The RWVA invites you to experience a LibertySeed event where our volunteers will tell the story of the birth of our Nation. These events are free to the public.

The 19th of April, 1775, a day that forever changed the course of our Nation. Why is this such an important day and who was involved in the birth of our Nation?

It will not be the story you think you know, or the story you heard in school. The volunteers at the RWVA are passionate about American Heritage. We love to tell people the Story of the Three Strikes, about 'The Day the Shot was Heard Around the World.' The volunteers are willing to tell the story to groups around the Nation. If your group is interested in hearing the story please contact us.

See the Schedule below!


  • When and where was the American Revolution fought and won?
  • When and where did the Revolutionary War actually start?
  • What caused the professional British Army to break and run from colonial farmers and shopkeepers?
  • Who fired the first shots of the Revolutionary War?
  • What did Paul Revere really say as he made his midnight ride?

It will be the real story, the story that historians have discovered, the story of the first day of the American Revolution.


Along the way, the story will answer questions you didn't even know existed, like:

Who fired the famous "Shot Heard Round the World"? Historians have debated this for years, but you'll find out the real answer at a LibertySeed.

 

Why did it take "three strikes of the match" before the American Revolution began? Yes, you believe the Revolution started on Lexington Green, when Capt John Parker's men were shot down by the redcoats - but surprisingly, it did not began there. Nor did it begin with the fighting at the North Bridge in Concord a few hours later. You'll learn the name of the obscure place the revolution REALLY began.

Why were some local peasants (as they were viewed by the British army) able to break the British line at Concord's North Bridge - in less than two minutes? Some original historical research suggests why, and the answer, unlike the answer to most historical questions, is one word. At a LibertySeed, you'll find out what that one word is.

You will be surprised by how much is known of that first day of the American Revolution, a day that some believe is the most important day in American history.

LibertySeed Schedule

Venue Location When Information
Peacemaker National Training Center, WVGerrardstown, WVApril 06, 2024Information
Cameo Shooting and Education Complex, COPalisade, COApril 24, 2024Information
Lakeshore Inn, Restaurant and Marina, ALDouble Springs, ALMay 06, 2024Information
Rivanna Rifle & Pistol Club, VACharlottesville, VAMay 11, 2024Information
Cheaha State Park, ALDelta, ALJuly 05, 2024Information
Cheaha State Park, ALDelta, ALJuly 06, 2024Information
Preppercamp, NCSaluda, NCSeptember 27, 2024Information
RWVA Home Range, NCRamseur, NCOctober 12, 2024Information

Samuel Adams

If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, go home from us in peace.

We seek not your counsel nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains set lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen.



Levi Preston

Young man, what we meant in going for those Redcoats was this: we always had governed ourselves and we always meant to. They didn't mean we should.

Captain Levi Preston of Danvers, Massachusetts, interviewed about his participation in the first battle of the American Revolution many years later, at the age of 91 (around 1843)



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