Paoli grew around an inn kept in 1769 by Joshua Evans, whose father bought from
William Penn in 1719 near the current site of the Paoli Post Office. Evans named his inn after General
Pasquale Paoli, a
Corsican, after Paoli had received the 45th and final toast at a
Saint Patrick's Day celebration. The inn's location on the
Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike, about 20 miles (one day's drive for a horse-drawn wagon) from Philadelphia, contributed to its success.
Battle of Paoli On the evening of September 20, 1777, near Paoli, General
Charles Grey and nearly 5,000
British soldiers launched a surprise attack on a
Patriot encampment, which became known as the
Battle of Paoli. Having intercepted
General Washington's orders to
General Wayne regarding British rearguard actions, Grey directed his troops to assault the small regiment of Americans commanded by Anthony Wayne in an area near his residence. Not wanting to lose the element of surprise, Grey ordered his troops to remove the flint from their muskets and to use only bayonets or swords to launch a surprise sneak attack on the Americans under the cover of darkness. With the help of a
Loyalist spy who provided a secret password, "here we are and there they go" and led them to the camp, General "No-flint" Grey and the British overran several American pickets and launched their successful attack on the
Continental Army camp. Two hundred one American soldiers were killed or injured, while 71 were captured. The British suffered only four killed and seven injured in comparison. Wayne's reputation was tarnished by the high casualties suffered in the battle, and he demanded a formal
court-martial to clear his name. On November 1, a board of 13 officers declared that Wayne had acted with honor. ==Geography==