When was samuel prescott born
That night, Paul Revere and the Assassin Connor arrived at Mulliken's residence and requested a half-dressed Prescott to aid them in warning militia troops of an impending raid by the British Army. Because Prescott lived in Concord, he knew the area well, and he rode there with Revere and William Dawes. When they arrived, they were stopped by a British patrol.
Revere was captured and Dawes lost his horse, forcing him to hide in a barn for several hours. Prescott, however, had his horse jump over a wall, and continued on to Concord to warn the militia.
Thanks to his actions, the militia won the following Battles of Lexington and Concord. Prescott's life after the Midnight Ride is poorly documented. Because of the "midnight" rides of Revere, Dawes, Prescott, and many other expresses couriers , minutemen and militia everywhere were on the ready, many marching to Concord to effectively engage the British Army at the Battles of Lexington and Concord.
Prescott was there to witness the Battle of Concord , then tried to beat the British back to Lexington to see Lydia Mulliken and her family and to help with the wounded. There is evidence that Prescott went on to serve as a surgeon in the Continental Army , a tradition that he joined the crew of a New England privateer , and a report that he was in prison in Halifax, Nova Scotia , where he may have died between November 23, and December 26 ?
Prescott's ride is re-enacted every Patriots' Day eve observed in the Town of Acton. The distance is approximately five miles 8 km. There are also re-enactments on Patriots' Day usually the third Monday of April of the rides of William Dawes and Paul Revere, to commemorate the famous "midnight" ride that began in the evening hours of April 18 and continued on April The re-enactment is preceded by a Patriots' Ball.
The Minute Men march with fife and drum leading the attendees from the armory to the church. A memorial plaque to Prescott is at his former home in Concord, Massachusetts. Samuel Prescott Samuel Prescott August 19, — c. Concord, Massachusetts , British America. Selesky, H. Encyclopedia of the American Revolution : Library of military history 2nd ed. It was there he met Paul Revere and William Dawes , who were racing through the countryside to warn the citizenry that a force of British regulars were on the march.
Prescott, a High Son of Liberty, joined them for their planned ride to Concord. Along the way, a patrol of British soldiers attempted to stop them. Revere was captured, and Dawes was thrown by his horse and ended up walking back to Lexington. Prescott, familiar with the landscape, made his escape by taking his horse off of the road, and brought the vital news to Concord. Later in the Revolutionary War, he joined the crew of a privateer, but was captured by the British and taken to a prison camp in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
It was there he died and was probably buried in an unmarked grave. The marker pictured here is located at the site of his home in Concord. Revolutionary War Graves Register. Clovis H. Taking a circuitous route through Lincoln, he pushed on with the utmost speed to Concord. He was the only one of the three men to reach Concord and warn the town. The other two men were captured before reaching Concord, but had successfully ridden all the way from Boston, spreading the alarm. Prescott then proceeded further west to warn Acton, Massachusetts while his brother Abel rode south to warn Sudbury and Framingham.
The rapid warning of Revere, Dawes, and Prescott alerted the Minutemen of this region in time for them to engage the British Army at the Battle of Lexington and Concord. Prescott later became a surgeon in the Continental Army and joined the crew of a New England privateer. He was captured by the Royal Navy and died between November 23, and December 26 ? Search the original records.
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