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For many Americans, the nation’s 250th anniversary will center on July 4, 2026, and the signing of the Declaration of Independence. In Yorktown, Virginia, local officials are asking visitors to look further down the road, to the battlefield where independence was secured years later.
Yorktown’s VA250 and America250 programming is being built around a longer Revolutionary War timeline, one that begins with the ideals of 1776 but continues through the military campaign that led to the British surrender at Yorktown in 1781.
The town’s commemorations are expected to continue beyond the national July Fourth anniversary and toward 2031, the 250th anniversary of the Siege of Yorktown.
“July 4, 1776, marks the moment the Declaration of Independence was adopted, but the fight for American independence was far from over,” Deirdre Roesch, marketing and communications manager for York County Economic and Tourism Development, told Military.com. “The struggle continued for several more years, and Yorktown played a decisive role in bringing it to its conclusion.”
That gives Yorktown a different place in the America250 calendar. The town is not only commemorating the Declaration, but also the military campaign that helped make independence more than an idea written on paper.
“Yorktown is honoring the full arc of the American Revolution from the ideals that ignited the movement to the people and events that ultimately secured freedom,” Roesch said. “Yorktown is where the story comes full circle.”
Yorktown Was Where American Independence Was Won
For veterans, service members and military families, Yorktown’s commemorations carry a particular weight. The Siege of Yorktown was not just a local battle. It was a multinational campaign involving American troops, French soldiers and sailors, and an alliance that helped change the course of the war.
“Yorktown is one of the few places where the human side of military history is still visible,” Roesch said. “This is where soldiers marched, ships arrived, strategy unfolded, and thousands of people from different countries and backgrounds converged at a pivotal moment that changed the course of history.”
Yorktown also remains tied to the military through the U.S. Coast Guard Training Center Yorktown, which Roesch said strengthens the connection between the area’s tourism mission and its military community.
America250 Events Bring the Final Campaign of the Revolution to Life
Several upcoming events are aimed at helping visitors understand that Revolutionary War history did not begin and end with famous speeches or fireworks. Yorktown Day, held each Oct. 19, directly commemorates the victory at Yorktown and the alliance between American and French forces.
Victory Weekend, scheduled for Oct. 16-19, 2026, is expected to include demonstrations, living history programming and interpretation focused on the final days of the siege.
Another event, “Yorktown 1781: Before the Siege,” is designed to help visitors understand the strategy, movements and decisions that brought American and French forces to Yorktown before the final campaign.
“Yorktown was not a single battle,” Roesch said. “It was the culmination of months of planning, movement, alliances and consequential military decisions.”
The most physically demanding event on the calendar may be the Yorktown Independence Day 8K Run/Walk/Ruck and 5K, which takes participants through Yorktown Battlefield. According to Roesch, the route includes Surrender Road, which runs parallel to where British troops lined up to surrender.
The event also includes a ruck option, allowing participants to carry weighted packs along the route. For service members and veterans, rucking is a familiar test of endurance, and at Yorktown, it adds a physical element to a course that already runs through Revolutionary War ground, including Surrender Road.
“It creates a visceral connection between the physical challenge of the event and the endurance and sacrifice of the soldiers who fought for independence on this very ground,” Roesch said.
Why Yorktown Still Matters 250 Years Later
Yorktown’s story also includes harder history that the commemorations will not avoid. Roesch said visitors are often surprised by how important the French fleet was to the victory, particularly its role in controlling the Chesapeake Bay and preventing British reinforcements from reaching Gen. Charles Cornwallis.
Out of Many, One VA250 Mobile Museum Experience
Visitors are also often struck by Yorktown’s place in the colonial slave trade. Roesch said that from 1698 to 1750, Yorktown served as the principal port for tobacco and slave trading along the Virginia coastal region, and that more than 31,000 Africans passed through Yorktown and neighboring communities between 1698 and 1771.
That fuller history, she said, is part of making Yorktown’s commemorations relevant to younger generations. The goal is to make history feel present through living historians, demonstrations, encampments, music, performances and family activities in the places where the events happened.
“We want young people to see Yorktown not as a chapter in a textbook, but as a real destination where they can ask questions, draw connections, and understand how the choices made here still shape the world they’re living in,” Roesch said.
For Military.com readers considering a visit, Yorktown’s appeal is not only that it marks the end point of a famous campaign. It offers a chance to stand where an alliance held, where an army was trapped, and where the fight that began with a declaration moved toward victory.
“The 250th anniversary is a once-in-a-generation moment to reflect on the sacrifices that built this country and the enduring importance of service, partnership, and community,” Roesch said.
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5 Comments
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