Paul Revere grew up in a family of 11 to 12 children. 7 survived.
Phones had not been invented at the time
He wore a Black pants and a white shirt
kind of but not exactly paul revere got there but William dawes came to help when revere got caught a concord
He was a silver smith and he was chosen as the safety mail man, which is the person who travels to pass on important messages
they were said to live in huts for a little bit then they started to make old style houses
Phones had not been invented at the time
He wore a Black pants and a white shirt
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kind of but not exactly paul revere got there but William dawes came to help when revere got caught a concord
it is kind of better because he finally takes time to restAs in Paul Revere? He has been dead a long time now
Kind of because he was in school only until he was thirteen after that he left to work in his fathers silversmith shop
He was a silver smith and he was chosen as the safety mail man, which is the person who travels to pass on important messages
they were said to live in huts for a little bit then they started to make old style houses
Paul Revere was patient and good with his hands. That showed in his silver work. He was patriotic which showed in his willingness to ride to warn the colonists at Concord and Lexington.
he attended a writing and reading school until he was apprenticed to his father as a silversmith. So, public
Although his family was of German descent, Ron Paul was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on August 20, 1935. He grew up in a suburb of the city and attended Dormont High School and Gettysburg College.
Paul Revere had a relatively modest and hardworking childhood. Born in 1735 in Boston to a French Huguenot father who was a silversmith, Revere was the second of twelve children. He learned the trade of silversmithing from his father, who passed away when Revere was just a teenager, which instilled in him a strong work ethic and an appreciation for craftsmanship. His upbringing in a bustling colonial city also exposed him to the growing tensions leading up to the American Revolution.