[101] Smith, 18.
[102] Lieut.-Col. Smith's Report.
[103] A. R. Proctor, who heard it from William Hill and told it to Mr. Smith. The shop stood front of the residence occupied by James Schouler in 1864. Smith, West Cambridge Address, page 19.
[104] Mrs. Almira T. Whittemore in Parker's Arlington, 194-5.
[105] Mrs. Henry Whittemore's Statement, Smith's West Cambridge Address, 20.
[106] Deposition of Wm. Munroe who states that he saw about two hundred cartridge ends dropped by the soldiers when loading.
[107] Deposition of William Munroe, reciting a statement to him by a British prisoner.
[108] Deposition of Captain John Parker.
[109] Article by Elizabeth S. Parker in Lexington Historical Society, I, 47.
[110] "William Dimond. Died July 29, 1828. Aged 73." Inscription on his gravestone in Peterboro, N. H. See article in the Boston Globe, Sept. 23, 1903, speaking of him at length as the drummer in Capt. Parker's Company. See also the deposition of Sylvanus Wood who called him William Dimon. See also list of Capt. Parker's Company in Boutwell's Oration at Acton.