Battle of Green Spring
Green Spring, Virginia (also Greenspring, Green Springs, and Green Springs Farm) is a colonial era plantation developed by Royal Governor Sir William Berkeley in Virginia northwest of Williamsburg. On July 6, 1781 General "Mad" Anthony Wayne was repulsed at Green Springs Farm by the British army in the last major battle of the Virginia campaign prior to the siege of Yorktown.
General Wayne with 800 men was unknowingly facing the entire British Army of 5,000 men under General Cornwallis at Green Spring. Wayne tried to confuse the enemy by sending marksmen forward and by sending runners back five miles to the Continental Army to let them know what he was facing. The British commander, not fooled by Wayne's ruse, began to advance. Wayne recognizing that he would be overwhelmed before the American army could arrive, organized a bayonet charge. The British, believing that no one would order such an attack without superior forces, withdrew to Portsmouth, and then later to Battle of Yorktown.
In the battle, the British had about 75 casualties and the Americans twice as many, with 28 killed.