Lexington

Incensed against the British, American colonials burst into action in Lexington in April 1775. On April 18, patriot leader Paul Revere alerted the town that British soldiers were approaching. The next day, as the British advance troops arrived in Lexington on their march toward Concord, the Minutemen were waiting to confront the redcoats in what became the first skirmish of the Revolutionary War.

These first military encounters of the American Revolution are very much a part of present-day Lexington, a modern suburban town that sprawls out from the historic sites near its center. Although the downtown area is generally lively, with ice-cream and coffee shops, boutiques, and a great little movie theater, the town becomes especially animated each Patriots’ Day (April 19 but celebrated on the third Monday in April), when costume-clad groups re-create the Minutemen’s battle maneuvers and Paul Revere rides again.

To learn more about the city and the 1775 clash, stop by the Lexington Visitors Center.

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