on the battlefield of theMarquis de Lafayette, who, not yet 20 years old, had joined Washington’s staff only a few weeks before. Wounded in the leg by a British musket ball while rallying a faltering detachment of Virginians on the front line, and thusfacilitating an orderly retreat for the rest of Washington’s troops, Lafayette was soon rewarded with a command of his own and served throughout the war with distinction.

The British victory was significant, but it was not decisive. In the end, the British troops occupied the battlefield, but they had not destroyed Washington’s army nor cut it off from the capital at Philadelphia. Over the next two weeks the AmericanContinental Congress had time to evacuate the capital and remove important papers and military supplies before the British finally occupied the city unopposed on September 26. Having suffered a massacre at Paoli and a subsequent defeat of Sullivan and Greene’s combined forces atGermantown in theinterim, losing the capital was a major blow to American morale, foreshadowing the difficult winter to come for Washington atValley Forge, but the Continental Army and the revolution had survived.

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Losses: American, 200–300 dead, 500-600 wounded, 400 captured; British and German, 80–90 dead, 488 wounded, 6 missing.

Raymond K. Bluhm

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