Correction: Revolutionary War History
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When it comes to American Revolutionary War history, we messed up and should be tarred and feathered. NPR's Robert Siegel and Kelly McEvers correct a mistake we should have caught on Friday's program: when the Revolutionary War actually ended.
Transcript
KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:
Now a correction.
ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:
And it comes with a history lesson.
MCEVERS: On Friday's show, the eve of July 4, we explored the question of what happened to the American colonists who were loyal to the crown after the British defeat at Yorktown.
SIEGEL: We identified the year of that defeat correctly - 1781.
MCEVERS: But we also described 1781 as the year the Revolutionary War ended.
SIEGEL: And we were wrong.
MCEVERS: While the surrender at Yorktown in 1781 did effectively end fighting in the American colonies...
SIEGEL: The Revolutionary War did not formally end until nearly two years later.
MCEVERS: Peace negotiations began six months after Cornwallis surrendered.
SIEGEL: And there was drama. The British had trouble settling on a negotiator.
MCEVERS: The American negotiators - John Jay, John Adams and Benjamin Franklin - didn't trust the British, but they also didn't really trust or even like each other.
SIEGEL: But they did get the job done. The Revolutionary War finally and officially ended on September 3, 1783, with the Treaty of Paris. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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