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American Revolution: The Lexington Alarm letter (1775)

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Profiles

  • Capt. John Hall, Jr. (1739 - 1822)
    A Patriot from Massachusetts with the rank of Captain. DAR Ancestor # A049739 Capt. John Hall Gender: Male Birth: July 17, 1739 -Hingham, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, British Colonial America ...
  • Pvt Nathaniel Hastings, Jr. (1738 - 1820)
    Patriot of the American Revolution HASTINGS, NATHANIEL Ancestor #: A052656 Service: MASSACHUSETTS Rank(s): PRIVATE Birth: 1738 WORCESTER CO MASSACHUSETTS Death: 1820 WORCESTER CO MASSACHUSETTS Service ...
  • Maj. John Goss (1739 - 1821)
    OSS, JOHNAncestor #: A046388 Service: MASSACHUSETTS - NEW HAMPSHIRE Rank(s): CAPTAIN Birth: 2-13-1739 SALISBURY ESSEX CO MASSACHUSETTS Death: 9-26-1821 HARDWICK CALEDONIA CO VERMONT Pension Number: *W2...
  • Pvt Isaiah Eaton, Sr (1757 - 1847)
    EATON, ISAIAH/ISIAH DAR Ancestor #: A035911 Service: MASSACHUSETTS Rank(s): PRIVATE Birth: 10-15-1757 HAVERHILL MASSACHUSETTS Death: 1-21-1847 WESTMINSTER VERMONT Service Description: 1) MILITIA Isaia...
  • Capt Timothy Eaton, I (1731 - 1811)
    SAR Patrion # P-152748 State of Service: MA Qualifying Service: Captain / Patriotic Service DAR #: A036065 Birth: 31 Jul 1731 Haverhill / Essex / MA Death: 14 Oct 1811 Haverhill / Essex / MA Patri...

The aim of this project is to showcase the SIGNERS and MESSENGERS who spread the word of the Battles of Lexington and Concord on 19 April 1775, and within 10 days had alerted 13 colonies to the war finally at hand. Please add their Geni profiles to this project.

The Lexington Alarm Letter

From The Lexington Alarm Letter

Late on April 18, 1775, British soldiers marched from Boston, toward Concord, to seize munitions that were stockpiled there. Around dawn on April 19, they were met by 77 militiamen on Lexington Common. A shot rang out, and the British opened fire. Eight patriots were dead and nine wounded.
At around 10 a.m. on the morning of April 19, 1775, just hours after the battle on the Lexington green, Joseph Palmer, a member of the Committee of Safety in Watertown, Massachusetts, composed a letter describing the events of that morning. Palmer then gave his letter to the Committee's messenger, Israel Bissel (sometimes spelled Bissell), who galloped out of Watertown on horseback and rode to Worcester. In Worcester, the text was then transcribed by Nathan Balding. Balding's copy of Palmer's letter was given to Bissel, who carried the letter on to Brooklyn, Connecticut, where he arrived on April 20.

The alarm letter seen here, which is in our collection, was copied out in Brooklyn, Connecticut during the late morning of April 20, by Daniel Tyler, Jr., son-in-law to General Israel Putnam. Tyler copied the text from the letter Bissel had brought from Worcester, and sent this letter on to Norwich, Connecticut where Bissel and the letter arrived around 4 o'clock in the afternoon of the 20th.

Bissel delivered the letter to Christopher Leffingwell, who was the proprietor of a tavern in Norwich and a row of shops known as "Leffingwell Row," all located in the center of town. Governor Jonathan Trumbull was in Norwich on the day that Bissel and the alarm letter arrived; historians have speculated that it's likely that Trumbull got news of the Lexington alarm while he was in Norwich. 

Bissel carried subsequent copies of the Lexington Alarm letter on to New York. Other riders took the message down further down the East Coast; by mid-May, news had reached as far as Charleston, S.C. - about 1,000 miles away.

Below is a transcription of our Lexington Alarm letter. The verso of the letter (not shown here) reads: "To Christopher Leffingwell Esq. or either the Committee of Correspondence Norwich." 

Watertown Wednesday Morning near 10 o'Clock

To all the Friends of American Liberty, be it known that this Morning before breake of Day a Brigade consisting of about 1000 or 1200 Men landed at Phip’s Farm at Cambridge & marched to Lexington where they found a Company of our Colony Militia in Arms, upon Whom they fired without any Provocation and killed 6 Men and Wounded 4 others. By an Express from Boston this Moment, we find another Brigade are now upon their march from Boston supposed to be about 1000. The Bearer Mr. Israel Bissel is charged to alarm the Country quite to Connecticut and all Persons are desired to furnish him with Fresh Horses as they may be needed. I have spoken with Several Persons who have seen the Dead & Wounded. Pray let the Delegates from this Colony to Connecticut see this they know.

J. Palmer, one of the
Committee of S


y [i.e. Safety].

(more about Palmer & his family here)

Col. Foster of Brookfield one of the Delegates. A True Coppy taken from the original p[er] order of Committee of Correspondence for Worcester. Attest. Nathan Balding T[own] Clerk Worcester April 19th 1775.

Brooklyne Thursday 11 o'Clock - The above is a true Coppy as rec[eived] here p[er] Express forwarded from Worcester - [at]Test. Daniel Tyler, Jr.

The Lexington Alarm letter will be on view in the lobby of the National Heritage Museum from April 18-26, as part of the festivities surrounding Patriots Day, a Massachusetts holiday that commemorates the Battles of Lexington and Concord.

If you're interested in the full story of the Lexington Alarm and exactly how the news spread after the letter above arrived in Norwich, Connecticut, we recommend the following article, which is available in our library:

John H. Scheide. "The Lexington Alarm." Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society. Volume 50, Part 1 (1940) pp. 49-79.

Another great resource for learning more about the events surrounding April 19, 1775, as well as a great explanation about the establishment of the "alarm" network employed by the colonies can be found in:

David Hackett Fischer. Paul Revere's Ride. New York: Oxford University Press, 1994. Call number:F69 .R43 F57 1994

More about Israel Bissel - including a map of his ride from Massachusetts to New York.

CONNECTICUT'S RESPONSE TO THE LEXINGTON ALARM

Following the Patriot confrontation with British troops at Lexington and Concord on Wednesday morning April 19, 1775. "An alarm was immediately spread in every direction, so that on the 27th of April it had reached the principal points as far as Baltimore, and by the 11th of May was posted at Charleston, S.C. Throughout New England, the news was rapidly carried by horse expresses from town to town. It was dispatched to Connecticut by the Massachusetts Committee of Safety at Watertown during the progress of the fighting, or near ten o'clock of Wednesday morning, April 19th: The bearer, Israel Bessel, is charged to alarm the country quite to Connecticut, and all persons are desired to furnish him with fresh horses as they may be needed."1 "The alarm which was carried by a man with a drum on horseback, found Putnam ploughing in the field. Putnam merely unyoked his team from his plough, and bidding his boy to go home, and tell his mother where he was gone, mounted his horse, and dashed away down the road towards Boston. In twenty-four hours he was there, a distance in those days, of nearly one hundred miles."2