II
This story of the Concord fight is taken from the original manuscript of Thaddeus Blood, of Concord, and was first published in the Boston Journal in 1896. He began as a minuteman, and later was a Lieutenant in Captain Moses Barnes’ company, Lieut.-Col. Pierce’s regiment, stationed part of the time in Rhode Island and part in Swanzey, as his own quaint phraseology puts its. He says:
On the morning of the 19th of April, 1775, about 2 o’clock in the morning, I was called out of bed by John Barrett, a Sergeant of the militia company to which I belonged (I was 20 years of age the 28th of May next following): I joined the company under Captain Nathan Barrett (afterwards Colonel), at the old court-house, about 3 o’clock, and was ordered to go to the Court House to draw ammunition. After the company had all drawn their ammunition we were paraded near the meetinghouse and I should suppose that there was 60 or 70 men in Capt. Barrett’s company, and that the whole of the militia and minute-men of Concord under arms that day was not less than 200. About 4 o’clock they were joined by two companies from Lincoln: the militia commanded by Capt. Pierce (afterwards Colonel) and the minute-men by Capt. William Smith—the venerable and honorable Samuel Hoar of Lincoln was one of his lieutenants—and were then formed, the minute-men on the right and Capt. Barrett’s on the left, and marched in order to the end of Meriam’s Hill, then so-called, and saw the British troops a-coming down Brooks’ Hill: the sun was arising and shined on their red coats and glis’ning arms. We retreated in order over the top of the hill to the Liberty pole erected on the heights opposite the meetinghouse, and made a halt; the main body of the British marched up in the road and a detachment followed us over the hill, and halted in half gun-shot of us, at the pole; we then marched over the burying-ground to the road and then over the bridge to Hunt’s Hill, or Punkataisett so called at that time, and were followed by two companies of the British. One company went up to destroy stores at Colonel James Barrett’s, and they tarried near the bridge; some of them went to Capt. David Brown’s, some to Mr Ephraim Butterick’s. About 9 o’clock we saw smoke rise at the Court House; it was proposed to march into town and were joined by Westford and Acton companies, and were drawn up west of where Colonel Jonas Butterick now lives. Colonel James Barrett rode along the line, and having consulted with the officers, shouted, not to fire first; then began their march—Robinson and Butterick led. Upon beginning to march the company of British formed first on the causeway in platoons: they then retreated over the bridge and took up three planks and formed, part in the road and part on each side; our men the same time marching in very good order along the road in double file. At that time an officer rode up, and a gun was fired. I saw where the ball threw up the water about the middle of the river; then a second and a third shot, and cry of fire, fire, was made from front to rear: the fire was almost simultaneous with the cry, and I think it was not more than two minutes, if so much, till the British run, and the fire ceased. Part of our men went over the bridge and myself among the rest, and part returned to the ground they had left. After the firing, every one appeared to be his own commander; it was thought best to go the east part of the town and take them as they came back. Each took his own station; for myself, I took my stand south of where Dr Minot then lived; when I saw the British coming from Concord, their right flank in the meadows, their left on the hill.
“When near the foot of the hill Col. Thompson of Billerica came up, with three or four hundred men, and there was heavy firing, but the distance so great that little injury was done on either side; at least I saw but one killed, and a number wounded.”
The rest of the story is more familiar to us—the steady, running fight, all the way, until Lord Percy’s welcome reinforcement saved the day—and the exhausted British detachment reached once more the sheltering lines of Boston, whence they had set out with so much confidence that early morning. Of the patriots, 49 were killed, 39 wounded and 5 missing. Of the British, 73 were killed, 174 wounded and 26 missing.
III
DR. FISK’S BILL
LEXINGTON, April, 1775.
| The Province of Massachusetts, Debtor to Joseph Fisk, to going to Woburn to dress one of the King’s troops; travel three miles and dressing | £0 | 3s. | 6d. |
| April 19, to dressing one of King’s troops at Mr. Buckman’s in Lexington; travel half a mile | 2 | 0 | |
| April 20, to dressing seven of the King’s troops, at Mr Buckman’s in Lexington; two days at one shilling per day each | 1 | 3 | 0 |
| April 20, to going to Lincoln to Dress two of King’s troops; travel three miles | 3 | 6 | |
| April 20, to going to Ebenezer Fisk’s to dress three of the King’s troops, two miles | 3 | 6 | |
| April 23, to going to Cambridge to dress one of the King’s troops; travel five miles | 4 | 0 | |
| April 26, to dressing one of the King’s troops three times, at Mr Buckman’s in s’d town | 4 | 0 | |
| Lexington, June 6, 1775 | |||
| Errors Excepted, | |||
| JOSEPH FISK. | |||
[On Monument in Lexington.]
