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March Route of Rochambeau's Army: Plainfield Pike

March Route of Rochambeau's Army: Plainfield Pike
PlainfieldCT MarchRoute PlainfieldPike.jpg
the march route along Plainfield Pike, in 2016
March Route of Rochambeau's Army: Plainfield Pike is located in Connecticut
March Route of Rochambeau's Army: Plainfield Pike
March Route of Rochambeau's Army: Plainfield Pike is located in the US
March Route of Rochambeau's Army: Plainfield Pike
Nearest city Plainfield, Connecticut
Coordinates 41°40′54″N 71°51′50″W / 41.68167°N 71.86389°W / 41.68167; -71.86389Coordinates: 41°40′54″N 71°51′50″W / 41.68167°N 71.86389°W / 41.68167; -71.86389
Area 22 acres (8.9 ha)
MPS Rochambeau's Army in Connecticut, 1780-1782 MPS
NRHP Reference # 03000312
Significant dates
Dates of significance 1781, 1782
Added to NRHP June 6, 2003

March Route of Rochambeau's Army: Plainfield Pike is a 3.6 mile-long road segment in Plainfield and Sterling, Connecticut which forms a portion of the historic march route of Comte de Rochambeau's army in June 1781 on its way to Yorktown, Virginia, and again of the returning army in November 1782. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 2003.

It is a linear historic district consisting of a portion of Connecticut Route 14A, locally known as Plainfield Pike, which is level in the eastern part but generally hilly with curves. Along the route is open land of pasture and cornfields, wooded areas, and streams, including Ekonk Brook. It is bordered on both sides by stone walls about 50 feet apart for most of the way. As of 2002, the walls were clearly visible at some times of the year, although overgrown in places, but difficult to see in the summer. The only concentration of houses as of 2002 was of 18th- and 19th-century houses in the Sterling Hill Historic District section. Among these is the Dorrance Inn in Sterling (which was part of Voluntown at the time), which was mentioned in multiple French accounts of the marches and which is also NRHP-listed. The segment includes views of farm fields and other countryside suggestive of how the land would have appeared in 1781 and 1782 for the troops marching through, including views west to ridges on the west side of the Quinebaug River valley. According to the NRHP nomination for the district:

Although it is now a paved state highway, the road retains its narrow, hilly, winding character, and for most of its length, the characteristic borders of stone walls remain in place. This is the longest continuous portion of the route to survive with these physical attributes intact. This is also the only portion of the route that still offers repeated vistas of distant ridges (Photographs 3 and 4). Elsewhere, the route has been too affected by re-forestation to allow such views.


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