Read Paul Revere's Ride Online
Authors: David Hackett Fischer
Tags: #General, #Biography & Autobiography, #History, #United States, #Historical, #Revolutionary Period (1775-1800), #Art, #Painting, #Techniques
My excellent Brandeis colleagues in American history helped in various ways. Morton Keller read and criticized the manuscript. Sam Bass Warner called my attention to materials I would otherwise have missed. Jacqueline Jones tested several chapters on two young critics in her household, and gave the project her warm encouragement. James Kloppen-berg had a helpful thought on an interpretative problem. Ina Malaguti and Judy Brown helped with many logistical problems, as did the staff of the Brandeis Library System.
Through the years, three graduate students completed independent research papers on Paul Revere and taught their teacher in the process: Ruth Friedman on Paul Revere’s business career, Carol Ely on the community of the North End, and Ellen Shea on Paul Revere’s other rides. Five Brandeis undergraduates also worked as paid research assistants on this project: Elizabeth Arnold, Keri Fisher, Michael Kalin, David Lawrence, and Jeremy Stern.
At the Oxford University Press, my editor and friend Sheldon Meyer read the manuscript and made many substantive suggestions for its improvement. Leona Capeless gave the book the benefit of her peerless copyediting, and Karen Wolny guided the book through the labyrinth of the Oxford University Press, refining it in many ways.
Andrew Mudryk did the maps with high skill and creativity. Once again it was a great pleasure to work with him, and to share his love of cartography as an art-form. Michael Farny of the Lincoln Guide Service loaned us a rare topographical survey of the Battle Road. Brian Donahue generously supplied materials from his own research on landholdings along the battle road. I am also endebted to Joyce Malcolm for her published studies of the land use in Concord, Lincoln, and Lexington.
Special mention is due to my riding teachers Mary Cressy and Lee Cressy, and to a spirited New England saddle horse named Quentin, who through the years taught the author many hard lessons on equestrian aspects of the midnight ride. Laura Goeselt also helped with questions of horsemanship, and reprogrammed a recalcitrant computer at a critical moment.
As always, my family pitched in. My wife Judith helped in many ways. John Henry Fischer read an early draft and gave me the benefit of his wise counsel. Norma Fischer contributed helpful advice and support. Miles Pennington Fischer criticized the chapters on the battle from the perspective of his own military service. Kate Fischer, Anne Fischer, Frederick Turner, John Anderson Fischer and William Pennington Fischer had words of encouragement in the early stages of the project. Specially helpful in this project was my daughter Susanna Fischer. Her candid and rigorous criticism of the manuscript improved it in many ways, and she found time in her busy career to help track down British materials. The book is dedicated to Susie, with much love.
Wayland, Massachusetts
21 December 1
993
D. H. F.
Abbott, Alice Stearns,
169
Abercrombie, Lt. Col. James,
258
Acton, Mass.,
145
,
155
,
165
,
209
,
211
,
230
,
320
,
329
Adair, Lt. Jesse,
127
,
184
,
186
,
189
,
190
,
282
,
324
Adams, Abigail,
342
Adams, Charles Francis Jr.,
337
,
420
Adams, John,
20
,
69
,
72
,
95
,
138
,
302
,
336
,
376
and news of Lexington,
279
and Lexington alarm,
289
Adams, Roxana,
424
Adams, Samuel,
11
,
14
,
20
,
25
,
27
,
28
,
38
,
51
,
66
,
69
,
72
,
75
,
78
,
79
,
85
,
90
,
94
,
95
,
97
,
103
,
108
,
110
,
111
,
112
,
132
,
134
,
151
,
174
,
176
,
178
,
179
,
182
,
183
,
198
,
288
,
292
,
302
,
338
,
376
illus.,
177
Afro-Americans,
82
,
106
,
124
,
147
,
168
,
169
,
282
,
286
see also by name:
Benson, Abel
Emerson, Frank
Estabrook, Prince
Mark; Prince, Salem
Tufts, Samuel
Aftermath of Lexington and Concord,
261
–80
Alarm companies,
152
see also
Militia Alarm list,
203
see also
Militia Alarm system, created,
51
precedents,
151
set in motion by Warren and Revere,
93
–112
speed of,
139
spatial diffusion,
138
–47 (map, 146)
awakens not individuals but institutions,
139
confirmation riders,
180
alarm bells,
112
,
128
,
136
,
140
,
143
,
145
,
181
,
185
,
186
,
399
trumpets,
147
signal guns,
128
,
135
,
140
,
145
,
181
,
184
–86,
399
operation after Lexington,
273
BY CARRIER
: Andover rider,
146
“bareheaded rider.”
