A Revolutionary walk in the park

BRING THE FAMILY

June 18, 2011|By Lylah M. Alphonse, Globe Correspondent
(lylah m. alphonse )

WHO: Globe correspondent Lylah M. Alphonse and two of her five kids, ages 6 and 4

WHAT: Learning the real story behind “The shot heard ’round the world.’’

WHERE: Minute Man National Historical Park, Concord

There’s been renewed interest in Paul Revere’s famous midnight ride, thanks to former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin telling reporters this month that Revere “warned the British that they weren’t gonna be taking away our arms.’’ Most people agreed that Palin messed up — Revere was trying to warn the locals that the British were on their way — but some historians said she was essentially right, given that Revere, after he was captured in Lincoln, told the British that the Colonists were prepared to fight. (In real life, unlike in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poem, Revere didn’t make it to Concord that night.)

I decided it was time to brush up on our history and drive to Concord, to wander around the place where the Revolutionary War started. Besides, my favorite “Schoolhouse Rock’’ segment is “The Shot Heard ’Round the World,’’ and my kids know the lyrics by heart.

My teenage stepkids weren’t in town, so it was just me and the little ones, who I knew wouldn’t be up for walking the entire route along which the local militia marched and fought on April 19, 1775. So we parked our car at the North Bridge Visitor Center on Liberty Street and wandered as far as my 4-year-old’s legs would allow.

We got farther than I thought we would. We explored the gorgeous gardens at the visitor’s center, stopped by what was left of a couple of historic houses, followed a long, sandy path through an overgrown field, and, about half a mile later, found ourselves at the Minute Man statue. Sculpted by Daniel Chester French to commemorate the citizen soldiers who rallied to expel the British Regulars, it marks one end of the North Bridge; a tall monument, erected in 1836, stands on the other side. Between those two spots the first shots of the Revolutionary War were fired.

Once we crossed the bridge, we followed a path to the Old Manse, home of the Rev. William Emerson (grandfather of Ralph Waldo Emerson), stopped to inspect a 19th-century boathouse, and listened to a recorded four-minute history lesson about Major John Buttrick of Concord and how he gave the first-ever order for the Colonists to attack the British (“Fire, fellow soldiers, for God’s sake, fire!’’). We saw the grave of the fallen British soldiers, the stone marker flanked by two British flags and inscribed: “They came three thousand miles and died to keep the past upon its throne. Unheard beyond the ocean tide, the English mother made her moan.’’

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