Opening Shots in the Colonies

1775-1776

Glenn F. Williams and Jonathan D. Bratten


U.S. Army Campaigns of the Revolutionary War
CMH Pub 71-42; 108 pages, maps, illustrations, appendix

Description: The Massachusetts militiamen who fired the first shots of the war on 19 April 1775 had no blueprint for creating a nation—nor did many think that the conflict would result in a drive for independence. Deep-seated colonial resentments over their rights as English citizens had been simmering since before the 1750s. As the British Parliament enacted even more restrictive laws, peaceful protests turned to military organization, and finally open violence. As New England formed its Army of Observation in the wake of the battles of Lexington and Concord, the Continental Congress saw the need for a national army.

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