Lexington Chapter, NSDAR, Lexington, Massachusetts
Captain John Parker adorns Lexington Center.
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On the morning of April 19, 1775, around seventy-seven Lexington militiamen under the command of Captain John Parker assembled on the green in the center of town to await the movement of British Regulars on their way to seize and destroy military arms stored down the road at Concord.
Eight colonists died in the skirmish in Lexington that morning: John Brown, Samuel Hadley, Caleb Harrington, Jonathan Harrington, Robert Munroe, Isaac Muzzey, Jonas Parker, and Asahel Porter. Porter’s body was taken to his hometown of Woburn for burial. The bodies of the other seven were laid to rest in the Old Burying Ground in Lexington.
In 1799, the bodies in the Old Burying Ground were moved to a vault on the Lexington Green. A granite obelisk inscribed with their names was installed to mark the site of the vault. The obelisk is the first monument erected to commemorate the American Revolutionary War.
LEGEND
BGen – Brigadier General
Capt – Captain
Cdr – Commander
Col – Colonel
Cnt – Coronet
Cpl – Corporal
CS – Civil Service
Drm – Drummer
Ens – Ensign
Lt – Lieutenant
Maj – Major
Noncom – Non-Commissioned Officer
PS – Patriotic Service
Pvt – Private
Sgt – Sergeant
Sol – Soldier
Smn – Seaman
Sur – Surgeon
SDI - Signer Declaration of Independence
X – Unknown