Siege of Yorktown
The Battle of Yorktown, sometimes also referred to as the Seige of Yorktown or the Surrender of Yorktown, was the closing battle of the American Revolutionary War.
Fought bewteen Continental and British forces, the battle took place in and around Yorktown, Virginia. George Washington and Marquis de Lafayette began an assault on the British-held city on 28 September 1781, where the British General Charles Cornwallis had stationed his troops with the intention of trapping the American leaders on the cape.
With the support of the French Navy, Washington and Lafayette laid seige to the city and engaged Cornwallis's troops in the fields around it for the next three weeks. The British were unable to either escape or provide reinforcements due to the success of the French with the Battle of the Chesapeake, allowing for a French naval blockade of the Chesapeake Bay. Aside from Connor's assistance in the blockade,the Colonial Assassins also covertly aided the American command on land, eliminating British threats as the battle went on.
With the American-French army gaining ground after several skirmishes, the British situation began to rapidly deteriorate, and Cornwallis offered to negotiate the terms of his surrender on 17 September. Two days later, the British Army formally surrendered. In the following days, Washington gained possession of an Apple of Eden from a British officer.
In the aftermath of the battle, the British finally recognized the Declaration of Independence and opened negotiations to officially end the war, culminating in the Treaty of Paris in 1783. Meanwhile, in the days following the surrender, Washington gained possession of an Apple of Eden from a British officer, and later began having terrifying nightmares caused by the object until he gave it to Connor after the war's end.