Abdalian, Leon H. “First revolutionary monument at Lexington Battle Field.” Photograph. October 19, 1929. Digital Commonwealth.
“Revolutionary Soldiers’ Monument, Lexington Common, Massachusetts.” Photograph. Malden, Mass.: E. M. Perry, (c) 1898. Digital Commonwealth.
Jones, Leslie. “Lexington monument.” Photograph. May 10, 1925. Digital Commonwealth.
Erected on July 4, 1799, Lexington‘s Revolutionary War Monument is the oldest war memorial in the United States. Featuring a granite obelisk set on a simple pedestal, it marks the approximate location of the line of the Lexington militia that stretched across the town common to confront the British Regulars on April 19, 1775.
Funded by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, following a 1797 petition to the General Court by Joseph Simonds to, "preserve to posterity a record of the first effort made by the people of America for the establishment of their freedom and independence,” it was designed by Thomas Park, a highly skilled stone cutter at a cost of $400.00.
Jonas Clarke, minister to Lexington from 1752 to 1805, composed the monument’s inscription honoring the eight men who died on Lexington Green. On April 20, 1835, the 60th anniversary of the Battles of Concord and Lexington, seven of the eight men honored on the monument were exhumed from Lexington’s Old Burying Ground and reinterred in a tomb beneath the monument in an elaborate ceremony with full military honors.
As reported in the Boston Daily Advertiser that same day, the ceremony began at 3:00 AM, the time when British troops fired on the Lexington militia, with an eight-gun salute honoring the eight men who “first fell as martyrs in the cause of civil liberty.” At sunrise a thirteen-gun salute honored the Thirteen Colonies (later States) followed at 11:00 AM with a procession, accompanied with military escort to the burying ground to receive the remains of those killed on April 19th.
A service took place at the meeting house, then another procession made its way to the monument. In what the Boston Daily Advertiser described as an "interesting circumstance" connected with the rededication service, ten of the eleven survivors of the Battle of Lexington were in attendance. Despite inclement weather, the ceremony attracted a crowd of nearly one thousand people who listened to a two-hour address by the Honorable Edward Everett in “breathless silence.” At the time a new marble tablet was installed in the face of the monument, as well as an iron fence which surrounds it to this day.
The inscription reads:
Sacred to Liberty & the Rights of mankind!!!
The Freedom & Independence of America,
Sealed & defended with the blood of her sons.
This Monument is erected
By the inhabitants of Lexington,
Under the patronage, & at the expence, of
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
To the memory of their Fellow Citizens,
Ensign Robert Munroe, Messrs. Jonas Parker,
Samuel Hadley, Jonathan Harrington Junr.
Isaac Muzzy, Caleb Harrington and John Brown
Of Lexington, & Asahel Porter of Woburn,
Who fell on this field, the first Victims to the
Sword of British Tyranny & Oppression,
On the morning of the ever memorable
Nineteenth of April, An. Dom. 1775.
The Die was east!!!
The Blood of these Martyrs,
In the cause of God & their Country,
Was the Cement of the Union of these States, then
Colonies; & gave the spring to the spirit. Firmness
And resolution of their Fellow Citizens.
They rose as one man, to revenge their brethren’s
Blood and at the point of the sword to assert &
Defend their native Rights.
They nobly dar’d to be free!!
The contest was long, blood & affecting
Righteous Heaven approved the solemn appeal;
Victory crowned their arms; and
The Peace, Liberty & Independence of the United
States of America, was their glorious Reward.
Built in the year 1799.