Skip to main content
Gift of John C. Parsons, 1844.10.2  Photograph by David Stansbury.  © 2009 The Connecticut Hist ...
Plate II. A View of the Town of Concord
Gift of John C. Parsons, 1844.10.2 Photograph by David Stansbury. © 2009 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Photographs and all rights purchased by the Connecticut Historical Society.

Plate II. A View of the Town of Concord

Printmaker (American, 1754 - 1832)
After a work by (American, 1751 - 1801)
Date1775
MediumEngraving; printer's ink and watercolor on laid paper
DimensionsPrimary Dimensions (image height x width): 11 1/2 x 17 3/4in. (29.2 x 45.1cm)
ClassificationsGraphics
Credit LineGift of John C. Parsons
Object number1844.10.2
DescriptionTwo soldiers wearing British military uniforms stand in a cemetery on a hill. One man holds a spyglass or telescope to his eye. Below, British troops march in formation along a road behind a stone wall. Additional troops are on other roads in the village. Frame houses, fields, and trees are in the background.
Label TextAmos Doolittle's etching of The Town of Concord depicts the British troops marching along the Battle Road on April 19, 1775, while their officers look on from a nearby cemetery. This print is one of the most important contemporary views of the beginnings of the American Revolution. Doolittle traveled to Lexington and Concord from his home in New Haven, Connecticut, shortly after the battles in order to view the sites and obtain eyewitness accounts of the action.
NotesHistorical note: Amos Doolittle and Ralph Earl purportedly visited the battlefields and Lexington and Concord shortly after the events of April 15, 1775. Doolittle's four plates accurately depict the sites and of the battles and reflect the accounts of eyewitnesses interviewed by the two artists. Together with Paul Revere's print of the Boston Massacre, they are the most important early American prints depicting contemporary events. Such prints were extremely uncommon in the eighteenth century.

Dimensions Note: Print is matted, framed and glazed. Platemark and the edges of the sheet are not visible. Image size was estimated through glass and may not be precise. Print should be remeasured when removed from frame.
Status
Not on view