Home > American Revolution > Lexington, Concord, and the Organization of Colonial Resistance
Lexington, Concord, and the Organization of Colonial Resistance
- The formation of the First Continental Congress
- Getting down to business
- Documents of the First Continental Congress
- King receives documents; Franklin pleas for peace
- Battles at Lexington and Concord: Two views
- The Second Continental Congress
- The Battle of Bunker Hill
- Preparing for all-out war
- Why General Washington?
- "Our cause is just. Our union is perfect"
- For More...
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- The People of the New World
- Colonial Life
- Literature and the Arts in the Revolutionary Era
- The Roots of Rebellion (1763–1769)
- On the Brink of War (1770–1774)
- Lexington, Concord, and the Organization of Colonial Resistance
- Assembling an Army (1775–1776)
- Native Americans and Blacks in the American Revolution
- A Ragtag Force Enters the Revolution (1776–1777)
- The Agonizing Path to Victory (1777–1778)
- The War Shifts to the South (1778–1780)
- The Revolution Draws to a Close (1781–1783)
