Posted on 04/19/2026 8:09:26 AM PDT by PROCON
On April 19, 1775, the opening shots of the American Revolutionary War at Lexington and Concord—later immortalized as “the shot heard around the world”—gave way, almost immediately, to something more consequential than a single day’s fighting. As British regulars retreated into Boston under constant fire from colonial militia, the countryside did not simply quiet. Instead, it closed in. What began as a running battle hardened into a siege—an improvised but determined effort by New England militias to isolate British forces inside the city and challenge imperial authority in a sustained way.
Boston, already a focal point of imperial tension, now became a trapped garrison. British troops under Gen. Thomas Gage, having marched out to seize colonial military supplies and arrest rebel leaders, found themselves driven back by thousands of armed farmers and townsmen who had mobilized with striking speed. By the evening of April 19, the roads leading into Boston were no longer secure. Militia units from Massachusetts and neighboring colonies converged, occupying key positions along the narrow neck of land that connected the city to the mainland.
The geography of Boston made this possible. Surrounded by water on three sides and connected to the mainland by a thin strip known as Boston Neck, the city could be effectively cut off if that corridor were controlled. Colonial forces moved quickly to do just that. Within days, an informal but increasingly organized ring of militia encampments formed around British-held Boston, stretching from Roxbury in the south to Cambridge and beyond in the north. Their objective was not to storm the city outright—something they lacked the training and heavy weaponry to attempt—but to contain the British army, restrict its movement, and force a strategic stalemate.
(Excerpt) Read more at thisdayofhistory.com ...
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Dang! Today is Patriot’s Day. It’s too bad little Jimmy Gollum Carwreck is still breathing our oxygen. The treasonous biatch. Semper Fi my arse.
So that is what the left is LARPing.
Related...
“A Scene the Most Shocking New England Ever Beheld” John Adams to William Barrell April 19, 1775
Lexington and Concord are a Fascinating
Battle.
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Lexington and Concord are a Fascinating
Battle.
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Ditto.
I lived 3 miles downriver from the Old North Bridge in Concord for the first 10 years of my life before moving to Arizona. No school on April 19th. Everybody from miles around was in Concord and Lexington watching the parades and honoring the American patriots. Patriot’s day meant something. Something big.
In the tense months following the passage of the Intolerable Acts (also known as the Coercive Acts) in 1774, which punished Massachusetts for the Boston Tea Party by closing Boston Harbor, altering the colonial government, and restricting local rights, colonists across the province grew deeply concerned that British authorities under General Thomas Gage might seize their military supplies. Many towns quietly and discreetly began moving or hiding their town-owned gunpowder and arms from central storage facilities, particularly the large provincial powder house in Charlestown (now Powder House Square in Somerville).
By late August 1774, William Brattle, the provincial militia leader, informed Gage in a letter dated August 27 that the towns had already removed all of their own supplies from the Charlestown magazine, leaving only the provincial ("King's") powder behind. This widespread precautionary action involved numerous towns, primarily in the greater Boston area and Middlesex County. No exhaustive central list of all the towns that undertook to secure their gunpowder survives due to the decentralized and often secretive nature of the efforts.
These moves accelerated after the events of early September 1774. On September 1, Gage ordered approximately 260 British regulars to secretly remove the remaining provincial gunpowder from the Charlestown powder house and two field pieces from Cambridge, transporting them to Castle William in Boston Harbor for safekeeping. The operation itself was bloodless and limited in scope, but false rumors spread rapidly that the British had attacked Boston, shed blood (with some claims of six killed), or even bombarded the city. This sparked what became known as the Powder Alarm: on September 2, thousands of New England militiamen (with estimates reaching tens of thousands regionally) mobilized and marched toward Cambridge and Boston. Loyalists fled to the city for protection, but once the rumors proved false and the facts emerged, the militia dispersed without firing a shot. The incident served as a major "dress rehearsal" for the revolution, highlighting how quickly colonial forces could assemble in response to perceived threats and significantly heightening tensions in the lead-up to open conflict.