147
Baker, Amos,
144
Baker, Nathaniel,
144
Baldwin, Loammi,
141
Bancroft, Edward,
145
Benson, Abel,
147
Billerica courier,
145
Boston messenger, third,
387
Brown, Reuben,
203
Brown, Solomon,
132
Bullard, Ephraim,
147
Carlisle leaders,
146
Charlestown “expresses” before Revere,
103
Davis, Isaac,
145
Dawes, William,
see
Dawes, William, midnight ride
Dedham riders,
147
Dorchester rider,
146
Faulkner, Francis,
145
Gerry, Elbridge, “express.”
90
Hall, Capt. Isaac,
140
Hartwell, Mary,
144
Hart-well slaves,
144
Herrick, Martin,
140
Hunt, Simon,
145
Lexington riders to Cambridge,
180
,
181
Lincoln messengers,
144
Maiden messengers,
141
Nelson, Josiah,
92
North Reading courier,
140
Page, Nathaniel,
143
Plympton, Thomas,
147
Proctor, Jonathan,
141
Rand, Elizabeth,
124
Revere, Paul,
see
Revere, Paul, midnight ride
Roxbury rider,
146
Salem rider,
146
Sanderson, Elijah,
89
Tewksbury rider,
139
Trull, Capt. John,
139
Tufts, Samuel,
124
Varnum, James,
139
Walker, Capt. Joshua,
141
Watson, Abraham,
90
Weatherbee,
145
Weston rider,
146
BY TOWN AND VILLAGE
:
Acton,
145
Bedford,
143
Billerica,
145
Burlington,
141
Carlisle,
145
Chelsea,
141
Concord,
144
Danvers,
140
Dedham,
147
Dover Farms,
147
Dracut,
139
Framingham,
147
Groton,
145
Lexington,
143
Lincoln,
144
Littleton,
145
Lynn,
140
Lynn End,
140
Maiden,
141
Medford,
139
–41
Menotomy,
141
Natick,
147
Needham,
147
Newton,
147
North Reading,
140
North Waltham,
142
Pepperell,
145
Reading,
140
Roxbury,
147
Stoneham,
140
Sudbury,
147
Tewksbury,
139
Waltham,
142
Waltham Farms,
142
Watertown,
147
West Acton,
145
Weston,
144
Wilmington,
139
Winchester,
139
Albany, N.Y.,
67
Albee, Peter A.,
160
Albemarle, Earl of,
34
Alewife Brook,
258
Alexandria, Va.,
325
Alger, Horatio,
235
Allen, Dr.,
302
Allen, pedlar, captured,
132
Allen, Sgt. Thomas,
160
America: British attitudes toward,
264
American identity,
110
Ames, Dr. Nathaniel,
265
,
311
,
415
Andover, Mass.,
156
Andrews, Benjamin,
300
Andrews, Charles M.,
336
Andrews, Hannah,
300
Andrews, John,
384
Andrews, Joseph,
311
Anglophilia,
336
Annapolis, Md.,
325
Antietam,
298
Appleton, Nathaniel,
302
see also
Menotomy Village
West Cambridge
Armstrong, Emma,
424
Arnold, Benedict,
247
Arnold, Liz,
424
Artillery,
see
British army, regts.: Royal Artillery
Ash, Capt. Gilbert,
302
Aspinwall, William,
159
Atrocities: American at North Bridge,
215
,
216
,
218
,
406
,
407
historians and,
414
Auchmuty, Robert,
65
Austin, Benjamin,
302
Austin, Samuel,
302
Averne, Capt. Thomas,
324
Avery, John,
302
Ayascough, Lt. James,
310
Bacon, Jacob,
321
Baker, Jabez,
121
Baldwin, Cyrus,
302
Baldwin, Maj. Loammi,
141
,
158
,
224
,
225
,
288
illus.,
227
Balestier, Joseph,
298
Ballard, John,
376
Bancroft, George,
331
Barber, Edward,
320
Barker, Lt. John,
67
,
88
,
113
,
115
,
123
,
188
,
194
,
232
,
241
,
257
–59,
263
,
265
,
322
,
405
Barnard, Samuel,
302
Barnard, Thomas,
63
Barnhill, Georgia,
423