by Melinda Pillsbury-Foster
As the harsh storms of winter subside
we approach the 238th anniversary of an event in American
history which provides insight and direction badly needed today. On
April 19, 1775 a musket was discharged, beginning a clash of arms
over a small bridge standing astride the stream at Concord,
Massachusetts. We have all seen the statues and, perhaps, remember
the poems.
To this day no one knows who fired the shot. But the unfolding clash shocked the British Crown and set the stage for the first nation on Earth who proclaimed the principle of universal freedom in July of the next year.
To this day no one knows who fired the shot. But the unfolding clash shocked the British Crown and set the stage for the first nation on Earth who proclaimed the principle of universal freedom in July of the next year.
This was not a government operation. These were a people who recognized the power was within them.
Perhaps the best lesson to be drawn from those events, which we have allowed to be obscured through the misted lens of time, is that this marked a moment when the people did it themselves. By so doing, they confounded the greatest power then existing on Earth.
The people had come together to
determine their course thorough the Committees of Correspondence. In
most towns across the colonies small groups met and discussed all of
the reasons for action and their options. Today, the parallel method
would be the Internet.
The British had been emboldened by
their success in seizing the colonist's powder, read this
'ammunition,' held in Portsmouth, New Hampshire the year before.
With their supply of munitions cut off from capture of the Fort
William And Mary, the colonists were determined to be prepared. Town
folk armed themselves and turned out to practice.
The British Empire had 8,000 men under
arms across the globe. A far smaller number were serving the Crown in
New England. That, the Crown felt, was entirely sufficient.
At the close of day, April 19, 1775, 10,000 Americans were marching towards Lexington and Concord, muskets, knives, and hammers in hand, prepared to die to win their freedom.
At the close of day, April 19, 1775, 10,000 Americans were marching towards Lexington and Concord, muskets, knives, and hammers in hand, prepared to die to win their freedom.
Women who helped their husbands,
fathers, grandfathers and sons ready themselves, packing their
pouches with food, filling containers with water, understood the
danger they, too, faced. This was not a war fought far away, but one
which would shatter families, homes and destroy their businesses and
the food they relied on for winter.
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