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Paul Revere's Ride

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by David Hackett Fischer




  Paul Revere’s Ride

  PAUL REVERE’S RIDE

  DAVID HACKETT FISCHER

  Oxford University Press

  Oxford New York

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  Copyright © 1994 by David Hackett Fischer

  First published in 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.

  198 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016-4314

  First issued as an Oxford University Press paperback, 1995

  Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,

  stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means,

  electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise,

  without the prior permission of Oxford University Press.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Fischer, David Hackett, 1935–

  Paul Revere’s Ride

  David Hackett Fischer.

  p. cm.

  Includes bibliographical references (p.) and index.

  ISBN-13: 978-0-19-509831-0 (pbk)

  ISBN-13: 978-0-19-508847-2 (case)

  1. Revere, Paul, 1735-1818.

  2. Massachusetts—History—Revolution, 1775-1783.

  3. Lexington, Battle of, 1775.

  4. Concord, Battle of, 1775.

  I. Title.

  F69.R43F57 1994

  973.’311’092--dc20 93-25739

  CLOTH 10 9 8 7 6 5

  PAPER 25 24 23 22 21 20

  Printed in the United States of America

  on acid-free paper

  For Susie, with love

  CONTENTS

  Introduction

  Paul Revere’s America

  General Gage’s Dilemma

  First Strokes

  Mounting Tensions

  The Mission

  The Warning

  The March

  The Capture

  The Alarm

  The Muster

  The Great Fear

  The Rescue

  The First Shot

  The Battle

  A Circle of Fire

  Aftermath

  Epilogue

  Appendices

  Historiography

  Bibliography

  Abbreviations

  Notes

  Acknowledgments

  Index

  MAPS

  Boston in 1775

  The Powder Alarm, September 1, 1774

  The Portsmouth Alarm, December 13-19, 1774

  The Attack on Fort William and Mary, December 14, 1774

  The Salem Alarm, February 26-27, 1775

  The British Expedition to Concord, April 18-19, 1775

  Gage’s Spies, February-March, 1775

  Smith’s Crossing of the Charles River, April 18, 1775

  The Middlesex Alarm, April 18-19, 1775

  The Fight at Lexington, April 19, 1775

  The Fight at Concord, April 19, 1775

  The Battle Road: Terrain and Land Use, 1775

  The Retreat from Concord to Lexington

  Percy at Lexington

  The Retreat from Lexington to Charlestown

  American and British Tactics on the Battle Road

  News of Lexington, April 19-May 10, 1775

  ILLUSTRATIONS

  Paul Revere, Portrait by John Singleton Copley

  Apollos Rivoire, gold buttons, ca. 1730

  Apollos Rivoire, silver tankard, ca. 1750

  View of North End, 1775

  Bell Ringers’ Agreement, ca. 1750

  Paul Revoire, book plate

  Paul Revere, book plate

  Rachel Walker Revere, miniature by Joseph Dunkerly

  Paul Revere House

  The Rescinders’ Bowl, front

  The Rescinders’ Bowl, back

  Landing of the Troops in 1768

  The Boston Massacre Print

  Paul Revere’s Sketch of the Boston Massacre

  Thomas Gage, Portrait by John Singleton Copley, 1769

  Margaret Kemble Gage, Portrait by John Singleton Copley, ca. 1771

  The Powder House

  Death Threats to Lawyers

  Green Dragon Tavern

  Shackles and Leg Irons

  The Rogues March

  Paul Revere, “A Certain Cabinet Junto,”

  Paul Revere, “The Able Doctor, or America Swallowing the Bitter Draught,”

  The Golden Ball Tavern

  Doctor Joseph Warren, oil sketch by John Singleton Copley

  William Dawes, Jr.

  The Newman House

  Old North Church

  Lantern displayed in the Old North Church

  Cathead, HMS Somerset,

  Paul Revere’s Saddlebags

  Paul Revere’s Spur

  The Hancock-Clarke Parsonage

  The Reverend Jonas Clarke

  Lt. Col. Francis Smith

  An Officer of the 4th Foot, Gainsborough

  A Light Infantry Officer of the 10th Foot

  Captain W. G. Evelyn, 4th Foot, 1775

  The Parker Home

  Firearms used on April 19, 1775

  The Middlesex Sword

  The Bedford Flag

  John Hancock, portrait by John Singleton Copley

  Samuel Adams, portrait by John Singleton Copley

  Dorothy Quincy, portrait by John Singleton Copley

  Lydia Hancock, portrait by John Singleton Copley

  John Hancock’s Trunk

  Major John Pitcairn

  Lexington Green

  William Munroe

  Amos Muzzey

  William Emerson

  Joseph Hosmer

  “The White Cockade,”

