
# 619 - 1925 5c Lexington-Concord Issue: The Minuteman
1925 Lexington-Concord Issue
5¢ The Minuteman
First Day of Issue: April 4, 1925
First City: Washington, D.C.; Concord, MA; Concord Junction, MA; Boston, MA; Cambridge, MA; Lexington, MA
Quantity Issued: 5,348,800
Printing Method: Flat Plate
Perforation: 11
Color: Dark blue
Battles Of Lexington And Concord
As resentment grew against their British governors, the colonists realized they might have to fight for fair treatment. Farmers, craftsmen, and shopkeepers began to organize and prepare for possible conflict. In the spring of 1775, British troops gathered in Boston. The colonials stored arms at nearby Concord, and drilled and readied themselves to fight “at a minute’s notice.”

As it turned out, that’s about all the notice the aptly named minutemen had. Due to unrest in the American colonies, British General Thomas Gage received orders to use force against the defiant colonials. Consequently, Lieutenant Colonel Francis Smith led a British column from Boston to seize the gunpowder of the Massachusetts Provincial Congress at Concord on the night of April 18, 1775. Their first stop was Lexington, headquarters of two famous leaders of the rebellion – Samuel Adams and John Hancock.
But the patriot underground in Boston sent two messengers to spread the alarm. William Dawes, a tanner of shoe leather, and Paul Revere, a well-known silversmith, galloped through the night toward Lexington by different routes. Shouting, “The British are coming!” they woke minutemen in houses along the way. Patriots hurried out to face British troops in defense of their freedom.

After Revere reached Lexington (and warned Adams and Hancock to hide), the town bell tolled, signal guns boomed, and a band of about seventy militia and minutemen lined up in the town square to face six companies of British redcoats in the early hours of April 19. The commander of the minutemen ordered his troops not to fire unless fired upon, “But if they want a war let it begin here!” He later told his men to disperse.
As they began to leave their positions, someone – to this day no one is sure which side – fired a single shot. Musket fire then commenced from both sides. When it was over, eight minutemen were dead and ten wounded. Only one British soldier was wounded, but this brave first stand by American patriots helped to rally the colonies toward the cause of the revolution and focus the world’s attention on the struggle.
The British left Lexington for Concord, and the minutemen fared much better there. The colonists had gained enough time to hide their munitions. While the Redcoats searched Concord for remaining military supplies, the Americans gathered near North Bridge. The battle at this site was immortalized by a later Concord resident, Ralph Waldo Emerson, in “Concord Hymn.” (Click here to read it.)

The Americans held the bridge, and exhausted British soldiers headed back to their base in Boston. Swarms of minutemen hid behind stone fences and barns along the route, and inflicted heavy casualties.

The Revolution had begun. America’s Second Continental Congress had to choose a commander-in-chief. It was considered necessary to appoint a Virginian to insure full southern support for the cause. George Washington, a plantation owner, had led Virginian forces during the French and Indian War when he was a young man. He met all qualifications to lead the Continental Army, had a reputation for dependability, and few political enemies. In June 1775, Congress selected him as supreme commander. Washington protested that he was unqualified, but a few days later he was on his way.
When Washington joined his new command, he did so with tact. Aware that New Englanders would resent a Virginian general, he exerted his authority carefully. At Cambridge, it became evident Washington possessed the leadership qualities to guide America through her fight for Independence.
1925 Lexington-Concord Issue
5¢ The Minuteman
First Day of Issue: April 4, 1925
First City: Washington, D.C.; Concord, MA; Concord Junction, MA; Boston, MA; Cambridge, MA; Lexington, MA
Quantity Issued: 5,348,800
Printing Method: Flat Plate
Perforation: 11
Color: Dark blue
Battles Of Lexington And Concord
As resentment grew against their British governors, the colonists realized they might have to fight for fair treatment. Farmers, craftsmen, and shopkeepers began to organize and prepare for possible conflict. In the spring of 1775, British troops gathered in Boston. The colonials stored arms at nearby Concord, and drilled and readied themselves to fight “at a minute’s notice.”

As it turned out, that’s about all the notice the aptly named minutemen had. Due to unrest in the American colonies, British General Thomas Gage received orders to use force against the defiant colonials. Consequently, Lieutenant Colonel Francis Smith led a British column from Boston to seize the gunpowder of the Massachusetts Provincial Congress at Concord on the night of April 18, 1775. Their first stop was Lexington, headquarters of two famous leaders of the rebellion – Samuel Adams and John Hancock.
But the patriot underground in Boston sent two messengers to spread the alarm. William Dawes, a tanner of shoe leather, and Paul Revere, a well-known silversmith, galloped through the night toward Lexington by different routes. Shouting, “The British are coming!” they woke minutemen in houses along the way. Patriots hurried out to face British troops in defense of their freedom.

After Revere reached Lexington (and warned Adams and Hancock to hide), the town bell tolled, signal guns boomed, and a band of about seventy militia and minutemen lined up in the town square to face six companies of British redcoats in the early hours of April 19. The commander of the minutemen ordered his troops not to fire unless fired upon, “But if they want a war let it begin here!” He later told his men to disperse.
As they began to leave their positions, someone – to this day no one is sure which side – fired a single shot. Musket fire then commenced from both sides. When it was over, eight minutemen were dead and ten wounded. Only one British soldier was wounded, but this brave first stand by American patriots helped to rally the colonies toward the cause of the revolution and focus the world’s attention on the struggle.
The British left Lexington for Concord, and the minutemen fared much better there. The colonists had gained enough time to hide their munitions. While the Redcoats searched Concord for remaining military supplies, the Americans gathered near North Bridge. The battle at this site was immortalized by a later Concord resident, Ralph Waldo Emerson, in “Concord Hymn.” (Click here to read it.)

The Americans held the bridge, and exhausted British soldiers headed back to their base in Boston. Swarms of minutemen hid behind stone fences and barns along the route, and inflicted heavy casualties.

The Revolution had begun. America’s Second Continental Congress had to choose a commander-in-chief. It was considered necessary to appoint a Virginian to insure full southern support for the cause. George Washington, a plantation owner, had led Virginian forces during the French and Indian War when he was a young man. He met all qualifications to lead the Continental Army, had a reputation for dependability, and few political enemies. In June 1775, Congress selected him as supreme commander. Washington protested that he was unqualified, but a few days later he was on his way.
When Washington joined his new command, he did so with tact. Aware that New Englanders would resent a Virginian general, he exerted his authority carefully. At Cambridge, it became evident Washington possessed the leadership qualities to guide America through her fight for Independence.