British retreat from Concord - click for larger view Source: National Park Service
The previous battle in the British Battles sequence is the Battle of Quebec 1759 The next battle of the American Revolutionary War is the Battle of Bunker Hill Return to the American Revolutionary War index Battle: Lexington and Concord War: American Revolution Date of the Battle of Lexington and Concord: 19th April 1775 Place of the Battle of Lexington and Concord: Boston, Massachusetts Combatants at the Battle of Lexington and Concord: British Troops and the Militia of Massachusetts Generals at the Battle of Lexington and Concord: Colonel Smith, Major Pitcairn and Lord Percy commanded the British Troops. Paul Revere and William Dawes rode to warn the villages on the route to Concord and the Congress. Militia were commanded by Barrett, Buttrick, Robinson and many others. Size of the armies at the Battle of Lexington and Concord: 1,800 British. American numbers are unknown. Uniforms, arms and equipment at the Battle of Lexington and Concord: The British were armed with muskets and bayonets. Some light guns were used. The American militia were armed with muskets, blunderbusses and any weapons they could find. Winner of the Battle of Lexington and Concord: The British suffered extensive loss. The Americans considered the contest an encouraging start to the war. British Regiments at the Battle of Lexington and Concord: Account of the Battle of Lexington and Concord: Acting on orders from the British Government in London, General Gage decided to send a force to seize the weapons and ammunition held by the Congress in the armoury at Concord, some 15 miles from Boston. Lieutenant-Colonel Smith was dispatched with the grenadier and light infantry companies from each of the regiments in the garrison. Boston was sealed overnight to prevent word being passed of the departure of the force, which was rowed across the harbour late on the night of 18th April 1775 to Charles River. The troops landed and began the march, but the sound of bells ringing showed that the countryside had been alerted. Paul Revere and William Dawes escaped from Boston and rode through the villages on the route to Concord warning the inhabitants, shouting as they rode ‘The British are coming.’ Lieutenant-Colonel Smith sent, in advance of his main body, a force of light infantry under Major Pitcairn to secure the bridges at Concord. Pitcairn entered Lexington to find a body of militia drawn up on the village green. Shots were fired in which 18 Americans were hit and the militia dispersed. The troops marched on to Concord where the British destroyed such supplies as had not been removed. In the meantime, American militia attacked a body of light Infantry on one of the bridges in Concord and drove them back. Smith’s troops then began the march back to Boston, shot at from hidden positions by American militia along the route, until they met Percy’s relieving force and the whole force withdrew into Boston. On the route British soldiers burned and looted houses of the colonials. In one or two cases colonial militia caught with weapons were summarily executed. The British force was extracted through the initiative of Lord Percy, who, on finding the bridge at Cambridge blocked by the American Colonial Militia, took the British force east to Charlestown on Boston Harbour, from where they were conveyed to Boston by Royal Navy boats. Casualties at the Battle of Lexington and Concord: The British Regiments suffered 19 officers and 250 soldiers killed and wounded. The American losses did not exceed 90 men. Follow-up to the Battle of Lexington and Concord: The British force achieved its aim of destroying much of the build-up of arms and ammunition at Concord, but the harrying of the troops along the route of their return march and the way they were bundled back into Boston was considered by both sides to be a reverse for the British. This success encouraged the spirit of revolt across the American colonies and was the immediate cause of New York being seized for the revolution. A strong force of Americans moved spontaneously to Boston and invested the city, this force being eventually formed into Washington’s Continental Army. Anecdotes and traditions from the Battle of Lexington and Concord:
References for the Battle of Lexington and Concord: History of the British Army by Sir John Fortescue The War of the Revolution by Christopher Ward The previous battle in the British Battles sequence is the Battle of Quebec 1759 The next battle of the American Revolutionary War is the Battle of Bunker Hill Return to the American Revolutionary War index |