Meriam's Corner

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Meriam's Corner
Part of the battles of Lexington and Concord
Meriam's Corner, Concord, Mass (NYPL b12647398-69505).tiff
An early-20th-century postcard of Meriam's Corner, looking northeast. In view is the Nathan Meriam House
DateApril 19, 1775(249 years ago) (1775-04-19)
Location 42°27′34″N71°19′27″W / 42.4594745°N 71.324283°W / 42.4594745; -71.324283
Result Massachusetts Bay victory
Belligerents
Massachusetts Bay Union flag 1606 (Kings Colors).svg  Great Britain
Commanders and leaders
Union flag 1606 (Kings Colors).svg Francis Smith
Casualties and losses
0 2
Relief map of USA Massachusetts.png
Red pog.svg
Location within Massachusetts

Meriam's Corner is a historic American Revolutionary War site associated with the revolution's first battle, the 1775 battles of Lexington and Concord. It is located, on the former Battle Road, at the junction of today's Lexington Road and Old Bedford Road in Concord, Massachusetts, and is named for the Meriam family who lived there. The Nathan Meriam House still stands beside Old Bedford Road and forms part of Meriam's Corner itself. Both the house and Meriam's Corner are part of the Minute Man National Historic Park. Three of the Meriam family's homes stood here in 1775, the other two belonging to Josiah Meriam, brother of Nathan, and their nephew John. [1]

In the early afternoon of April 19, 1775, it was the site of the first offensive between the British regulars, who were retreating from Concord to Boston, [2] and the colonial militia. The regulars had made the outbound journey that morning, with the first defensive conflict of that journey having been in the dawn hours on Lexington Common.

A stone marking the nearby burial site of at least one of the two British soldiers killed during the skirmish stands on the western side of Old Bedford Road, near to the junction with Lexington Road.

Another stone marker, installed in 1885 in the wall at the apex of the corner, reads:

The British troops
retreating from the
Old North Bridge
were here attacked in flank
by the men of Concord
and neighboring towns and driven under a hot fire
to Charlestown''
[1]

Redcoats' retreat to Boston

A National Park Service map showing the redcoats' retreat from Concord Concord Retreat.png
A National Park Service map showing the redcoats' retreat from Concord

Lieutenant Colonel Francis Smith, concerned about the safety of his men, sent flankers to follow a ridge and protect his forces from the roughly one thousand colonials now in the field as the British marched east out of Concord. This ridge ended near Meriam's Corner, a crossroads about a mile (2 km) outside the village of Concord, where the main road came to a narrow bridge across Elm Brook, a tributary of Mill Brook. To cross the bridge, the British had to pull the flankers back into the main column and close ranks to a mere three soldiers abreast. Colonial militia companies arriving from the north and east had converged at this point and presented a clear numerical advantage over the regulars. [3] The British were now witnessing once again what General Thomas Gage had hoped to avoid by dispatching the expedition in secrecy and in the dark of night: the ability of the colonial militiamen to rise and converge by the thousands when British forces ventured out of Boston. As the last of the British column marched over the bridge, the British rear guard wheeled and fired a volley at the colonial militiamen, who had been firing irregularly and ineffectively from a distance but now had closed to within musket range. [4] The colonists returned fire, this time with deadly effect. Two regulars were killed and perhaps six wounded, with no colonial casualties. Smith sent out his flanking troops again after crossing the small bridge.

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References

  1. 1 2 Meriam House, Minute Man National Historical Park, Concord, Massachusetts, p. 3
  2. "The Battle Road Trail"Minute Man National Historic Park
  3. Muster rolls for the militia and minute companies converging at this point are included in Coburn, pp. 7-35. However, as Coburn notes, these rolls are not a complete tally of the militiamen present, because some muster lists were either not submitted or have not been found in archives.
  4. Both the British and the local militias were armed with smooth-bore muskets that had an effective range of aimed fire of only 80-100 yards (75-90 m), although the musket ball could have serious effect at a greater distance, if it happened by chance to hit a person. There is no record that any soldiers on either side were armed with longer-range, more accurate rifles. Dr. Benjamin Church, a member of the Massachusetts Provincial Congress and the Committee of Safety, informed General Gage in March 1775, that the colonial militiamen "from their adroitness in the habitual use of the firelock suppose themselves sure of their mark at a distance of 200 rods". Even if Church meant yards rather than rods (600 feet versus 3300 feet), it is unclear whether he was profoundly ignorant of the capabilities of a musket, was exaggerating in order to mislead Gage (as Church later claimed when accused of being a spy), or was ridiculing the American militiamen. See Philbrick, p. 92, and French, p. 57-58. On whether Church was a spy, see French, Chapter V.