Two Hundred Forty-Seven Years Ago…

The battle for America started just after sunrise at 5:20 am…

“Major John Pitcairn at the head of the Regular Grenadiers,” detail from The Battle of Lexington, April 19th. 1775. Plate I, by Amos Doolittle, 1775.

The report below is from “Battle at Lexington Green, 1775,” EyeWitness to History, www.eyewitnesstohistory.com (2001).

Twenty-three-year-old Sylvanus Wood was one of the Lexington militia who answered the call that spring morning. Several years after the event he committed his recollection to paper in an affidavit sworn before a Justice of the Peace which was first published in 1858:

When I arrived there, I inquired of Captain Parker, the commander of the Lexington company, what was the news. Parker told me he did not know what to believe, for a man had come up about half an hour before and informed him that the British troops were not on the road. But while we were talking, a messenger came up and told the captain that the British troops were within half a mile. Parker immediately turned to his drummer, William Diman, and ordered him to beat to arms, which was done. Captain Parker then asked me if I would parade with his company. I told him I would. Parker then asked me if the young man with me would parade. I spoke to Douglass, and he said he would follow the captain and me.”I, Sylvanus Wood, of Woburn, in the county of Middlesex, and commonwealth of Massachusetts, aged seventy-four years, do testify and say that on the morning of the 19th of April, 1775, I was an inhabitant of Woburn, living with Deacon Obadiah Kendall; that about an hour before the break of day on said morning, I heard the Lexington bell ring, and fearing there was difficulty there, I immediately arose, took my gun and, with Robert Douglass, went in haste to Lexington, which was about three miles distant.

By this time many of the company had gathered around the captain at the hearing of the drum, where we stood, which was about half way between the meetinghouse and Buckman’s tavern. Parker says to his men, ‘Every man of you, who is equipped, follow me; and those of you who are not equipped, go into the meeting-house and furnish yourselves from the magazine, and immediately join the company.’ Parker led those of us who were equipped to the north end of Lexington Common, near the Bedford Road, and formed us in single file. I was stationed about in the centre of the company. While we were standing, I left my place and went from one end of the company to the other and counted every man who was paraded, and the whole number was thirty-eight, and no more.

Just as I had finished and got back to my place, I perceived the British troops had arrived on the spot between the meeting-house and Bucknian’s, near where Captain Parker stood when he first led off his men. The British troops immediately wheeled so as to cut off those who had gone into the meeting-house. The British troops approached us rapidly in platoons, with a general officer on horseback at their head. The officer came up to within about two rods of the centre of the company, where I stood, the first platoon being about three rods distant. They there halted. The officer then swung his sword, and said, ‘Lay down your arms, you damned rebels, or you are all dead men. Fire!’ Some guns were fired by the British at us from the first platoon, but no person was killed or hurt, being probably charged only with powder.

Just at this time, Captain Parker ordered every man to take care of himself. The company immediately dispersed; and while the company was dispersing and leaping over the wall, the second platoon of the British fired and killed some of our men. There was not a gun fired by anv of Captain Parker’s company, within my knowledge. I was so situated that I must have known it, had any thing of the kind taken place before a total dispersion of our company. I have been intimately acquainted with the inhabitants of Lexington, and particularly with those of Captain Parker’s company, and, with one exception, I have never heard any of them say or pretend that there was any firing at the British from Parker’s company, or any individual in it until within a year or two. One member of the company told me, many years since, that, after Parker’s company had dispersed, and he was at some distance, he gave them ‘the guts of his gun.'”

And the first rounds were fired…

I wonder what is being taught to our children (or grandchildren) today? Or is it even being mentioned???

Comments

Two Hundred Forty-Seven Years Ago… — 14 Comments

  1. It’s not being mentioned. Which is rather sad, I think — those who don’t learn history, as it is often said, are doomed to repeat it.

  2. Don’t fire unless fired upon. If they mean to have a war, let it start here.

  3. And a bit later in the day, as Emerson immortalized:

    By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
    Their flag to April’s breeze unfurled,
    Here once the embattled farmers stood
    And fired the shot heard round the world

  4. Come out to a Project Appleseed event and hear this story and the story of the rest of that fateful day. This is a story we should all know well, but few have ever heard.

  5. Patriot’s Day in Massachusetts was more important than July 4th when we lived in Concord in the early 70’s. Lots of re-enactors (both Minutemen and Red Coats), parties, and the night of the 18th someone repeats Dr. Samuel Prescott’s ride.

    Note: Paul Revere was captured early in his ride but had Longfellow as a press agent so his name is known but Dr. Prescott is the one who got all the way to Concord.

    During the day the Concord Free Battery fired a 21 gun salute at Old North Bridge. Yes, a privately owned set of muzzle loading cannon.

    Mass-holes don’t follow the ideals of the Minutemen any more but they do learn them.

  6. All- Thanks! .45- Yes Appleseed does an excellent job of telling the story!

    Rick- Good point on Dr. Prescott, and I didn’t know about the Free Battery! Good to hear that!!!

  7. “The shot heard round the world.”

    What have we done with the legacy that we were handed – as a nation? That’s for each of us to decide.

    What are we handing our grandchildren? They’ll decide how we did.

  8. The Free battery, and understanding what “Letters of Marque and Reprisal” mean (Art 8, Para 11) make a mockery of the argument the 2nd Amendment only applies to civilian arms. You can’t equip a private warship without cannon.

  9. Thanks for that. I was stunned to discover US schools didn’t teach history anymore. “What’s this ‘social studies’?” I’d ask in bewilderment, and no one seemed to know.

    • It’s (at best) a little bit of history, a little bit of cultural anthropology and cultural geography (who is where and why), a little bit of civics (now relegated to US Government class, which might not be taught). When I was coming through, social studies was for grades 1-4, US history was grade 5, state history was grade 6, more US, world history, college US history, US government (civics), economics. Although I took world history in 11th grade, and government/econ both in 12th.

  10. LL- Exactly…

    Rick- There you go with facts again! 🙂

    LSP/TXRed- What she said. I’m older than she is, and I got all those classes (and had to pass them)!

    RHT- Thanks for the link!

  11. Rick is right, very little of the Revolutionary war is taught in MA, and hasn’t been in some time.

    Every couple of years between kindergarten and 12 th grade we had to go to frigging Walden Pond to look at where Thoreau was inspired to write and make every high school student in New England miserable for at least a few weeks in English class with his snobbery and whiny ennui.
    We passed by Lexington Green each time we made the trip and not a word was said except by those boys among us who knew what was there. Not that the Green is very impressive these days. It’s a lawn surrounded by where several busy state roads intersect so everyone north of Boston can get stuck in traffic together. But I mean, it’s Massachusetts, where history no longer exists except in the sense of class struggle and a listing of grievances blaming every prior generation for all the many grievances of the present.

    Wonderful thing, to have left MA. I recommend it.