Paul Revere, William Dawes, and Dr. Samuel Prescott
Paul Reveer warned them that the British were coming, riding on a horse shouting "The British are coming!" while riding through a small village.
Concord
At the time these people were British citizens, if they were patriots they would have supported their King and country. Their actions showed them to be not patriots, but rather traitors.
Concord.
Concord.
William Dawson
The patriot who famously warned Massachusetts colonists that the British were coming was Paul Revere. On the night of April 18, 1775, he rode through the countryside to alert colonial militias of the approaching British troops. His midnight ride became legendary and is celebrated as a symbol of American resistance during the Revolutionary War. Revere's warning helped prepare the colonists for the battles of Lexington and Concord.
Paul Reveer warned them that the British were coming, riding on a horse shouting "The British are coming!" while riding through a small village.
Concord
At the time these people were British citizens, if they were patriots they would have supported their King and country. Their actions showed them to be not patriots, but rather traitors.
Concord.
Concord.
The British were moving to seize weapons and ammunition that belonged to the colonists as part of the traditional right to keep and bear arms as free British subjects. The colonists took a stand to defend their rights.
Paul Revere.
The Battle of Lexington and Concord was made up of two battles that began on April 18th, 1775. British troops were sent to Concord to capture John Hancock and Samuel Adams, but both men had been warned about the British attack. The night of April 18th, Paul Revere rode through Concord warning everybody about the British attack. So when the British came in to take and attack the Rebels, the Minutemen, Americans who were"ready to fight in a minute," were waiting to attack at Lexington. The Americans were withdrawing when someone fired a shot, and the British troops started to fire at the Minutemen. The British then charged with bayonets. Nobody knows who shot first.After this fight, the British found out that Hancock and Adams had escaped. So the British marched towards Concord looking for ammunition. As the British went to look at a nearby farm for weapons, they ran into a group of minutemen at Concord's North Bridge. There was a big fight, and the Minutemen made the British retreat. The Minutemen tried not to let the British retreat, but the retreat was successful. The Battles of Lexington and Concord were battles that took many lives. By the end of the day, British troops had lost 273 soldiers, while the Colonists lost only 94. 18 of these Colonists had died during the battle at Lexington. The Revolutionary War had begun.
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 patriots expected the British to pass through Lexington on their way to Concord, where supplies of guns were stored. It should be Lexington and Concord.