|
The Battle of
Lexington and Concord
Document
A
To
the inhabitants of Great Britain: In Provincial Congress, Watertown, April
26, 1775:
Friends and fellow subjects:
Hostilities are at length commenced in the Colony by the troops under
command of General Gage; and it being of the greatest importance that
an early, true and authentic account of this inhuman proceeding should
be known to you, the Congress of this Colony have transmitted the same,
and from want of a session of the honorable Continental Congress, think
it proper to address you on the alarming occasion.
By the clearest depositions relative
to the transaction, it will appear that on the night proceeding the nineteenth
of April instant…the Town of Lexington…was alarmed, and a
company of the inhabitants mustered on the occasion; that the Regular
troops, on their way to Concord, marched into the said town of Lexington,
and the said company, on their approach, began to disperse; that notwithstanding
this, the regulars rushed on with great violence and first began hostilities
by firing on saif Lexington Company, whereby they killed eight and wounded
several others; that the regulars continued their fire until those of
said company, who were neither killed nor wounded, had made their escape.
These, brethren, are the marks
of ministerial vengeance against this colony, for refusing, with her sister
colonies, a submission to slavery. But they have not yet detached us from
our Royal Sovereign. We profess to be his loyal and dutiful subjects,
and so hardly dealt with as we have been, are still ready, with our lives
and fortunes, to defend his person, family, crown and dignity. Nevertheless,
to the persecution of tyranny of his cruel ministry we will not tamely
submit; appealing to Heaven for the justice of our cause, we determine
to die or be free.
Joseph Warren (President pro
tem)
Back
to Case
Document
B
We Nathaniel Mulliken, Philip
Russell, (Followed by the names of 32 other men present on Lexington Green
on April 19, 1775)…All of lawful age, and inhabitants of Lexington,
in the County of Middlesex…do testify and declare, that on the nineteenth
of April instant, about one or two o’clock in the morning, being
informed that…a body of regulars were marching from Boston towards
Concord…we were alarmed and having met at the place of our company’s
parade (Lexington Green), were dismissed by our Captain, John Parker,
for the present, with orders to be ready to attend at the beat of the
drum. We further testify and declare that about five o’clock in
the morning, hearing our drum beat, we proceeded towards the parade, and
soon found that a large body of troops were marching towards us, some
of our company were coming to the parade, and others had reached it, at
which time, the company began to disperse, whilst our backs were turned
on the troops, we were fired on by them, and a number of our men were
instantly killed and wounded, not a gun was fired by any person in our
company on the regulars to our knowledge before they fired on us, and
continued firing until we had all made our escape. Lexington, April 25,
1775.
Sworn by 34 minutemen on April
25 before three Justices of the Peace.
Back
to Case
Document
C
Major Pitcairn screamed at us
“Lay down your arms, you lousy bastards! Disperse, you lousy peasant
scum!”….At least those were the words that I seem to remember.
Others remembered differently: but the way he screamed, in his strange
London accent, with the motion and excitement, with his horse rearing
and kicking…with the drums beating again and the fixed bayonets
glittering in the sunshine, it’s a wonder that any of his words
remain with us…We still stood in our two lines, our guns butt end
on the ground or held loosely in our hands. Major Pitcairn spurred his
horse and raced between the lines. Somewhere, away from us, a shot sounded.
A redcoat soldier raised his musket, leveled it at Father, and fired.
My father clutched at his breast, then crumpled to the ground like an
empty sack…Then the whole British front burst into a roar of sound
and flame and smoke.
Excerpt from the novel April
Morning by Howard Fast, published in 1961.
Back
to Case
Document
D
19th. At 2 o’clock we began
our march by wading through a very long ford up to the middles; after
going a few miles we took three or four people who were going off to give
intelligence; about five miles on this side of a town called Lexington,
which lay in our road, we heard there were some hundreds of people collected
together intending to oppose us and stop our going on; at 5 o’clock
we arrived there, and saw a number of people, I believe between 200 and
300, formed in a common in the middle of town; we still continued advancing,
keeping prepared against an attack through without intending to attack
them; but on our coming near them they fired on us two shots, upon which
our men without any orders, rushed upon them, fired and put them to flight;
several of them were killed, we could not tell how many, because they
were behind walls and into the woods. We had a man of the 10th light Infantry
wounded, nobody else was hurt. We then formed on the Common, but with
some difficulty, the men were so wild they could hear no orders; we waited
a considerable time there, and at length proceeded our way to Concord.