  The North Bridge at Concord

  Meriam’s Corner

  Major John Brooks, portrait by Gilbert Stuart

  The Battle Road

  The Middlesex Terrain

  Major Loammi Baldwin

  The Bloody Curve

  Major Pitcairn’s Pistols

  Lord Hugh Percy

  British Six-Pounder Field Gun

  General William Heath

  Paul Revere’s Expense Account

  The Coffin Broadside

  “The Yankey’s Return from Camp,”

  The Wreck of HMS Somerset,

  Paul Revere in Old Age

  Rachel Revere in Old Age

  Paul Revere’s Eyeglasses

  The Monument at Concord’s North Bridge

  Grant Wood, Paul Revere’s Ride, 1931

  The Filiopietists in Full Cry

  The Debunkers at Work: Paul Revere as a Canary

  INTRODUCTION

  Paul Revere Remounted

  Paul Revere? Ain’t he the Yankee who had to go for help?”

  —old Texas joke

  OUR BRITISH FRIENDS had never heard of him. “Paul Revere?” one asked incredulously, as we led him captive along Boston’s Freedom Trail, “a midnight ride?… captured by us?”

  Our visitor was a man of learning. We were as surprised by his ignorance, as he was by the story itself. In our mutual astonishment we discovered the enduring strength of national cultures in the modern world.

  Nearly everyone who has been raised in the United States knows of Paul Revere. The saga of the midnight ride is one of many shared memories that make Americans one people, diverse as we may
be. Even in these days of national amnesia the story of Paul Revere’s ride is firmly embedded in American folklore. His name is so familiar that it has become a general noun in American speech. During the Presidential election of 1992, a Republican journalist ambiguously described a defeated Democratic candidate as “an economic Paul Revere.” Whether that phrase was intended to mean a heroic messenger of alarm, or a messenger who failed to reach his destination, was not immediately clear. 1

  Ambiguity is an important part of the legend of Paul Revere, and a key to its continuing vitality. The story has been told so many different ways that when Americans repeat it to their children, they are not certain which parts of the tale are true, or if any part of it actually happened. They are also divided in how they feel about it. A curious paradox of American culture is the persistence of two parties who might be called the Filiopietists and Iconoclasts. Both have been strongly attracted to the legend of Paul Revere, for opposite reasons. Filiopietists love to celebrate the midnight ride. Iconoclasts delight in debunking it.

  Together, these two parties have produced a large literature on an inexhaustible subject—poetry in abundance, fiction, oratory, essays, humor, criticism, and popular biography. One of the earliest films on American history was Thomas Edison’s “Midnight Ride of Paul Revere” in 1914. American composers have given us several musical versions of the event—a march, a suite, and even an operetta. American artists have created many imaginative paintings and prints. American scientists have contributed monographs on the meteorology, astronomy, and geology of Paul Revere’s ride. The most imaginative works are the many children’s books the story has inspired. The most bizarre are the fables concocted by cynical Boston journalists every April 18, in their annual search for a new angle on an old story.

  But one genre is strangely missing from this list. Professional historians have shown so little interest in the subject that in two centuries no scholar has published a full-scale history of Paul Revere’s ride. During the 1970s, the event disappeared so completely from academic scholarship that several leading college textbooks in American history made no reference to it at all. One of them could barely bring itself to mention the battles of Lexington and Concord. 2

  The cause of this neglect is complex. One factor is a mutual antipathy that has long existed between professional history and popular memory. Another of more recent vintage is a broad prejudice in American universities against patriotic events of every kind, especially since the troubled years of Vietnam and Watergate. A third and fourth are the popular movements called multicultural-ism and political correctness. As this volume goes to press, the only creature less fashionable in academe than the stereotypical “dead white male,” is a dead white male on horseback.

  Perhaps the most powerful factor, among professional historians at least, is an abiding hostility against what is contemptuously called histoire événimentielle in general. As long ago as 1925, the antiquarian scholar Allen French fairly complained that “modern history burrows so deeply into causes that it scarcely has room for events.” 3 His judgment applies even more forcefully today. Path-breaking scholarship in the 20th century has dealt mainly with social structures, intellectual systems, and material processes. Much has been gained by this enlargement of the historian’s task, but something important has been lost. An entire generation of academic historiography has tended to lose sense of the causal power of particular actions and contingent events.

  An important key here is the idea of contingency—not in the sense of chance, but rather of “something that may or may not happen,” as one dictionary defines it. An organizing assumption of this work is that contingency is central to any historical process, and vital to the success of our narrative strategies about the past.

