Presently the French and English dragoons met.
Tarleton raised his pistol and approached Lauzun.
A single combat was imminent, when Tarleton's horse
fell. The English dragoons covered the escape of
their colonel, but his horse was taken by Lauzun.[1]
The 10th of October was marked by a deed of valor.
Major Cochrane had left New York in a small vessel
with despatches for Lord Cornwallis. He arrived at
Chesapeake Bay in broad daylight, ran the gantlet of
the French fleet, which fired briskly at him, and reached
Yorktown in safety. This brave man had, however,
seen the last of his good fortune. Two days after his
arrival he pointed a gun with his own hands. As he
looked over the parapet to see the effect of his shot,
his head was carried off by a cannon-ball. Lord
Cornwallis was standing by his side, and narrowly escaped
sharing his fate.[2]
On the night of the 11th of October the second parallel was opened. Two redoubts, facing the right wing of the allied position, were so placed as to interfere with this parallel. It was necessary to take them. The work of storming the larger one was intrusted to the French. The redoubt was manned partly by Germans. The French, under command of the Baron de Vioménil, were discovered and challenged at one hundred and twenty paces from the redoubt. Some time was spent in making an opening in the abatis. When
- ↑ “Mémoires du Duc de Lauzun,” p. 245; Ewald's “Belehrungen,” vol. ii. p. 391; Tarleton, pp. 376-378; Lee's “Memoirs,” pp. 496-498; Rochambeau's “Memoires,” pp. 291, 292.
- ↑ Ewald's “Belehrungen,” vol. i. p. 11; Johnston's “Yorktown Campaign,” p. 138, quoting a statement by Captain Mure in a letter published in appendix to vol. vii. of Lord Mahon's “History of England.”