| 
      PATRIOT'S DAY
       ___________________________________________ 
      IN THE SPIRIT OF PATRIOT'S DAY 
       The Shot Heard Around the World
      APRIL 19, 1775
      Remember, that as wayward children of King George, we (as British
      subjects), were commanded by our government to surrender our guns and
      powder. 
      The actual British order to seize and destroy the American's
      guns and supplies, for that day, reads as follows:  
      "Having received Intelligence, that a Quantity of Ammunition,
      Provision, Artillery, Tents and small Arms, have been collected at
      Concord, for the Avowed Purpose of raising and supporting a Rebellion
      against His Majesty, you will March with the Corps of Grenadiers and Light
      Infantry, put under your Command, with utmost expedition and Secrecy to
      Concord, where you will seize and destroy all Artillery, Ammunition,
      Provisions, Tents, Small Arms, and all Military Stores whatever ..."
      (Per Order of General Gage to Lt. Colonel F. Smith, of the Kings Troops. The
      Minute Men The First Fight: Myths and Realities of the American Revolution,
      by John R. Galvin, at page 100). 
      At Concord, house to house searches were conducted by the
      British to carry out the above order. Remember, the possession of powder,
      cannon, and other supplies of war might have meant arrest for
      revolutionary activities. The supplies of arms were substantial: 
      "Within the town, scattered through the cellars and attics and
      outbuildings of at least twenty-five houses, the provincials had concealed
      ten tons of musket balls and cartridges, thirty-five half
      barrels of powder, 350 tents, fourteen medicine chests, eighty barrels
      of beef, eight and a half tons of salt fish, seventeen and a half tons of
      rye, 318 barrels of flour, 100 barrels of salt, ... hundreds of axes,
      canteens, reams of cartridge paper ... and ... a substantial number of
      cannon and gun carriages of varying sizes... ." (emphasis added). The
      Minute Men the First Fight: Myths and Realities of the American Revolution,
      by John R. Galvin, at page 140). 
      On April 19, 1775, the Americans were prepared to, and did,
      fight for their liberty and freedom. What would you have done? 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
         |