- War in the Northeast
- The Campaign for New York (William Howe vs. George
Washington)
- NY was key
- British and American Goals in NY
- Battle of Long Island
- Americans Flee
- Nathan Hale
- Significance of Battles for New York
- Trenton (Hessian Commander Colonel Johann Rahl
v. Washington at Trenton)
- "Necessity, Dire Necessity"
- Crossing the Delaware
- Importance of Spy
- Surprise Attack and Surrender
- Importance of Victory
- Princeton (Gen. Charles Cornwallis v. Washington)
- Reenlistments
- Washington Flees British
- Washington Stops Retreat at Princeton
- Importance of These Battles
- Brandywine and Germantown (Gen. Howe v. Washington)
- Fight at Brandywine Creek
- Howe Enters Philadelphia
- Americans Attack at Germantown
- Significance of These Battles
- Howe Winters in Philadelphia
- Valley Forge
- Terrible Conditions
- Baron von Steuben
- Saratoga (Gen. John Burgoyne v. Gen. Horatio
Gates and Benedict Arnold.)
- Burgoyne's Campaign down from Canada
- Gen. Burgoyne
- Burgoyne's First Obstacle - Fort Ticonderoga
- Burgoyne's Plan to Meet Gen. Barry St. Leger and
Howe at Albany
- St. Leger's Defeat at Oriskany and Hessian Defeat
at Bennington
- American Rifleman under Daniel Morgan
- Benedict Arnold's Role
- Burgoyne's Surrender
- The Alliance with France
- France's Role to this point
- Franklin’s Role
- The Franco-American Treaty
- British Reaction
- Importance of French Help
- Volunteers and Mercenaries
- John Paul Jones
- Lafayette
- Baron von Steuben
- Pulaski and Thaddeus Kosciusko
- De Rochambeau
- How entry of French changed strategy of British.
- Monmouth (Washington v. Sir Henry Clinton)
- Clinton is ordered to remove to NY
- Dissension in American Army and Gen. Charles Lee
- Lee Retreats at Monmouth
- Washington Inspires Troops
- Story of Molly Pitcher
- Significance of Battle
- The War on the Frontier
- Frontier
- American Goals
- Savage Warfare
- Vincennes (George Rogers Clark v. Henry Hamilton)
- Clark's Plan
- Clark takes Kaskaskia
- Clark and the Indians
- Clark recaptures Vincennes
- Importance of Clark's Victory
- Benedict Arnold and West Point
- Importance of West Point
- The Great Chain and Defenses of West Point
- Seeds of Arnold's Treason
- Arnold's Plan
- Capture of Major John Andre
- Arnold's Escape and Andre's Execution
- Naval Battles
- Privateers
- John Paul Jones (Bonhomme Richard v. Serapis)
- Pursuit of Empire
- The War in the South
- New British Strategy
- Focus on South
- Why
- Charleston
- Fall of Savannah
- Fall of Charleston
- Importance of Loyalists and Civil War
- Banastre Tarleton
- Francis Marion - the Swamp Fox
- Camden (Horatio Gates v. Charles Cornwallis)
- King's Mountain (Frontiersmen v. Patrick Ferguson's
Loyalists)
- Cowpens (Daniel Morgan v. Banastre Tarleton)
- Daniel Morgan
- Morgan's Strategy at Cowpens
- Impact of Battle
- Guilford Courthouse (Nathanael Greene v. Charles
Cornwallis)
- Greene's Strategy in the Carolinas
- Cornwallis' Tactics at Guilford Courthouse
- Aftermath of the Battle
- Yorktown
- Economic Problems of Americans and French - Desperate
Situation
- Strategy of Washington and Rochambeau
- Naval victory of De Grasse
- Siege of Yorktown and British Surrender
- Reaction in England
- How Washington saved the Revolution after Yorktown
- Why did the Americans Win?
- France
- Did England bungle it?
- Could England have won?
- The Treaty of Paris
- American Negotiaters (Ben Franklin, John Adam
and John Jay)
- What France Wanted
- What England wanted
- The Treaty
- Great Britain recognized independence of the US
- Great Britain recognized the US' claims to the territory
west to the Mississippi and from Great Lakes to Florida
- Florida returned to Spain
- US gets fishing privileges off Newfoundland
- Britain agrees to withdraw their troops from American
soil
- US agrees
- British can collect debts owed by Americans
- Congress would urge the states to restore to the
Loyalists the property they'd confiscated and would prevent further
confiscation of property
- England and US could Navigate the Mississippi
- Analysis: Why Americans got favorable terms
- What America was like in the 1780s
- What happened to the Loyalists
- State Constitutions
- Size and Population
- Daily Life and Slavery
- Attitude of Americans
- Epilogue
- George III
- Louis XVI
- John Adams and Thomas Jefferson
- Benjamin Franklin
- Benedict Arnold
- George Washington