My New Book!

My New Book!
My New Book!

Tuesday, December 31, 2024

December 31, 2024: 2025 Anniversaries: Lexington and Concord

[A New Year means another blog series dedicated to historic anniversaries we’ll be commemorating this year. Leading up to a special weekend post on five films celebrating their 50th this year!]

On two ways to add to our memories of an already very familiar history.

Compared to yesterday’s subject of King Philip’s War, and indeed compared to almost any other American histories, the battles of Lexington and Concord figure very, very prominently in our collective memories. Even as a kid learning about American history in Virginia schools—and thus occupying an overtly partisan, anti-New England place in the debate over where the American Revolution and thus the United States of America itself began—I distinctly remember how much was made of the minutemen at Lexington and Concord (and of related figures and stories like Paul Revere’s ride). There’s no version of our revolutionary and founding histories that doesn’t include these sites and stories in central ways, and thus commemorating the 250th anniversary of Lexington and Concord might well feel like a repetition, or at least a reinforcement, of existing memories.

If you’re a reader of this blog, though, you already know that I believe we can and should always expand and add nuance to our collective memories, and that the process is only that much more important when the histories already feel familiar. I’ve written previously in this space, in response to Serena Zabin’s phenomenal book The Boston Massacre: A Family History (2020), about the importance of thinking of the American Revolution as a civil conflict, rather than a war between two distinct nations. As Zabin traces, even the British soldiers had become part of American communities in a variety of ways that made these battles familial; and if we go beyond the people firing guns at each other at Lexington and Concord, we can really remember the range of perspectives featured among colonists themselves on the conflict, on England and America, and on every aspect of this historical moment. In a very real sense, the shot heard ‘round the world was more like Fort Sumter, the first shots in a civil war, than we’ve generally been able to see.

Moreover, and more complicatedly still, that reference to Fort Sumter can remind us of another vital and too often forgotten aspect of Massachusetts in 1775—the presence and practice of slavery in the colony (and in the state once it was created as well). I’ve made the case repeatedly, in this space and most everywhere else, for thinking about enslaved people like Elizabeth Freeman and Quock Walker as American revolutionary leaders. Seen in that light, another shot heard ‘round the world (or one that should have been and still should be, anyway) was the 1777 petition through which Massachusetts enslaved people and their allies argued for their freedom in a post-Declaration of Independence world. At the very least, 250th anniversary commemorations of Lexington and Concord in 2025 should include Massachusetts and American enslaved people, a recognition of both the limits of revolution and of what every part of those unfolding histories meant and could mean for these American communities.

Next anniversary tomorrow,

Ben

PS. What do you think?

No comments:

Post a Comment