HISTORY
Mustered
into active service on April 19, 1775; reorganized and entered Massachusetts Army
as Gardner's Regiment 23 April 1775. (Elements continued in the county as as 1st
Middlesex County Regiment as depot and for local defense.) Redesignated Bond's
Regiment upon death of Col. Gardner, on July 3, 1775.
Redesignated on
January 1, 1776 as the 25th Continental Regiment. The regiment was commanded by Col.
William Bond of Watertown, Massachusetts. Many of the soldiers had served in 1775,
joining the Continental Army organized outside of Boston following the Battles
of Lexington and Concord. Redesignated as the 7th Massachusetts Regiment, Continental
Line, on January 1, 1777. Mustered out of continental service on June 12, 1783.
The
regiment consisted of eight companies, and was to have a total strength of over
700 men. Each company was commanded by a captain, and consisted of 76 privates,
4 corporals, 4 sergeants, 1 ensign, 2 lieutenants, 1 fifer and 1 drummer. Soldiers
enlisted for one year.
Campaigns:
Siege of Boston:
The regiment served outside Boston through March of 1776.
In March, the arrival of cannon from Fort Ticonderoga led to the British evacuating
the city on March 17, 1776. General Washington expected the British would move
to New York City, and ordered the regiment to join American forces already there.
New
York City:
The 25th left Boston on March 18, 1776, and marched to New London,
Connecticut where it set sail for New York City. The regiment remained in New
York until April 21, 1776, when it was ordered by General Washington to join the
troops in Canada under Major General John Thomas.
Defense
of Canada:
The regiment arrived in Canada to find disease (smallpox) prevalent.
The arrival of British re-inforcements soon resulted in the June withdrawal of
the army south along the Richelieu River. By July 2, 1776, the army had arrived
at Crown Point, New York. There the decision was made to defend Lake Champlain
by occupying Fort Ticonderoga on the New York side and Mount Independence on the
Vermont side of the lake.
Champlain
Valley:
The 25th Regiment was at Mount Independence until November. Throughout
the Revolution, the Champlain Valley and surrounding area played a key role in
the History of the Adirondacks and United States. The troops built extensive fortifications
and prepared for a British attack from the north. Brigadier General Benedict Arnold
supervised the building and outfitting of a fleet of gunboats to delay the British.
(One of these, the Philadelphia, has been raised from the lake and is in the Smithsonian.
A copy, the Philadelphia II, can be seen at the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum
in Basin Harbor, Vermont.) Although Arnold's fleet was defeated, the British abandoned
there attack as a result of the delay, and the strength of the fortifications
at Ticonderoga and Mount Indepedence.
Northern
New Jersey:
In mid-November, the regiment was ordered to move south and join
Washington's Main Continental Army
in northern New Jersey. The regiment remained in service until January 1, 1777,
when it was reorganized as the 3rd Massachusetts Regiment of the Continental Line.