News:

We need volunteers in sales, marketing, PR, IT, and general "running of an organization." 
Maximize your Appleseed energy to make this program grow, and help fill the empty spots
on the firing line!  An hour of time spent at this level can have the impact of ten or a
hundred hours on the firing line.  Want to help? Send a PM to Monkey!

Main Menu

Portrait of an American Rifleman: Isaac Davis

Started by caseyblane, August 02, 2009, 11:09:21 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

caseyblane

This is the second in the series.
For inspirational rifleman stories and flyers you can use to promote Appleseed:
See pdf flyer attached and go to http://blogofcorrespondence.blogspot.com/ and subscribe for future articles.

Portrait of an American Rifleman: Isaac Davis

After the renowned battle between the British Regular Army and the American Colonial Militia at Lexington and Concord, Lord Percy, an officer of the British Army remarked about the colonists that "there were men amongst them who knew what they were about." Isaac Davis was a man who knew what he was about. Isaac Davis wasn't just some farmer with a musket. A gunsmith by trade and a captain of the militia in Acton, Massachusetts (an organized group of able bodied men dedicated to the defense of their town), Isaac Davis played a significant role in supplying arms to his community and preparing for its defense. And on April 19, 1775, those preparations made history.



General Gage, commander of the British troops in Colonial America, predicted that local opposition to his troops might be "irregular, impetuous, and incessant" and the "bushmen" could be troublesome, men "who from their adroitness in the habitual use of the Firelock suppose themselves sure of their mark at a distance of 200 rods [1100 yards?]." But the British troops who marched to Concord from Boston to seize and destroy ". . . all military stores whatever" did not expect the organized opposition they met. Isaac Davis, a man of 30, with a wife and four children, was captain of Acton's Minuteman Company. His men carried their muskets with them at all times. Davis's men drilled twice weekly, practicing marksmanship in a field behind the Davis home since November of 1774, and were all outfitted with bayonets and cartridge boxes (which aided in increasing their rate of fire) provided by Davis himself. When the men were alerted of the British march, 37 of them rendezvoused at Davis's house. Each man carried his musket, powder horn, cartridge box, bayonet and a ration of bread and cheese. Davis reportedly said before leaving his home, "I have a right to go to Concord on the King's Highway and I will go to Concord."

The Acton militia gathered with militia from Concord and other surrounding towns at a hill above Concord's North Bridge. British troops were guarding the bridge to assure retreat of their fellow soldiers searching a nearby farm. As the militia officers were meeting, smoke was seen rising from Concord. Mistakenly believing that British troops were burning the town, the militia officers decided to take the bridge and go to the aid of the townspeople. Upon the approach of the militia men, the British Redcoats began retreating across the bridge towards Concord tearing planks off the bridge as they withdrew. For unknown reasons, Davis's men were placed in the lead, a position normally reserved for a more senior officer. It is possible that Davis and the men of Acton led the formation due to their superior training and possession of bayonets. When asked if he was afraid to lead his men at the front, it is reported that Captain Davis replied "No, I am not and I haven't a man that is."

Reports of exactly what happened next are conflicting, but what is known is that as the militia moved toward the bridge with the orders, "Don't fire first. . . don't fire first!", several volleys occurred between the British regulars and the colonists, with Isaac Davis being the first to fall by a fatal shot. The militia then crossed the bridge giving heavy fire with superior marksmanship. The militia pursued for a short distance and then took position on a hill while the "regulars" retreated. The rest of the day went as poorly for the British troops as they were routed by the "country people" all the way back to Boston.

Decades later, the famed Senator Daniel Webster spoke of Isaac Davis: "An early grave in the cause of liberty has secured to him the long and grateful remembrance of his country." Today, every April 19th, proud New Englanders celebrate "Patriot's Day" by retracing the "Line of March" from Acton to Concord, where a statue of a minuteman crafted in the likeness of Davis's descendants stands. The statue is engraved with Emerson's verse:

By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
Their flag to April's breeze unfurled.
Here once the embattled farmers stood,
And fired the shot heard round the world.
[/i]
"Boy, there are Do'ers, Thinkers, and Wonderers, be a Do'er!" My Grandfather.

crak

Quote from: caseyblane on August 02, 2009, 11:09:21 PM
Reports of exactly what happened next are conflicting,

Not really... even Captain Walter Laurie (commanding officer of the light infantry at the bridge) admitted one of his men fired the first shot "without orders."
Check your drama at the door.