Following the Powder Alarm, local militias became even more vigilant. Supplies were frequently relocated further inland, away from British-controlled areas near the coast. This grassroots effort contributed directly to the establishment of major provincial magazines in Concord and Worcester, which served as key collection points for military stores gathered or moved from various towns. The Massachusetts Provincial Congress later directed such centralization as part of broader preparations, including militia reorganization under the Suffolk Resolves.
While a complete roster of every town that participated in moving or hiding gunpowder remains elusive—many actions were handled locally by committees of safety or militia companies without centralized documentation—historical accounts confirm that dozens of towns, especially those with access to the Charlestown facility, took part starting in the summer of 1774. Specific towns or places prominently associated with these or related efforts include:
Broader measures, such as purchasing additional powder or hiding arms, occurred in many other communities across eastern and central Massachusetts. Related incidents, like the February 1775 standoff in Salem or the later British expedition to Concord on April 19, 1775, built upon this atmosphere of suspicion and preparation. In essence, the decentralized movement of gunpowder after the Intolerable Acts, culminating in the Powder Alarm, represented a critical escalation: colonists shifted from passive resistance to active, organized defense of their resources, setting the stage for the armed confrontations that began seven months later on the road to Lexington and Concord.
The Minute Men: The First Fight: Myths and Realities of the American Revolution, 1989, by John R. Galvin, a U.S. Army General (four-star general who served as Supreme Allied Commander Europe and as Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army). Provides a military-focused history of the minutemen, the opening battles at Lexington and Concord, and the myths versus realities of that first day of fighting.
Paul Revere’s Ride, 1994, by David Hackett Fischer. It goes well beyond Revere's ride and covers the British retreat to Boston after the fighting at Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775—often called the “Battle Road” phase of the engagement. It provides a detailed, hour-by-hour account of the full day’s events, including:
When I reflect and consider that the fight was between whose parents but a few generations ago were brothers, I shudder at the thought, and there’s no knowing where our calamities will end.
This sparked what became known as the Powder Alarm: on September 2, thousands of New England militiamen (with estimates reaching tens of thousands regionally) mobilized and marched toward Cambridge and Boston. Loyalists fled to the city for protection, but once the rumors proved false and the facts emerged, the militia dispersed without firing a shot. The incident served as a major “dress rehearsal” for the revolution, highlighting how quickly colonial forces could assemble in response to perceived threats and significantly heightening tensions in the lead-up to open conflict.
Tens of thousands! All summoned without any electronic communications. Just people riding from town to town sounding the alarm and the populace responding with their rifles and scatterguns.
Too bad that antifa isn’t put down like that.
It illustrates the 2nd.
“A well regulated militia being necessary.............”
Exactly right. The Massachusetts events were still fresh in the minds of the Framers when they drafted the Constitution and Bill of Rights. During the 1787–1788 ratification debates and the 1789 congressional discussions on the Bill of Rights, references to the need for a well-regulated militia (to avoid reliance on a dangerous standing army) and the right of the people to keep and bear arms echoed the lessons of 1774–1775.
The sequence—from the Powder Alarm’s mass mobilization to the “shot heard round the world”—underscored that an armed and organized populace was vital for securing a free state.
This historical experience helped embed the militia clause and arms right into the Second Amendment’s text and purpose.
I think Cornwallis said something like ‘They’re farmers with pitchforks’.
underscored that an armed and organized populace was vital for securing a free state.
https://legalclarity.org/what-does-well-regulated-mean-in-the-2nd-amendment/
In the Second Amendment, “well regulated” meant properly disciplined, trained, and equipped for military service. The Supreme Court confirmed this reading in District of Columbia v. Heller (2008), where Justice Scalia wrote that the phrase “implies nothing more than the imposition of proper discipline and training.” That 18th-century meaning is narrower than the modern sense of “regulated,” which most people associate with government rules and restrictions. The gap between those two meanings sits at the center of almost every modern debate over gun rights.
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