An official website of the United States Government 
Here's how you know

Official websites use .gov

.gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS

A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

American Battle Tactics Help Achieve Victory in Revolutionary War

During the Revolutionary War, the Americans often engaged the British through unconventional warfare, also known as the Fabian strategy.

Men in a variety of Revolutionary War-era military uniforms wield muskets with the bayonets attached as other people in similar attire ride into battle on horses with dead or wounded people lying on the ground.
Battle of Guilford Courthouse
A painting by artist H. Charles McBarron depicts the Battle of Guilford Courthouse, near Greensboro, N.C., March 15, 1781. Continental Army Maj. Gen. Nathaniel Greene, on the lead horse with sword raised, observes the 1st Maryland Regiment as they engage the British during the American Revolutionary War.
Credit: David Vergun, DOW
VIRIN: 260310-D-UB488-1001

This strategy involves hit-and-run tactics favored by Continental Army Gen. George Washington, as well as other Army and state militia commanders. 

In this approach, instead of initiating frontal assaults in open fields, soldiers hide behind trees, rocks or structures. They then shot into formations of redcoats before quickly withdrawing into the forest. 

These tactics wore the British down through heavy casualties and lower morale — American casualties were minimized. 

The strategy is named after the Roman army Gen. Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus, who used it against Carthage during the Second Punic War, from 218 to 201 B.C.

Men in a variety of Revolutionary War-era military uniforms wield muskets, play a drum and carry flags.
Battle of Bunker Hill
A painting by artist Ken Riley depicts the Battle of Bunker Hill, June 17, 1775, near Boston. In the foreground are militia from Massachusetts, Connecticut and New Hampshire.
Credit: David Vergun, DOW
VIRIN: 260310-D-UB488-1002

The American and British soldiers also employed frontal assaults, such as in the Battle of Bunker Hill and the Battle of Long Island. In these pitched battles, soldiers lined up in formations and fired their muskets at each other from about 80 to 100 feet away, getting three or four shots per minute.

As the formations drew closer and with no time to reload their muskets, fighting shifted to bayonets, swords and pikes. 

In addition to these tactics, both sides sent light infantry forward to engage the enemy before the bulk of their forces arrived. They were also used as scouts to determine the enemy's size and location. 

Another key tactic was the siege, which Washington employed at Yorktown, Virginia. The Americans dug trenches, which they used to safely move artillery pieces close to the British, who were surrounded by the Americans on land and by French warships in the Chesapeake Bay.

People in Revolutionary War-era military uniforms fire long guns from a platform at another ship.
Revolutionary War
A painting by artist William Gilkerson depicts Continental Navy and Marine Corps service members on a sailing ship's mainmast, firing their muskets down at British troops on a nearby ship during the American Revolutionary War.
Credit: David Vergun, DOW
VIRIN: 260310-D-UB488-1003

At sea, tactics aboard warships were different. Ships would pummel each other with cannonballs, hotshot or scattershot, with the goal of sinking the other ship, felling the ship's masts, setting it ablaze and killing sailors.  

Then, as in land combat, close-quarters fighting erupted: as the two ships drew abreast, sailors would jump onto the opposing vessel, killing their enemy with pistols, knives, swords and pikes. 

Meanwhile, reflecting another layer of strategy, Continental Marine sharpshooters took positions on platforms on the mainmast, firing their muskets down at sailors on the other ship. 

Related Stories