Student Worksheet Packet
The Shot Heard Round the World: Lexington and the Start of Revolution
Lexington, MA
This lesson guides middle school students through the events of April 19, 1775, on Lexington Green. Students will analyze primary sources from multiple perspectives — British officer accounts, colonial militia depositions, and later commemorative narratives — to understand how a brief, chaotic skirmish became the symbolic opening of the American Revolution. The lesson emphasizes critical thinking about how eyewitness accounts differ, why those differences matter, and how communities construct memory around pivotal events. Students will grapple with questions about who fired first, whose voices are preserved in the historical record, and whose are missing. By examining the experiences of Captain John Parker, Prince Estabrook, and ordinary militiamen alongside the British soldiers who marched that morning, students develop a nuanced understanding of how revolution begins — not with grand declarations, but with ordinary people making extraordinary choices in moments of crisis.
This Packet Includes
- Learning Objectives & Essential Questions
- 3 Primary Source Analysis Worksheets
- 1 Reading & Activity Handout
- Assessment Quiz (7 questions)
Learning Objectives
By the end of this unit, you will be able to:
- Students will analyze primary source accounts from multiple perspectives on the Battle of Lexington Green
- Students will evaluate how eyewitness testimony can be contradictory yet individually truthful
- Students will explain the significance of Lexington in the broader narrative of the American Revolution
- Students will identify whose voices are preserved and whose are missing from the historical record
Essential Questions
Keep these questions in mind as you work through this packet:
- Who fired the "shot heard round the world," and does it matter?
- How do different eyewitnesses remember the same event differently?
- Whose stories about Lexington have been told — and whose have been left out?
These depositions are among the most important primary sources for teaching the Battle of Lexington, and they reward careful, critical reading. Collected by the Massachusetts Provincial Congress in the days immediately following April 19, the depositions served an explicit political purpose: to establish before the world that British troops fired first on peaceful colonists. This context does not make them unreliable — the deponents were under oath and describing events they personally witnessed — but it means students should consider how political urgency shaped what was recorded and how. Guide students to notice what the depositions share in common: the militia was dispersing when firing began, the British advanced in battle formation, the colonists did not intend to engage. Then push students to notice what varies: the sequence of events, the number of shots, whether orders were given. This is where genuine historical thinking begins. Contradictions between honest eyewitness accounts are not evidence of deception — they are evidence of the chaos of lived experience. Use these documents to build students' capacity for holding ambiguity and evaluating evidence on its own terms.
Analysis Questions
Read the document carefully, then answer each question in complete sentences.
Who collected these depositions, and what was their political purpose?
How might the political context affect what the deponents chose to say?
What details appear consistently across multiple depositions?
What is notably absent from these accounts?
How do these accounts compare to British officers' reports of the same events?
Reflection
How does this source connect to what happened in Lexington, MA? What does it tell you about the people involved?
Lieutenant Barker's diary is a gift for teaching source analysis because it complicates the simple binary of "British account vs. colonial account." Barker was critical of his own commanders — he thought the expedition was poorly planned and badly executed — which gives his account a credibility that official reports lack. A soldier complaining in his private diary about his superiors is unlikely to be crafting propaganda. Guide students to consider the difference between public and private sources. The colonial depositions were created for publication and political persuasion. Barker's diary was never intended for an audience. Ask students: does this make it more reliable? Less reliable? In what ways? Students often assume that "the other side" is simply lying. Barker's diary helps them move beyond that simplistic framework toward a more sophisticated understanding of perspective, context, and the limits of any single account. This is exactly the kind of source that builds genuine historical thinking skills rather than reinforcing comfortable narratives.
Analysis Questions
Read the document carefully, then answer each question in complete sentences.
How does a private diary differ from an official military report as a historical source?
What does Barker criticize about the British expedition? Why might this matter?
How does Barker describe the colonial militia? What assumptions does he reveal?
Compare Barker's account of the first shots with the colonial depositions.
Reflection
How does this source connect to what happened in Lexington, MA? What does it tell you about the people involved?
Visual primary sources offer a powerful entry point for students who struggle with dense written texts. The Doolittle engravings are especially valuable because they were created by someone who actually visited the sites and interviewed witnesses, yet they are clearly constructed arguments about what happened. Have students "read" the images like texts: What is in the foreground? What is emphasized? Where are the British soldiers relative to the militia? These choices tell a story. Doolittle was a Connecticut patriot — his sympathies are clear in how he composed the scenes. This makes the engravings excellent for teaching that even "documentary" images reflect a point of view. Pair them with the written sources for a multimedia analysis that builds visual literacy alongside textual analysis skills.
Analysis Questions
Read the document carefully, then answer each question in complete sentences.
Doolittle visited the sites weeks after the battle. How does this affect the engravings as evidence?
What choices did Doolittle make about what to show and what to leave out?
How do these visual sources complement or contradict the written depositions?
What narrative do these images construct about who was the aggressor?
Reflection
How does this source connect to what happened in Lexington, MA? What does it tell you about the people involved?
Lexington Green: Primary Source Analysis
graphic organizer
Structured graphic organizer for analyzing and comparing eyewitness accounts of the Battle of Lexington Green.
# Lexington Green: Perspective Analysis Organizer
## Source Information
- Source Title: _________________
- Author/Creator: _________________
- Date Created: _________________
- Purpose of Creation: _________________
- Audience: _________________
## What the Source Says
List 3 key claims or details from this source:
1.
2.
3.
## Perspective Check
- What is the author's relationship to the events? _________________
- What might the author want the reader to believe? _________________
- What evidence supports the author's account? _________________
## Corroboration
Compare with another source on the same events:
| Detail | This Source Says | Other Source Says | Agreement? |
|--------|-----------------|-------------------|------------|
| Who fired first? | | | |
| Militia behavior | | | |
| British behavior | | | |
| Number of casualties | | | |
## Missing Voices
- Whose perspective is NOT represented in this source? _________________
- Why might their perspective be different? _________________
## Your Analysis
Based on this source, what can we say happened on Lexington Green? What remains uncertain?
_______________________________________________
The Battle of Lexington Green
Answer all questions based on our study of Lexington in the American Revolution. For short answer questions, use specific evidence from sources we studied.
1. Why were British troops marching through Lexington on April 19, 1775?
2. What makes the colonial depositions about Lexington valuable but also potentially problematic as historical sources?
3. Prince Estabrook, an enslaved man, was among the Lexington militiamen and was wounded in the battle.
4. Explain why historians still debate who fired the first shot at Lexington, even though we have multiple eyewitness accounts. Use evidence from at least one source.
Answer:
5. How does Lieutenant Barker's private diary differ from the official British military reports as a historical source? Why does this difference matter?
Answer:
6. Captain John Parker's famous order — "Stand your ground. Don't fire unless fired upon, but if they mean to have a war, let it begin here" — is:
7. Identify one group of people whose perspectives are largely missing from the primary sources about the Battle of Lexington. Why might their perspective add to our understanding?
Answer: