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he did so for anybody that's trying to hide from the british No. Paul Revere met at the Old North Church where the decision was made to warn the men in Concord and Lexington. The lanterns were a signal to those outside Boston----and not for Revere. No, Paul Revere's friend hung them. But it wasnt Dawes because him and Revere were together when they notticed they were lit.
Paul Revere's ride is where Paul Revere took a journey to tell people the Bristish were coming.
i am sorry to tell you that paul revere did not fight in wars
You tell me, paul revere expert!
actually it was Cherokee sparks, a native American who hung the lanterns cherrypopper1 I'm afraid cherrypopper1 is mistaken. Although, not a Bostonian, I have been convincingly told that Robert Newman actually stole from his house and climbed the 154 stairs of Old North to hang the two lights warning those in Charlestown of the British movements by sea just in case the famous Paul Revere was unsuccessful in crossing the Charles River on 18th of April 1775.
Paul Revere!
According to the Longfellow poem it is lanterns in the old North church. It didn't really happen that way and Longfellow was using a poetic license in his poem. He wrote it in 1861 just before the civil war to remind people of their history.
IT WASNT PAUL REVERE it was dr William Prescott
He was trying to single the people and tell them when the british are coming.
He ran all the way across town to tell the people that the British were coming.
he had to tell all the people and warn them the british were comming. And to stop the British
No code. Revere was told to warn the men in Concord and paid 30 shillings for the job. He never finished his ride because he met a British patrol and his horse taken away. Dawes never got to Concord either because he fell off his horse. Prescott is the only one to get to Concord.