Palm Trees in southern Florida

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

The Shot Heard Around The World

My previous post was about Yorktown, Virginia, where the last battle of the American Revolution was fought.  This is where the British General, Cornwallis, had his second in command perform the surrender to General Washington and his French allies.

Today I'm going to talk about the first battle of the Revolutionary War.  The Village Green in Lexington, Massachusetts is where Captain Parker and his men stood up to the Regular Army & refused to surrender their arms on
 the morning of the 19th of April, 1775.


Lexington, Massachusetts 

In the 5th grade I had to memorize the poem by Longfellow about this day... "Oh listen my children and you shall hear of the midnight ride of Paul Revere.  On the 18th of April in Seventy Five...."  That poem colored all my knowledge about that day & place ... at least until I went to the Minuteman National Historical Park, stood on the green in Lexington, and read a lot of plaques talking about that day.  



The Minute Man National Historical Park was a good place to visit. The staff was knowledgeable, friendly, worked very hard to help you understand what life was like back then, and what happened on that day.  Well worth the time to go there!


Back to April 19th, 1775...



It had already been a long day for the 700 Regulars. The goal of this operation was to seize
the arms the colonists had stockpiled in Concord.  The troops mustered around 9pm the evening before, to load on the boats for the ride to Charlestown.  

Once arrived, they then marched all night, arriving in Lexington around day break.

But the colonists had been warned.  The alarm for the militia was out and the men of Lexington armed themselves and stood well away from the road to Concord.


The far right corner is where Capt Parker & his men formed up.
They were about as far from the road that the regulars were
marching on as they could get.

When the regulars saw the armed men formed up on the far side of the green,  they left the road and marched directly up to them.  



Words were spoken, demands were made and rejected. Someone, no one knows who, fired a shot. That shot started it all. The eight Americans who died there on the Lexington Green that morning are now buried there....

The marker where the men are buried

The Regulars continued on to Concord and searched in vain for the arms, the arms had been moved because of the warnings.  The Concord men stood at the far side of town, just over the bridge.  Around 0930 fighting broke out, that was the first time the colonists had been ordered to fire on the Kings troops.  Two colonials and two Regulars died.


The regulars having completed their mission to search for arms in Concord 
(and not finding them), then started the long march back to Charlestown & Boston. On the way back they were met by a relief force of about 1,200 Regulars out of Boston.



When the Regulars had marched out of Charleston/Boston the night before, word went out to the local militia.  By the time the Regulars were heading back, thousands of armed militia from far & wide had shown up.  It was a constant skirmish all the back for them.


These were the towns where that answered the call that
went out that night


The road they marched on is now called Battle Road. 


Battle Road


There are small British Union Jack flags marking the graves where the British regulars were buried.

I found it a very moving place....



The casualty list from that day


Thus began the war that didn't end until eight years later, on September 3rd, 1783, when the Treaty of Paris was signed.



3 comments:

  1. I can see why you found it a very moving place.

    I do not remember being taught very much about the American Revolution in school or perhaps I just don't recall.

    Good post!

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  2. We don't teach a lot of history in school any more - the curriculum is too full - and too focused on passing state standards test. We lose history, we lose our culture and we lose respect for country when we do not focus on teaching our history. It is all about standards and passing that God Damn test. In the classrooms you briefly hit a subject enough to cover the standard and move on to something else. It is not the teachers fault it is politicians who have never taught a day in a classroom making rules and requirements for educators.
    the Ol'Buzzard

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The test... justifying the money and letting the rest slip.

      >>According to college enrollment statistics, many students are underprepared for college-level work. In the United States, research shows that anywhere from 40 percent to 60 percent of first-year college students require remediation in English, math, or both.Sep 28, 2016<<
      Remedial Education - Center for American Progress
      https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/education-k-12/reports/.../remedial-education/

      Delete