It was April 19,1775 in Lexington, Massachusetts. The colonists were going on about there day. Feeding the animals, getting the water, etc. Until, they heard that the British were coming. When Sylvanus Wood heard the news he grabbed his gun, and went with Robert Douglass into Lexington. When he arrived he went immediately to Captain Parker. Captain Parker is the commander of the lexington company. So, they had to come up with a plan. Sylvanus Wood states that the british shot first. “ Fire! Some guns were fired at us from the first platoon.” This quote is important because, he states that the British shot first. And the British say that “ lay down your guns or we will kill you all. The colonists didn’t lay down their guns so, the British
A shot was fired and several men were killed. Although it was never proven, accounts from a few witnesses say that the Colonial Militia shot the first bullet, but the British were indeed the ones who fired first. “The shot heard around the world”. An analysis on the multiple first hand accounts proves that the British were indeed the ones who fired first because of the fact that they were marching upon Lexington to destroy colonial militia stores, and because
The British march to Concord and the people of Concord win the first Battle of the Concord and Lexington Battles. The first shot at Lexington will probably never be known but Evidence
After looking at both the American account and the English account from The Battle of Lexington, The English account provides more information to prove that the Americans might have shot first. The British soldiers wanted to avoid violence, when shots were fired it was a quick skirmish and the british army was barely wounded.1 Earlier a letter was sent to General Gage in January but received in April. The letter included that , Dartmouth, Gage’s higher in command ordered gage, in letter to use force against the patriots.2 The American’s could have figured out that the English were planning on coming because the General Gage was married to Margaret Kemble, an American colonial women. It is said that she had spied against him out of sympathy
Supporting Paragraph On April 19th, 1775, on Lexington Green, early in the morning, gun fire had broken out between the colonists and British soldiers. This specific battle was one of the first leading up to the Revolutionary war. Being one of the battles leading to the Revolution, it is important for historians to know who had fired the first shot, to this day there are speculations, but nobody knows for sure.
On March 2, 1770, a fight broken up between a group of Boston rope makers and three British soldiers. The conflict was nasty up three nights later when a British soldier looking for
In 1776, it took the momentous step of declaring America’s independence from Britain. When the army marched out to the towns of Lexington and concord to seize a cache of weapons held by colonial Patriots who ceased to recognize the authority
(Exposition) (NR) When the British marched into the South, Maurice Thompson said that Jackson was the only man who could defeat them. So, in January, many American patriots of all different back rounds and lifestyles, came together to stop the growing world power of Britain. Then the redcoats, led by General Pakenham, charged the American bunker. The U.S. citizens (Antonomasia for Americans) blazed volley after volley. Again the panicked British charged and their ranks were broken.
“[The British declare] that parliament can ‘of right make laws to bind us all in cases whatsoever’” (Dickinson and Jefferson, Document 5). Another reason why American colonists were justified in waging war on the British is because of the growing acts of British violence against the colonists. “Order quickly broke down, and the frightened soldiers fired into the crowd.
At the village green of Lexington, on April the 19th, 1775, a shot rang out from an unknown shooter on an unknown side. This is as “The Shot Heard ‘Round The World.” To this day, no one is quite sure which side fired first, the British or the Colonists. I believe that the British fired first upon the Colonists.
People had hid themselves in houses ‘till we had passed and then fired” (Lt. John Barker, 4th Regiment, Diary Account on Battle Road). The colonists had no mercy and fired first at the British, who had come to simply restore order. The Patriots were the aggressors at Concord and Lexington because they
Throughout the night, outnumbered colonial forces built defensive fortifications in preparation for an imminent attack by the British. Prepared for the worst, Prescott gave his men the famous order: "Don't fire until you see the whites of their eyes. " Historians believe Prescott’s order was given to save ammunition, in an effort to conserve the Americans’ limited supply of ammunition. On June 17, 1775, the British conquered the Americans at the Battle of Bunker Hill in Charlestown.
When the shooting ended, several people were dead and more were wounded. ”(Document C). With no freedoms, the colonists felt caged
This story only focuses on the some facets of that night that how Revere alarmed everyone by shouting that” The British are coming”, and no one actually pay attention to the deep insight of this event night. Fischer by writing this book took the responsibility and explores the deep insight on the mythical event in American history. Fischer makes it very clear that Revere alarmed colonists that night but not by saying that “The British are coming” instead of word British Revere used Regulars, Redcoats, the King’s men or Ministerial troops. Because after independence tales began to recorded, and in 1775 the colonists still were considering themselves as British. Further Fischer reveals that how the alarm was passed by Revere in way that it passes through all the colonies and curved back to
The sharpshooters were able to kill fifteen cavalrymen as they charged causing the rest of the cavalry to retreat. As the British infantry advanced, the second line was able to hold long enough to deliver the two volleys and then retreat. Tarleton saw Americans retreat as a sign that the battle was leaning towards a British victory. With overconfidence, Tarleton sent his infantry to advance on the American continentals, Morgan’s last line. Morgan gave the order to fire a volley and charge Tarleton’s infantry.
British men-of-war opened fire but in spite of the canon balls Colonel William Prescott walked on the top of the ramparts and his men carried on digging. General Thomas Gage sent three thousand men across the Charles River to Charlestown to attack the Americans. The British troops attacked and the first two assaults were repelled by the colonial militia, resulting in considerable losses to the British force - over 1000 men were either killed or wounded. More British soldiers came from Boston. On the third assault, the colonial militia ran out of powder and ammunition and had to retreat back to Cambridge.