Battle of Menotomy | |||||||
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Part of the American Revolutionary War | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Massachusetts Bay | Great Britain | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
William Heath Gideon Foster | Hugh Percy | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
5,100 | |||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
25 killed | 40 killed |
The Battle of Menotomy was an action on April 19, 1775 (the day of the Battles of Lexington and Concord, popularly regarded as the opening day of the American Revolutionary War), in what is now Arlington, Massachusetts. 5,100 men from eastern Middlesex County and southern Essex County gathered in Menotomy to meet the retreating British troops on their way to Boston from Concord. [1] [2] 25 rebels and 40 British troops were killed in this battle. [3] It was here in Menotomy that the first British soldiers were captured. [3] [ better source needed ]
The village of Menotomy (today's Arlington, Massachusetts) lay on the busy Concord Road (now Massachusetts Avenue) between Boston and Lexington. On April 18, the Revolutionary body, the Committee of Safety, met there at the Black Horse Tavern, in arms over British policies perceived as being oppressive. At 3 A.M. the following day, the British troops marched through town en route to Concord to destroy the military stores collected there, rousing the Committee from its sleep. [2]
While the fighting was going on in Lexington and Concord, 5,100 militia men from thirteen towns arrived in Menotomy from Middlesex and Essex Counties. These men took up positions in and around houses, stone walls, fields and barns along the road the British troops would take on their retreat to Boston. The British column stretched for an entire mile. [2]
Orders were given by British commanding general Hugh Percy [4] for the British troops to eliminate snipers. Homes were ransacked, plundered, and set ablaze. Finally, the American militiamen were set off. [2]
Wrote author Thomas Fleming, "What followed was a bloody running fight, a kind of serial ambush that surprised and bedeviled the British, hardened the rebellious Americans’ resolve and spawned the legend that the Continentals fought “unfairly” like Indians, hitting and running and sniping from concealed positions." [1]
Ultimately, the bloodiest fighting of the first day of the American Revolution took place inside a single house as the British cleared a path for their retreat. [1] Of the 25 militia men killed in Menotomy, 11 died in the Jason Russell House. During the fighting in Menotomy, 40 British soldiers were killed. [1]
"Battle Green [in Lexington] was an accident. Concord Bridge, a skirmish. But in the most brutal and deadly warfare of April 19, 1775, nearly 6,000 combatants fought hand to hand and house to house, the length and breadth of Menotomy. At the Foot of the Rocks, the British 'regulars' encountered their worst nightmare: a nascent Continental Army." – historian A. Michael Ruderman. [5]
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