Battles of Lexington and Concord | Revolutionary War, Patriots, British (2024)

United States history

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Battle of Lexington

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Date:
April 19, 1775
Location:
Concord
Lexington
Massachusetts
United States
Participants:
Massachusetts
United Kingdom
Context:
American Revolution
Key People:
Thomas Gage
Paul Revere

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Battles of Lexington and Concord, (April 19, 1775), initial skirmishes between British regulars and American provincials, marking the beginning of the American Revolution. Acting on orders from London to suppress the rebellious colonists, General Thomas Gage, recently appointed royal governor of Massachusetts, ordered his troops to seize the colonists’ military stores at Concord. En route from Boston, the British force of 700 men was met on Lexington Green by 77 local minutemen and others who had been forewarned of the raid by the colonists’ efficient lines of communication, including the ride of Paul Revere. It is unclear who fired the first shot. Resistance melted away at Lexington, and the British moved on to Concord. Most of the American military supplies had been hidden or destroyed before the British troops arrived. A British covering party at Concord’s North Bridge was finally confronted by 320 to 400 American patriots and forced to withdraw.

The march back to Boston was a genuine ordeal for the British, with Americans continually firing on them from behind roadside houses, barns, trees, and stone walls. This experience established guerrilla warfare as the colonists’ best defense strategy against the British. Total losses were British 273, American 95. The Battles of Lexington and Concord confirmed the alienation between the majority of colonists and the mother country, and it roused 16,000 New Englanders to join forces and begin the Siege of Boston, resulting in its evacuation by the British the following March.

American Revolution Events

Battles of Lexington and ConcordApril 19, 1775 Siege of Bostonc. April 19, 1775 - March 1776 Battle of Bunker HillJune 17, 1775 Battle of Moore’s Creek BridgeFebruary 27, 1776 Battle of Long IslandAugust 27, 1776 - August 29, 1776 Battle of White PlainsOctober 28, 1776 Battles of Trenton and PrincetonDecember 26, 1776 - January 3, 1777 Siege of Fort TiconderogaJuly 2, 1777 - July 6, 1777 Battle of OriskanyAugust 6, 1777 Battle of BenningtonAugust 16, 1777 Battle of BrandywineSeptember 11, 1777 Battles of SaratogaSeptember 19, 1777 - October 17, 1777 Battle of GermantownOctober 4, 1777 Battle of Bemis HeightsOctober 7, 1777 Battle of MonmouthJune 28, 1778 Wyoming MassacreJuly 3, 1778 Capture of SavannahDecember 29, 1778 engagement between Bonhomme Richard and SerapisSeptember 23, 1779 Siege of Charleston1780 Battle of CamdenAugust 16, 1780 Battle of Kings MountainOctober 7, 1780 Battle of CowpensJanuary 17, 1781 Battle of Guilford CourthouseMarch 15, 1781 Battle of the ChesapeakeSeptember 5, 1781 Siege of YorktownSeptember 28, 1781 - October 19, 1781 Gnadenhütten MassacreMarch 8, 1782 Battle of the SaintesApril 12, 1782

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.

Battles of Lexington and Concord | Revolutionary War, Patriots, British (2024)
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