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Who rode to warn people the british were coming?

Updated: 8/17/2019
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13y ago

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prescott and dawes

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Q: Who rode to warn people the british were coming?
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Who rode her horse to warn the british were coming?

Paul Revere


Who was the patriot that rode to warn Lexington?

Paul Revere rode into Lexington to warn the colonists. That's where the saying "The British are coming" comes from.


Who rode to warn the Minutemen that the British were coming?

Revere, Dawes, and Prescott


Who rode to warn Lexington to warm that the British was coming?

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Who rode on Paul Revere's ride with him?

William Dawes rode with him on the night he went to warn Lexington and Concord that the British where coming.


What did Paul Revere warn them about?

Paul Revere rode to warn the people of Lexington and Concord that the British were coming. However he was captured. William Dawes was the rider that made it through the lines.


What important roles did Paul Revere play in the American Revolution?

Paul Revere rode to warn the people in Lexington and Concord that the British were coming.


How do you know Paul revere valued libertywhat did he do?

Paul Revere rode on horse back with William Daws to warn every one in the colonists the "The Redcoats Are Coming!".


What did Paul Revere do to warn the colonst and how important was it in American history?

Paul Revere rode a horse around saying the British are coming the British are coming, and it was an important part of American history because warning the people helped us get ready for when they came by sea.


Is Paul Revere a horse or a human?

Paul Revere is a man who rode through the street of Boston in 1775 to warn the citizens the British are coming.


Why was Simon Winship with the British troops when they arrived in Lexington?

He was out riding his horse when he was stopped by a british patrol on the same night that Paul Revere had rode out to warn of the coming of the british. Simon was questioned as to whether or not he was out to "warn the minutemen" and he said no, although he was still forced to go on with the british.