Biography of Paul Revere

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Paul Revere was born on New Year’s Day of 1735 in Boston, Massachusetts. Paul Revere was a master silversmith in Boston and was well known for his work. Revere is most well-known for his “midnight ride” to warn John Hancock and Samuel Adams that the British troops were coming to Lexington in 1775. Revere is also known for his propaganda sketch of Boston Massacre of 1770 that helped rally the colonist behind the Revolution. Paul Revere is a great example of an ordinary man that becomes a politically involved and is symbolically represents the American Revolution as the start of changing history. The setting is eighteenth century Boston, Massachusetts. The population in Boston between 1760’s and 1790’s ranged from sixteen thousand to eighteen thousand . Some of the major building that are well known for the time period are Old State House; originally called Town House, this building is very historic the Boston Massacre of 1770 took place in front of this building, also the Declaration of Independence was first read off the balcony. Also Boston has the Old South Meeting House; which in that time was the largest meeting space, this was where the “convocation met before the Boston Tea Party, and this is community commemorated the Boston Massacre” . Another building is the Old North Church, the first stone was laid in April of 1723 taking twenty-two years to complete, this is the oldest church is Boston today. This church’s steeple was immortalized by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in his poem “The midnight ride of Paul Revere” . The geography in Boston is that it was a coastal region with poor soil, this was not a farming community, and most people that lived in Boston were people that practice a trade or a craft. The climate in Boston ca... ... middle of paper ... ...ushee, I. (1996, April 2). Paul Revere Grand Master. Retrieved from Most worshipful Paul Revere grand master grand lodge of Massachusetts a.f. & a.m. 1795-1797 200th anniversary: http://www.mwsite.org/papers/mwrevere.html Brooks, R. (2011, December 5). Paul Revere. Retrieved from History Of Massachusetts: http://historyofmassachusetts.org/paul-revere/ Edwards, B. (1998, January 2). Revere Foundry and Copper Mill. Retrieved from Paul Revere Home: http://www.paulreverehouse.org/bio/coppermill.html Society, B. T. (2008). Paul Revere. Retrieved from Boston tea party historical society: http://www.boston-tea-party.org/participants/paul-revere.html Wees, P. (2003, October 1). Paul Revere Jr. (1734-1818). Retrieved from Metropolitain Museum of Art: http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/rvre/hd_rvre.htm Young, A. F. (1991). The Shoemaker and the Tea Party. Boston: Beacon Press.

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