Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Lexington and Concord

I am reminded that on this day in 1775, the opening shots of the Revolutionary War were fired at the villages of Lexington and Concord in Massachusetts.
Some witnesses among the regulars reported the first shot was fired by a colonial onlooker from behind a hedge or around the corner of a tavern. Some observers reported a mounted British officer firing first. Both sides generally agreed that the initial shot did not come from the men on the ground immediately facing each other.[54] Speculation arose later in Lexington that a man named Solomon Brown fired the first shot from inside the tavern or from behind a wall, but this has been discredited.[55] Some witnesses (on each side) claimed that someone on the other side fired first; however, many more witnesses claimed to not know. Yet another theory is that the first shot was one fired by the British, that killed Asahel Porter, their prisoner who was running away (he had been told to walk away and he would be let go, though he panicked and began to run). Historian David Hackett Fischer has proposed that there may actually have been multiple near-simultaneous shots.[56] Historian Mark Urban claims the British surged forward with bayonets ready in an undisciplined way, provoking a few scattered shots from the militia. In response the British troops, without orders, fired a devastating volley. This lack of discipline among the British troops had a key role in the escalation of violence.
 Thus began the shooting war.  It would drag on for many long years before we won our independence.

Here's an interesting little tidbit that I had never read.  From the link above:
After Percy had left the city, Gage directed two ammunition wagons guarded by one officer and thirteen men to follow. This convoy was intercepted by a small party of older, veteran militiamen still on the "alarm list," who could not join their militia companies because they were well over 60 years of age. These men rose up in ambush and demanded the surrender of the wagons, but the regulars ignored them and drove their horses on. The old men opened fire, shot the lead horses, killed two sergeants, and wounded the officer. The British survivors ran, and six of them threw their weapons into a pond before they surrendered.[104]
Ignore old men with rifles at your peril.  We've learned a thing or two, and we don't have long to fight.

Let Freedom Ring.

1 comment:

Old Grafton said...

I'm an old man. I can't hump an 80# ruck and I can't run any more.I can still shoot Expert with a service rifle though, and if the "balloon" ever goes up I don't know where I'll die, but I DO know what I'll be doing. My grandchildren deserve a future.