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Bedford Minuteman Companyhttp://www.bedfordminutemancompany.org |
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![]() 19 April 1775Long before the firing started in Lexington, Bedford's Minutemen had been warned by Lexington's Captain Parker, who had sent two young men, Benjamin Tidd and Nathaniel Monroe into Bedford as couriers.The men rode up to the door of Cornet Page's house, and striking the door shouted "Get up, Nat Page; the Redcoats are out." The oldest structure in the center of Bedford is the historically significant Fitch Tavern. It was here, while Jeremiah Fitch, a sergeant of the Bedford Militia company, was operating it as a tavern, that twenty-six Bedford Minutemen gathered on the morning of April 19, 1775, following the alarm that the British were on the march from Boston. It was in the tap room that Mr. Fitch called the Minutemen to gather about the warmth of the fireplace while young Lydia Fitch served up cold cornmeal mush and hot buttered rum. Captain Jonathan Wilson looked into the eyes of his men and spoke the famous words, "It is a cold breakfast, boys, but we'll give the British a hot dinner; we'll have every dog of them before night." The Minutemen then marched on foot to Concord, joining the fifty men of the Bedford Militia en route.
Grief that day could not keep the Bedford Minutemen from their sworn duty to their fellow Minutemen; before the day was over they would again assemble for the long march to Cambridge and the continuing battles. | |
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Bedford Minuteman Company P.O. Box 1775 Bedford, MA 01730 |