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What Happened at Dawn
Stand your ground. Don't fire unless fired upon. But if they mean to have a war, let it begin here.
Capt. John Parker · Lexington Green · April 19, 1775
1775
Battle of Lexington
1775
Paul Revere and William Dawes Warn Lexington
1775
Captain Parker Musters the Militia
1775
British Retreat Through Lexington

Lexington

MA · American Revolution

Before dawn on April 19, 1775, roughly seventy militiamen assembled on Lexington Green to face a British column ten times their size.

The First Shot
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April 19, 1775
The Shot Heard Round the World
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77 militiamen. 700 British regulars. The first morning of the war.

Exceptional
95.9/100
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On the morning of April 19, 1775, a loosely assembled group of roughly seventy-seven men stood on a triangular patch of common land in the small farming town of Lexington, Massachusetts. They were not professional soldiers. They were farmers, artisans, and laborers, many of them related to one another by blood or marriage, most of them bone-tired from a night of waiting and false alarms. Within minutes, they would become the first Americans to face British musket fire in what would grow into a war for independence. What happened on Lexington Green that morning — confused, brief, and bloody — transformed a political crisis into an armed revolution and gave the town a permanent place in the founding story of the United States.

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