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| Battle of Lexington and Concord | |||||||||||||||||
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| Conflict | American Revolutionary War | ||||||||||||||||
| Date | April 19, 1775 | ||||||||||||||||
| Place | Lexington, Concord and Charlestown, Massachusetts | ||||||||||||||||
| Result | Indecisive | ||||||||||||||||
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The Battle of Lexington and Concord was the first battle of the American Revolutionary War. The engagment took place on April 19, 1775, when 700 British regulars, mainly from the flank and grenadier companies, marched from Boston to Lexington and Concord. The British drove the 70 Minutemen from the towns but were ambushed during their return march, beginning the Siege of Boston.
The British Army had occupied Boston for years and was now augmented by naval forces and additional troops. The contest between colonial governors, the army, and the rebel and Tory militias to control arms and ammunition had been escalating for some time. (See Fort William and Mary for a description of this contest.) With martial law declared in Massachusetts, the governor General Gage had ordered Samuel AdamsSamuel Adams ( September 27, 1722 October 2, 1803) was an American revolutionary and organizer of the Boston Tea Party. He was also one of the signatories of the Declaration of Independence ( 1776). Born to a wealthy Boston family, Adams attended Harvard and John HancockThis article is about John Hancock, the 18th century statesman. For other people and things named John Hancock, see John Hancock (disambiguation). John Hancock ( January 23, 1737 October 8, 1793) was President of the Continental Congress, and the first pe arrested for treason.
On the night of April 18April 18 is the 108th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (109th in leap years). There are 257 days remaining. Events 1518 Bona Sforza is crowned as queen of Poland and married to Sigismund I of Poland. 1775 Paul Revere, William Dawes and Samuel Pre Gage ordered a forced march to Lexington and Concord. Adams and Hancock had escaped Boston and were staying at Lexington. The majority of the colony's militia supported the rebel cause and had been gathering a stock of weapons, powder and supplies at Concord. The British regulars, 700 strong, were led by Colonel Francis Smith and were drawn from the elite flank and grenadier companies in Gage's occupying regiments. But most were marching without their own officers. While Colonel Smith had the good fortune to designate Major John Pitcairn from the Royal Marines to head his advance party, the rest of his officers were those too junior to avoid the duty, or subalterns out for the adventure.
The Americans meanwhile were aware of the expedition. Express riders were ready to warn those along their route and at Lexington. Joseph WarrenJoseph Warren ( 1741 1775) was born in Roxbury, Massachusetts. After attending the Roxbury Latin School, he studied medicine at Harvard University, graduating in 1759. While practicing medicine and surgery in Boston, he joined the Masons and became involv sent William Dawes, who covered the longer southern route by land across the Boston Neck through Roxbury, and Paul Revere, who watched the northern route by ship across the Back Bay and through Charleston. Later in the night, Warren rode, too. The British began to awaken their troops at 10:00 P.M., and by 10:30 the signal was given to send the riders out, a half hour before the regiments marched sharply to their boats.