  This is not to raise again ill-framed counterfactual questions about what might have happened in the past. It is rather to study historical events as a series of real choices that living people actually made. Only by reconstructing that sort of contingency (in this very particular sense) can we hope to know “what it was like” to have been there; and only through that understanding can we create a narrative tension in the stories we tell about the past. 4

  To that end, this inquiry studies the coming of the American Revolution as a series of contingent happenings, shaped by the choices of individual actors within the context of large cultural processes. It centers on two actors in particular. One of them is Paul Revere. Historians have not placed him in the forefront of America’s revolutionary movement. He held no high offices, wrote none of the great papers, joined few of the large deliberative assemblies, commanded no army, and did not advertise his acts. But in another way he was a figure of very high importance. The historical Paul Revere was much more than merely a midnight messenger. He was also an organizer of collective effort in the American Revolution. During the pivotal period from the Fall of 1774 to the Spring of 1775, he had an uncanny genius for being at the center of events. His actions made a difference, most of all in mobilizing the acts of many others. The old Texas canard that remembers Paul Revere as the “Yankee who had to go for help,” when shorn of its pejoratives, is closer to the mark than the mythical image of the solitary rider. His genius was to promote collective action in the cause of freedom—a paradox that lies closer to the heart of the American experience than the legendary historical loners we love to celebrate. 5

  The other leading actor in this story is General Thomas Gage, commander in chief of British forces in America and the last Royal Governor of Massachusetts. General Gage has rarely been remembered with sympathy or respect on either side of the water. He was not a great commander, to say the least. But he was a man of high principle and integrity who personified the British cause in both its strength and weakness. In the disasters that befell him, Thomas Gage was truly a tragic figure, a good and decent man who was undone by his virtues. During the critical years of 1774 and 1775, he also played a larger role than has been recognized by scholars of the American Revolution. It was his advice that shaped the fatal choices of leading British ministers, and his actions that guided the course of American events. Without Thomas Gage there might well have been no Coercive Acts, no midnight ride, and no fighting at Lexington and Concord.

  One purpose of this book is to study that series of events as a sequence of choices by Paul Revere, General Gage and many other leaders. Another purpose is to look again at the cultures within which those choices were made. In that respect, Paul Revere’s ride offers a special opportunity. It was part of a larger event, vividly remembered by people who were alive in 1775 as the Lexington Alarm.

  Most readers of this book have lived through similar happenings in the 20th century. We tend to remember them with rare clarity. To take the most familiar example, many of us can recollect precisely what we were doing on the afternoon of November 22, 1963, when we learned that President John F. Kennedy had been shot. Many other events in American history have had that strange mnemonic power. This historian is just old enough to share the same sort of memory about an earlier afternoon, on December 7, 1941. More than fifty years afterward, I can still see the dappled sunlight of that warm December afternoon, and still feel the emotions, and hear the words, and recall even trivial details of the place where my family first heard the news of the Japanese attack upon Pearl Harbor.

  It was much the same for Americans who heard the Lexington Alarm in 1775. They also would long remember how that news reached them, and what was happening around them. Many of their recollections were set down on paper immediately after the event. Others were recorded later, or passed down more doubtfully as grandfathers’ tales. These accounts survive in larger numbers than for any other event in early American history. Taken together, they are a window into the world of Paul Revere and Thomas Gage.

  When we look through that window, we may see many things. In particular we can observe the cultures that produced these men, and the values that framed their attitudes and acts. From a distance, the principles of Paul R
evere and Thomas Gage appear similar to one another, and not very different from those we hold today. Some of the important words they used were superficially the same—words such as “liberty,” “law,” “justice,” and what even General Gage himself celebrated as “the common rights of mankind,”

  But when we penetrate the meaning of those words, we discover that the values of Paul Revere and Thomas Gage were in fact very far apart, and profoundly different from our own beliefs. Paul Revere’s idea of liberty was not the same as our modern conception of individual autonomy and personal entitlement. It was not a form of “classical Republicanism,” or “English Opposition Ideology,” or “Lockean Liberalism,” or any of the learned anachronisms that scholars have invented to explain a way of thought that is alien to their own world.

  Paul Revere’s ideas of liberty were not primarily learned from books, or framed in terms of what he was against. He believed deeply in New England’s inherited tradition of ordered freedom, which gave heavy weight to collective rights and individual responsibilities—more so than is given by our modern calculus of individual rights and collective responsibilities. 6

  In 1775, Paul Revere’s New England notions of ordered freedom were challenged by another libertarian tradition that had recently developed in the English-speaking world—one that was personified in General Thomas Gage. Its conception of liberty was more elitist and hierarchical than those of Paul Revere, but also more open and tolerant, and no less deeply believed. The American Revolution arose from a collision of libertarian systems. The conflict between them led to a new birth of freedom that would be more open and expansive than either had been, or wished it to be. To explore the cultural dimensions of that struggle is another purpose of this book.

  We shall begin by meeting our two protagonists, Paul Revere and Thomas Gage. Then we shall follow them through eight months from September 1, 1774, to April 19, 1775—the period of the powder alarms, the Concord mission, the midnight ride, the march of the Regulars, the muster of the Massachusetts farmers, the climactic battles of Lexington and Concord, and the bloody aftermath.

 

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