to capture Paul Revere
The objective of the British task force was a double one: capture the Patriot leaders John Hancock and Samuel Adams and destroy the military depot established by the Continental Congress at Concord.
On the evening of April 18, 1775, Paul Revere was summoned by Dr. Joseph Warren of Boston and given the task of riding to Lexington, Massachusetts, with the news that regular troops were about to march into the countryside northwest of Boston.
to capture Paul Revere The objective of the British task force was a double one: capture the Patriot leaders John Hancock and Samuel Adams and destroy the military depot established by the Continental Congress at Concord.
In the American Revolutionary War, Lexington and Concord were the sites of the first two military engagements of the war. Indeed, these two towns, both located northeast of Boston (Massachusetts), witnessed what is considered to be the start of the war in April of 1775, as British troops marched through the countryside and into these towns in a poorly calculated show of force that was courageously opposed by American militia troops.
The "midnight rides" by Paul Revere and William Dawes (April 18-19, 1775) came first, alerting the colonial militias of the movement of British troops from Boston into the countryside. Later on April 19 came the Battle of Lexington (a skirmish the British won) and the Battle of Lexington (which compelled the British to retreat to Boston). The Battle of Bunker Hill (fought mainly on Breed's Hill) was fought 2 months later, on June 17, 1775.
In reference to the Battles of Lexington and Concord, the British commanders were Major General Francis Smith, British Marine officer, John Pitcairn, and Lieutenant-General Hugh Percy. The battles took place on April 19, 1775.
At dawn on April 19.
At dawn on April 19.
William Dawes, Jr. (April 1745 to February 1799) was a tanner and active in Boston's militia. He was one of several men and a woman who alerted of the approach of the British troops.
There were two skirmishes between American colonial militia and regular British troops, who were on an expedition into the Massachussets countryside to confiscate weapons. It was the first armed battles between British forces and colonial patriots in the American revolution.
The Boston Massacre, also know as the Boston riot, was an incident that led to the deaths of five civilians at the hands of British troops on March 5, 1770, the legal aftermath of which helped spark the rebellion in some of the British American colonies, which culminated in the American Revolutionary War. A heavy British military presence in Boston led to a tense situation that boiled over into incitement of brawls between soldiers and civilians and eventually led to troops discharging their muskets after being attacked by a rioting crowd. Three civilians were killed at the scene of the shooting, eleven were injured, and two died after the incident.
Paul Revere and William Dawes were sent to warn the colonists when British troops began moving from Boston toward Lexington and Concord. They rode through the night on April 18, 1775, alerting militias and residents of the impending British advance. Their famous midnight ride helped prepare the colonial forces for the battles that would ignite the American Revolutionary War.
The Siege of Boston began April 19, 1775. The battle was between the American colonies and the British. William Howe was the British commander, he saw that British position was indefensible and order his soldiers to withdraw from Boston.