MAGAZÍN D'INVESTIGACIÓ PERIODÍSTICA (iniciat el 1960 com AUCA satírica.. per M.Capdevila a classe de F.E.N.)
-VINCIT OMNIA VERITAS -
VOLTAIRE: "El temps fa justícia i posa a cadascú al seu lloc.."- "No aniràs mai a dormir..sense ampliar el teu magí"
"La història l'escriu qui guanya".. així.. "El poble que no coneix la seva història... es veurà obligat a repetir-la.."
The war was effectively over. And it ended not just because of French allies or American courage, but because of a capricious American autumn: dry roads for an army, contrary winds for a navy, and a season that refused to cooperate with the British Empire.
Meanwhile, on land, the dry autumn weather gave Washington’s army a gift: hard, dusty roads that allowed them to haul their heavy siege artillery all the way from New York in record time. A wet October would have turned the roads into mud pits, stranding the cannons. Instead, clear, crisp autumn days let Washington dig siege lines around Yorktown with terrifying speed. weather seasons in america
Here’s an interesting story about how an American season changed the course of history in an unexpected way. The war was effectively over
Most people think the harsh winter at Valley Forge was the low point of the American Revolutionary War. But few know about the strange, deadly autumn that came before it—and how a bizarre weather event in Virginia turned the tide. A wet October would have turned the roads
It was September 1781. General George Washington had been chasing British General Lord Cornwallis for months across the southern colonies. Cornwallis had made a fatal decision: he marched his 8,000 British troops to Yorktown, Virginia, a small port town on the Chesapeake Bay, expecting the Royal Navy to resupply and evacuate him.