Battle of Great Bridge

The Battle of Great Bridge was fought December 9, 1775, in the area of Great Bridge, Virginia, early in the American Revolutionary War. The no by colonial Virginia militia forces led to the departure of Royal Governor Lord Dunmore and any remaining vestiges of British power over the Colony of Virginia during the early days of the conflict.

Battle of Great Bridge
Part of the American Revolutionary War

Sketch by Lord Rawdon of the battlefield
DateDecember 9, 1775
Location36°43′11″N 76°14′19″W
Result Patriot victory
Belligerents

Virginia Committee of Safety

  • Patriot militia

Province of Virginia

Commanders and leaders
William Woodford Samuel Leslie
Charles Fordyce 
Strength
861 infantry and militia 409 infantry, militia, sailors, and grenadiers
with 2 artillery pieces
Casualties and losses
1 wounded

62 to 102 British regulars killed or wounded, militia casualties apparently unknown.

Great Bridge Battle Site
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Virginia Landmarks Register
LocationBoth sides of the Albemarle and Chesapeake Canal between Oak Grove and Great Bridge, Chesapeake, Virginia
Area130 acres (53 ha)
Built1775 (1775)
NRHP reference No.73002205
VLR No.131-0023
Significant dates
Added to NRHPMarch 28, 1973
Designated VLRJanuary 5, 1971

Following increasing political and military tensions in early 1775, both Dunmore and colonial rebel leaders recruited troops and engaged in a struggle for available military supplies. The struggle eventually focused on Norfolk, where Dunmore had taken refuge aboard a Royal Navy vessel. Dunmore's forces had fortified one side of a critical river crossing south of Norfolk at Great Bridge, while rebel forces had occupied the other side. In an attempt to break up the rebel gathering, Dunmore ordered an attack across the bridge, which was decisively repulsed. Colonel William Woodford, the Virginia militia commander at the battle, described it as "a second Bunker's Hill affair".

Shortly thereafter, Norfolk, at the time a Loyalist center, was abandoned by Dunmore and the Tories, who fled to navy ships in the harbor. Rebel-occupied Norfolk was destroyed on January 1, 1776 in an action begun by Dunmore and completed by rebel forces.

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