With the 250th anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill in less than two months and of Americaâs founding coming up next year, history buffs will be looking for places to see legendary artifacts of the American Revolution.Â
And Wyoming is home to one of the most legendary artifacts of the Revolution â the musket that fired the first shot at the Battle of Bunker Hill. Thatâs the one where the soldiers were said to have been told to âwait until you see the white of their eyesâ before firing on the British.
As history tells it, that isnât what happened. A soldier jumped the gun, literally, shooting at a British officer from 54 yards away.Â
That inspired the first court martial for the fledgling nation, and the record produced by that court martial is how itâs known who fired that premature shot June 17, 1775.
The firearm belonged to a man named John Simpson, and the musket he fired, which was his own personal rifle, is now housed at the National Museum of Military Vehicles in Dubois, Wyoming, owned by Dan Starks.Â
Starks told Cowboy State Daily the musket is sometimes confused with having fired another famous shot, the âshot heard around the world,â a phrase later coined by Ralph Waldo Emerson in an 1837 poem called âConcord Hymn.â
âThe historical data on the shot heard around the world is conflicting,â Starks told Cowboy State Daily. âThe Americans said the British fired the first shot, killing eight Americans. But the British submitted a report to the king saying the colonists had fired the first shot.â
Who exactly fired the shot has been completely lost to history, along with the rifle that fired it.Â

Bunker Hill
The Battle of Bunker Hill, though, is a completely different story, thanks to the nationâs first court martial.Â
âWe didnât have enough ammunition to fight the British very long, and the American officers knew that,â Starks said. âSo they told all the volunteers who came out to the battle to wait until the British are right on you before you shoot at them. Every shot has to count.â
But Simpson was a crack shot and he knew he could hit that British officer easily at 54 yards away. So, he disobeyed, firing off the first shot of the battle, and starting it prematurely.
It was ultimately a losing battle for the Americans. But the colonists, poorly trained and ill-equipped as they were, still managed to inflict heavy casualties on the British. That was a surprise not only for the British, but the Americans, too. And it has been credited by historians with boosting American morale and keeping their fledgling revolution alive.Â
Court Martial
If America was to win the war, its soldiers had to become more disciplined. Just because someone was a volunteer didnât mean they could take orders as suggestion.Â
An example had to be made so that order â and the new country âcould prevail.
âThey convened a court martial the morning after to determine who fired that first shot,â Starks said. âAnd the court martial record was created 24 hours after the battle, when everybody was still fresh with their experience on what had happened.â
The conclusion of the court martial was that Simpson had been the one who fired that first shot.
âHe just got a slap on the wrist,â Starks said. âThe point of the court martial was education, not punishment.â
Not only did Simpson survive the war, but he was promoted to major by its end.Â
Simpson returned home after the war, taking with him the personal musket and bayonet he had brought to the fight. The relic stayed in his family until 2019, when a family member decided to sell the artifact to the highest bidder.Â
âThat highest bidder was me,â Starks said. âAnd so thatâs how I got my hands on the musket, along with all the family history and provenance and authentication that came with it.â
Winning Bid
At first, Starks had not planned to bid for the weapon.Â
âI told my wife, âMan, I canât believe that this is coming up for auction,ââ Starks recalled. âAnd I told her, âIâm not gonna bid on it because itâs gonna be too expensive.ââ
But Starks was already constructing his National Museum of Military Vehicles at the time, so she told him he had to buy it.Â
âYouâve got to put it in the museum,â she said.
To this day, Starks tells people â albeit a little tongue in cheek â that the only reason he bought the musket was to keep peace at home.Â
âMy wife told me to buy it so I did,â he said, chuckling a little.
Starks paid nearly $500,000 for the musket which is housed at the museumâs Unknown Soldiers Weapons Vault. There are around 300 firearms in the vault, which span all the wars fought by Americans, starting with the American Revolution.Â
But the musket from the Battle of Bunker Hill is particularly special and is the first weapon visitors to the museum see as they enter the vault.
âIt sits in a display case all by itself, right in the center of just inside the doorway,â Starks said. âThat way everyone immediately sees it and can begin to appreciate what a historically significant firearm they are looking at. I refer to it as the Liberty Bell of American firearms. Itâs the most famous firearm in American history.â
Collector Of History
The Vault also includes weapons from the Civil War, settling the West, American Indian war weapons, World War One and Two weapons, the Vietnam War, and the Global War On Terror.
The reason itâs dedicated to the Unknown Soldier is poignant.
âThere wasnât a particular person appropriate for the scope of recognizing all the different weapons that are in the vault,â Starks said.Â
But, as he thought about it, he realized that was apt. There are so many soldiers over the years who fired weapons to defend America, some of whom are unknown, and some of whom have undoubtedly made the ultimate sacrifice, even though their names are lost to time.
âItâs just the very few who are known,â Starks said. âSo how about everyone else? Both those who died and those who survived?â
Today, Starksâ collection includes 500 military vehicles, most of which are U.S. military vehicles, as well as all the weapons in the Unknown Soldiers Weapons Vault.
Itâs a world-class collection of artifacts, which Starks said is the largest private collection of its kind in the nation.Â
Even so, Starks admits thereâs a bit of a bait and switch here. The military vehicles bring the people in, so that Starks can tell the story he really wants to tell.
That story is really about freedom in America, and all of the service and sacrifice that have gone into sustaining America for the last 250 years.
Â
Renée Jean can be reached at renee@cowboystatedaily.com.