Paul Revere made a midnight run to warn the people of Lexington and Concord. He cried to them, "The British are Coming, The British are Coming!" He never reached Concord, but told all of Lexington.
April 18, 1775, Paul Revere and other colonists learned of the British plan to capture John Hancock and Samuel Adams and to raid the colonists military supplies, so they rode ahead and alerted the minutemen.
a humongous debt which made the british tax the colonists which started the am. rev. a humongous debt which made the british tax the colonists which started the am. rev.
Gave it back to France, which made the colonists angryGave it back to France which made the colonists angry
Gave it back to France, which made the colonists angryGave it back to France which made the colonists angry
taxes
British laws that affected the colonies were made by the King and the British Parliament. The colonists had no voice in the laws.
The colonists ran out of ammunition and the British made it over the Earthworks. Therefore, the colonists had to retreat.
Gave it back to France, which made the colonists angryGave it back to France which made the colonists angry
No the acadians were not accepted by the British colonists in America because they were foreign, but some made their way to Louisiana where the French did accept them.
Paul Revere is most commonly known for his midnight ride, warning that the British were coming. However, another man named William Dawes, who has received less mention and fame, also participated in this midnight ride.
Paul Revere made the painting look like the British made a deadly massacre and to strike anger into the Colonists to get rid of the British. Basically he wanted the Colonists to believe the British did it for the fun of it.