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During the winter of 1774–
Thomas Gage realized how desperate the British position was. The people, Gage wrote Lord North, were “numerous, worked up to a fury, and not a Boston rabble but the freeholders and farmers of the country.” Gage requested twenty thousand reinforcements. He also strongly advised repeal of the Coercive Acts, but leaders in Britain could not admit failure. Instead, in mid-
Gage quickly planned a surprise attack on a suspected ammunition storage site at Concord, a village eighteen miles west of Boston (Map 6.3). Near midnight on April 18, British soldiers moved west across the Charles River. Paul Revere and William Dawes raced ahead to alert the minutemen. When the soldiers got to Lexington, five miles east of Concord, they were met by some seventy armed men. The British commander barked out, “Lay down your arms, you damned rebels, and disperse.” The militiamen hesitated and began to comply, but then someone—
The American Promise: Printed Page 160
The American Promise, Value Edition: Printed Page 147
The American Promise: A Concise History: Printed Page 171
Page 161The British units continued their march to Concord, any pretense of surprise gone. Three companies of minutemen nervously occupied the town center but offered no challenge to the British as they searched in vain for the ammunition. Finally, at Old North Bridge in Concord, British troops and minutemen exchanged shots, killing two Americans and three British soldiers. As the British returned to Boston, militia units ambushed them, bringing the bloodiest fighting of the day. In the end, 273 British soldiers were wounded or dead; the toll for the Americans stood at about 95. It was April 19, 1775, and the war had begun.
The American Promise: Printed Page 160
The American Promise, Value Edition: Printed Page 147
The American Promise: A Concise History: Printed Page 171
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