What does a life of freedom and fortune mean to you? And what would you do to attain it? 

To find that life, two men from different backgrounds joined the British Army, one as a foot soldier, the other as a commissioned officer. While their upbringings and choices differed, their lives crossed one fiery day in Concord, Massachusetts.

 In 1774, Hugh Cargill, a destitute Irishman, sought to change his life by joining the British Army. For men like Cargill, the army could provide a way out of poverty and passage to new lands to seek their fortune. Cargill landed in Boston but was soon expelled from the British Army, deemed “unfit” for service, perhaps because of his sympathies with the Colonists (as suggested by author James Haltigan). Sure enough, less than a year later, Cargill appeared in Concord on April 19th, 1775, and he was not there to support King George and Country.

Also in Concord that day was English Officer Jeremy Lister. A younger son of an English landholder, Lister would not inherit property and, like many younger sons, had to make his own fortune. Following a respectable path, Lister received a commission as an Ensign in His Majesty’s 10th Regiment of Foot and in 1771 sailed with the regiment to Canada. Tensions in the Colonies drew Lister’s regiment to Boston where, on the night of April 18th, 1775, troops assembled for an overnight march to Concord to destroy a reported Colonist arsenal. 

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North Bridge

Lister volunteered for the Concord trek when another officer feigned illness, and joined the King’s troops quietly boarding boats to cross the Charles River. But the Sons of Liberty were watching and, observing the troops on the river, Boston doctor Joseph Warren ascended to the belfry of Boston’s North Church and hung two lit lanterns – giving the signal immortalized in Longfellow’s poem: “one if by land, and two, if by sea.” Seeing the lights, a waiting Paul Revere galloped towards Concord, his cries of warning alerting the sleeping minutemen: “Awake! The Regulars are coming out!” Awake they did, and the minutemen heading towards Concord that night included Hugh Cargill.

Arriving in Concord, the King’s troops were dispatched to multiple locations. While Lister’s regiment was sent to the North Bridge, another searched the town center where they found only a small collection of military supplies. The King’s troops piled the confiscated weapons in front of the town house and set them alight. 

Sparks flew into the air and embers ignited the roof of the townhouse. Soon, the building was ablaze! Amid the chaos, a Concord widow, Martha Moulton, cajoled the King’s troops into forming a bucket brigade to extinguish the townhouse fire accidentally started by their bonfire.

Into this scene now arrived Hugh Cargill. Cargill, a fireman at Engine Company 6 in Boston, ran into the blazing townhouse and began grabbing town records and carrying them to safety. 

Meanwhile, up the road at the North Bridge, Jeremy Lister’s day was getting worse. The path to the bridge was narrow, the sides steep, and Lister feared an ambush. And just ahead, up the hill on the other side of the Bridge, over 400 Colonists were assembling. 

From their vantage point on the hill, the Colonists could now see a column of smoke rising from Concord Center and thought that the King’s troops were torching the town. “Will you let them burn the town down?” shouted Concord’s Lt. Joseph Hosmer. “No!” Trained and ready, the Colonists began to advance down the hill towards the bridge.

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Old Hill Burying Ground Marker

 Attempting to stop the advancing Colonists, Lister proposed destroying the bridge, but before they could get one plank off, all hell broke loose. Three warning shots from the Regulars bounced into the water, and then a volley flew across the bridge into the Colonists – killing two instantly. Concord’s Major John Buttrick gave his shout that rings through history, “Fire, fellow soldiers, for God’s sake fire!” This was the first command to intentionally fire on the King’s Troops: the American Revolutionary War had officially begun.

The cracks and fiery flashes of muskets filled the air as men on both sides of the bridge fired upon their fellow countrymen. Three Regulars were struck and killed, and a musket ball shattered Lister’s elbow. Hemmed in and outnumbered, panic filled the King’s Troops, and despite an injured Lister and fellow officers trying to regain order, the Regulars retreated and the King’s troops returned to Boston.

Lister’s arm was slow to heal; three surgeons deemed he should be medically retired. However, a shortage of men and the continued fighting, led to his being denied medical retirement and he remained serving in full duty. He wrote, “…I gave up all hopes of seeing England again this year… the rebels are not yet tired of fighting.” 

Among the “rebels” was Hugh Cargill. Cargill joined Captain Abishai Brown’s Concord Company and fought at the Battle of Bunker Hill. 

After the bloody and unexpected battle at Concord’s North Bridge, eight more years of fighting passed until the American Revolutionary War ended in 1783.

Now a Captain with the 10th Regiment, Lister sold his commission and finally returned to England where he married and lived out his days in Yorkshire. 

In Boston, Cargill became a successful businessman and property owner. In 1797, he moved to Concord and, upon his death, gave much of his land to the town for the benefit of the poor and destitute. His legacy of helping others is carried on today by the Hugh Cargill Trust. Cargill is buried in the Old Hill Cemetery in Concord Center, near the town house whose April 19th, 1775, accidental blaze can perhaps be described as the most significant fire in American History. 

If the town house had not caught fire, would the Colonists still have seen a large column of smoke rising from Concord center and thought the town was being burned down? Would they have been moved to action and advanced down the hill at that moment? Or would a few more moments have passed giving Lister and the rest of the King’s troops an opportunity to gain a better position? What then for the freedom and fate of Hugh Cargill, Jeremy Lister, men, and nations? 

Follow-Up Places to Visit: Monument Square, site of the townhouse. Old Hill Burying Ground: Hugh Cargill’s grave is in the front section near the Catholic Church. The North Bridge, including a movie presentation in the visitor center, knowledgeable rangers, and reenactors/historic interpreters. The Concord Museum whose collections include one of the original lanterns that hung in the North Church. 

Sources and Recommended Reading: Revere, P. (1775) Paul Revere’s sworn deposition. Retrieved from: www.masshist.org. Moulton, M. (1776) Petition for Pension. Retrieved from www.nps.gov.

Lister, J. (1931) CONCORD FIGHT: THE NARRATIVE OF JEREMY LISTER, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press Shattuck, L. (1835) HISTORY OF CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS, Boston, Massachusetts, Russell, Odiorne, and Company. Longfellow, H.W. (1860) “Paul Revere’s Ride”. Gross, Robert, THE MINUTEMEN AND THEIR WORLD (1976) Tourtellot, A.B.. (1959) LEXINGTON AND CONCORD: The Beginning of the War of the American Revolution. New York, W.W. Norton and Company Haltigan, J. (1907) THE IRISH IN THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION AND THEIR EARLY INFLUENCE ON THE COLONIES. Washington, D.C., P.J. Haltigan