Fred


   Yeah. There was a lot of that, that day...

   
QuoteDecades later, the famed Senator Daniel Webster spoke of Isaac Davis: "An early grave in the cause of liberty has secured to him the long and grateful remembrance of his country."

    If you define "long" as a generation or two, possibly.

    Unfortunately, he and everyone else that day are pretty much forgotten, and have been for several generations...

     But I guess I'm stating the obvious... >:D
"Ready to eat dirt and sweat bore solvent?" - Ask me how to become an RWVA volunteer!

      "...but he that stands it now, deserves the thanks of man and woman alike..."   Paine

     "If you can read this without a silly British accent, thank a Revolutionary War veteran" - Anon.

     "We have it in our power to begin the world over again" - Thomas Paine

     What about it, do-nothings? You heard the man, jump on in...

caseyblane

QuoteUnfortunately, he and everyone else that day are pretty much forgotten, and have been for several generations...

Well, I'm dedicated to trying to change that ;)

What about the range that Gage mentions, 1100 yards. Is that an exaggeration? Everything I could find says that a rod was equivalent to 5.5 yards.
"Boy, there are Do'ers, Thinkers, and Wonderers, be a Do'er!" My Grandfather.

Cowdog

QuoteDecades later, the famed Senator Daniel Webster spoke of Isaac Davis: "An early grave in the cause of liberty has secured to him the long and grateful remembrance of his country."
Sadly, not many people remember Daniel Webster anymore either.
My avatar is the Flag of John Proctor's Westmoreland County Provincials, from 1775

SamD

QuoteWhat about the range that Gage mentions, 1100 yards. Is that an exaggeration? Everything I could find says that a rod was equivalent to 5.5 yards
A rod is 16' 6"
I think it was a misprint. Should be about 20 rods or 330 feet/110 yards.
Back then a common distance to "shoot at a mark" was 40 rods and 40 rod rifle was thought of as a good one.

Xeyed

#6
Here is more than you ever wanted to know about rods.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rod_(unit)

"The rod is a unit of length equal to 5.5 yards, 11 cubits, 5.0292 meters, 16.5 feet, or 1⁄320 of a statute mile. A rod is the same length as a perch and a pole. The lengths of the perch (one rod) and chain (four rods) were standardized in 1607 by Edmund Gunter. In old English, the term lug is also used."

It is an old English unit of measure.

I think that General Gage's comments were based upon rumor and braggadocio of the colonials after a few pint's of Ale. Remember that while the Kentucky style long rifles were accurate to several hundred yards. The smooth bore muskets like the English Brown Bess were not accurate past 100.

Given the difference, it must have seemed like 1100 modern yards. It was also a dig at the Americans who did not fight all the time European style.

One Man awake, Awakens another. The second awakens  His next-door brother.
The three awake can rouse a town. By turning the whole place upside down.

The many awake can make such a fuss. It finally awakens the rest of us.
One man up, with dawn in his eyes, Surely then, Multiplies. Lawrence Trib

Cowdog

Could somebody please point me to the John Burns PDF in this series? I lost my download, and wanted to make 50 copies for the AS shoot in Slippery Rock.  I searched "John Burns", but it did not come up. Maybe it got lost in the Board changes?
My avatar is the Flag of John Proctor's Westmoreland County Provincials, from 1775

Mark D

Quote from: Cowdog on August 13, 2009, 01:05:24 PM
Could somebody please point me to the John Burns PDF in this series? I lost my download, and wanted to make 50 copies for the AS shoot in Slippery Rock.  I searched "John Burns", but it did not come up. Maybe it got lost in the Board changes?

It may be temporarily buried.  Here you go.