MMBRID_190809_113
Existing comment:
Concord Fight

On the morning of April nineteenth, 1775, while the British held this bridge, the minute-men and militia of Concord and neighboring towns gathered on the hill across the river. There the Concord Adjutant, Joseph Hosmer, demanded, "Will you let them burn the town down?" There the Lincoln captain, William Smith, offered to dislodge the British. The Acton captain, Isaac Davis, said "I haven't a man that's afraid to go!" and the Concord colonel, James Barrett ordered the attack on the regulars.

The column was led by Major John Buttrick, marching from his own farm. His aide was Lt. Colonel John Robinson of Westford. The minute-men of Acton, Concord, Lincoln and Bedford followed. After them came the militia. At the British volley Isaac Davis fell. Buttrick cried, "Fire, fellow-soldiers, for God's sake fire!" and himself fired first. The British fled; and here began the separation of two kindred nations, now happily long united in peace.

Allen French
Proposed user comment: