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Patriots of Color

Home » Topics » Patriots of Color
  • Bng1909a
    April 25, 2025
    By Joe Palumbo

    A Fight for Freedom: Honoring Patriots of Color

    Last fall, the Town of Concord and Concord250 were proud to be among the 37 selected recipients of a Massachusetts250 Grant provided by the Healey-Driscoll Administration and the Massachusetts Office of Travel and Tourism. The grant funded the project “A Fight for Freedom: Honoring Patriots of Color.” 

    For many months, scholars, interpreters, and artists collaborated to create this signature event. The program launched in March at The Umbrella Center for the Arts with a two-hour live event dedicated to uncovering and honoring the often-overlooked contributions of Black and Indigenous Patriots during the American Revolution and the ongoing struggle for freedom and equality over the past 250 years.

  • Thumbnail poc minute man 1 rgb
    March 28, 2025
    By Jarrad Fuoss

    Local Patriots of Color in the American Revolution

    On April 19, 1775, an estimated twenty to forty colonists of African or Native American descent fought in the first battle of the American Revolution. On that historic day, those men, often termed “Patriots of Color,” joined approximately 4,000 other men fighting British Regular soldiers along the “Battle Road” from Concord to Boston. Over the last 250 years, racism and historical bias have effectively ignored or trivialized the contributions of those men and many other people of color in the historic struggle that produced the United States. To understand who the Patriots of Color were, how they contributed to the American Revolution, and why they chose to do so, we must examine their social context.

  • Thumbnail poc minute man 1 rgb
    March 15, 2024
    By Jarrad Fuoss

    Local Patriots of Color in the American Revolution

    On April 19, 1775, an estimated twenty to forty colonists of African or Native American descent fought in the first battle of the American Revolution. On that historic day, those men, often termed “Patriots of Color,” joined approximately 4,000 other men fighting British Regular soldiers along the “Battle Road” from Concord to Boston. 

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  • Thumbnail  dsc5605
    September 15, 2023
    By Joe Palumbo

    Freedom Unfinished

  • Xxxx  salem peter  gravesite
    September 15, 2022
    By George Quintal Jr.

    Emancipation: Abridged excerpt from Patriots of Color at Battle Road

  • Img 2175
    September 15, 2022
    By Beth van Duzer

    Preserving & Updating Concord’s Civil War Monument

  • 800px the storming of ft wa
    June 15, 2021
    By Richard Smith

    George Washington Dugan: No Longer Missing, No Longer Forgotten

  • Robbinshouse
    May 15, 2021
    By Liz Clayton

    Mapping Concord’s African American History: What’s in a Name?

  • Nick johnson 096
    March 15, 2021
    By Erica Lome

    The Unheard Voices of April 19, 1775

  • Robbins house
    March 15, 2020
    By Alida Vienna Orzechowski

    The Robbins House: Preserving the Legacy of African American History in Concord

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Authors

  • Headshot generic for web
    Jarrad Fuoss
  • Headshot generic for web
    Joe Palumbo
  • Beth van duzer headshot
    Beth van Duzer
  • George Quintal Jr.
  • Headshot generic for web
    Erica Lome
  • Liz Clayton
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