In
memory of
DR. JOSEPH FISK,
Surgeon in the
Revolutionary Army and
member of the Mass.
Cincinnati Society,
who died Sept. 25, 1837,
Aged 84 Years.
THE DEAD OF PATRIOTS’ DAY[[23]]
APRIL 19, 1775[[24]]
| NAME | AGE | WHERE KILLED | TOWN FROM | WHERE BURIED |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ensign Robert Munroe | 63 | Lexington Common | Lexington | Lexington Common |
| Jonas Parker | 53 | „ „ | „ | „ „ |
| Jonathan Harrington | 30 | „ „ | „ | „ „ |
| Isaac Muzzy | 31 | Near Lexington Common | „ | „ „ |
| Samuel Hadley | 29 | „ „ „ | „ | „ „ |
| John Brown | 25 | „ „ „ | „ | „ „ |
| Asahel Porter | „ „ „ | Woburn | Woburn | |
| Capt. Isaac Davis | 30 | Concord Bridge | Acton | Acton Centre |
| Abner Hosmer | 21 | „ „ | „ | „ „ |
| Capt. Jonathan Wilson | 41 | N’r Brooks’ Tav’n, Lincoln | Bedford | Bedford |
| Daniel Thompson | 40 | „ „ „ „ | Woburn | Woburn |
| Nathaniel Wyman | 25 | „ „ „ „ | Lexington | Old Cemetery, Lexington |
| Asahel Reed | 22 | „ Hartwell’s „ „ | Sudbury | Sudbury Centre |
| James Hayward | 25 | Fiske’s Hill, Lexington | Acton | Acton Centre |
| Josiah Haynes | 80 | Concord Hill | Sudbury | Sudbury Centre |
| Jedediah Munroe | 54 | Lexington | Lexington | Old Cemetery, Lexington |
| John Raymond | 44 | N’r Munroe’s Tav’n, Lex. | „ | „ „ „ |
| Joseph Coolidge | 45 | East Lexington | Watert’wn | East Watertown |
| Henry Jacobs | 22 | Menotomy | Danvers | Danvers |
| Samuel Cook | 33 | „ | „ | „ |
| Ebenezer Goldthwait | 22 | „ | „ | „ |
| George Southwick | 25 | „ | „ | „ |
| Benjamin Daland | 25 | „ | „ | „ |
| Jotham Webb | 22 | „ | „ | „ |
| Perley Putnam | 21 | „ | „ | „ |
| Daniel Townsend | 37 | „ | Lynn | Lynnfield |
| Reuben Kennison | „ | Beverly | Danvers, Ryal Side | |
| William Flint | „ | Lynn | Menotomy, now Arl’gton | |
| Thomas Hadley | „ | „ | „ „ „ | |
| Jason Russell | 59 | „ | Menotomy | „ „ „ |
| William Polly | 30 | Mill Pond, Op. Menotomy | Medford | Medford |
| Henry Putnam | 70 | Menotomy | „ | „ |
| Benjamin Peirce | 37 | „ | Salem | Menotomy |
| Lieut. John Bacon | 54 | „ | Needham | „ |
| Sergt. Elisha Mills | 40 | „ | „ | Needham |
| Amos Mills | 43 | „ | „ | Menotomy |
| Natheniel Chamberlain | 57 | „ | „ | „ |
| Jonathan Parker | 28 | „ | Dedham | „ |
| Elias Haven | „ | Dover | „ | |
| Abednego Ramsdell | 25 | „ | Lynn | „ |
| Jabez Wyman | 39 | „ | Menotomy | „ |
| Jason Winship | 45 | „ | „ | „ |
| Moses Richardson | 53 | Cambridge | Camb’dge | Cambridge |
| John Hicks | 50 | „ | „ | „ |
| William Marcy | „ | „ | „ | |
| Isaac Gardner | 49 | „ | Brooklyn | Brooklyn |
| James Miller | 65 | Charlestown | Cha’stown | Charlestown |
| Edward Barber | 14 | Charlestown Neck | „ | „ |