Entry for April 19th 1775, from
the diary of Lieutenant John Barker, an officer in the British army.
Back
to Case
Document
E
Lieutenant Nunn, of the Navy,
arrived this morning at Lord Dartmouth’s and brought letters from
General Gage, Lord Percy and Lieutenant-Colonel Smith, containing the
following particulars of what passes on the nineteenth of April between
a detachment of the Kings troops in the Province of Massachusetts Bay
and several parties of rebel provincials….Lieutenant-Colonel Smith
finding, after he had advanced some miles on his march, that the country
had been alarmed by firing of guns and ringing of bells, dispatched six
companies of light infantry, in order to secure two bridges on different
roads beyond Concord, who, upon their arrival at Lexington, found a body
of the county people under arms, on a green close to the road; and upon
the King’s troops marching upon the,, in order to inquire the reason
of their being so assembled, they went off in great confusion, and several
guns were fired upon the King’s troops from behind a stone wall,
and also from the meeting house and other houses, by which one man was
wounded, and Major Pitcairn’s horse was shot in two places. In consequence
of this attack by the rebels, the troops returned the fire and killed
several of them. After which, the detachment marched on to Concord without
any further happening.
Newspaper account from The London
Gazette, June 10, 1775
Back
to Case
Document
F
There is a certain sliding over
and indeterminateness in describing the beginning of the firing. Major
Pitcairn who was good man in a bad cause, insisted upon it to the day
of his death, that the colonist fired first…He does not say that
he saw the colonists fire first. Had he said it, I would have believed
him, being a man of integrity and honor. He expressly says he did not
see who fired first; and yet believed the peasants began. His account
is this—that riding up to them he ordered them to disperse; which
they not doing instantly, he turned about to order his troops to draw
out as to surround and disarm them. As he turned, he saw a gun in a peasants
hand from behind a wall, flash in the pan without going off; and instantly
or very soon two or three guns went off by which he found his horse wounded
and also a man near him wounded. These guns he did not see, but believing
they could not come from his own people, doubted not and so asserted that
they came from our people and that thus they began the attack. The impetuosity
of the King’s troops were such that promiscuous, uncommanded but
general fire took place, which Pitcairn could not prevent; though he struck
his staff or sword downwards with all earnestness as a signal to forbear
or cease firing. This account Major Pitcairn himself gave Mr. Brown of
Providence who was seized with flour and carried to Boston a few days
after the battle; and Governor Sessions told me.
From the diary of Ezra Stiles,
president of Yale College, entry for August 21, 1775.
Back
to Case
Document
G
In April 1775, General Gage,
the military governor of Massachusetts sent out a body of troops to take
possession of military stores at Concord, a short distance from Boston.
At Lexington, a handful of “embattled farmers”, who had been
tipped off by Paul Revere, barred the way. The “rebels: were ordered
to disperse. They stood their ground. The English fired a volley of shots
that killed eight patriots. It was not long before the swift-riding Paul
Revere spread the news of this new atrocity to the neighboring colonies.
The patriots of all New England, although still a handful, were now ready
to fight the English.
From The United States: Story
of a Free People, a high school textbook by Samuel Steinberg, Allyn and
Bacon, publishers 1963.
Back
to Case
Document
H
To the best of my recollection
about 4’oclock in the morning being the 19th of April, the five
front companies were ordered to load, which they did….It was at
Lexington when we saw one of their companies drawn up in regular order.
Major Pitcairn of the Marines second in command called them to disperse,
but their not seeming willing, he desired us to mind our places which
we did when they gave us a fire, the run off to get behind a wall. We
had one man wounded in our company in the leg, his name was Johnson. Also,
Major Pitcairn’s horse was shot in the flank; we returned their
salute, and before we proceeded on our march from Lexington, I believe
we killed and wounded either 7 or 8 men.
Ensign Jeremy Lister, youngest
of the British officers at Lexington, in a personal narrative written
in 1782.
Back
to Case
|