Paul Revere, William Dawes, and Samuel Prescott met up at the home of Dr. Joseph Warren in Boston on the night of April 18, 1775. After their separate rides to warn the colonial militia of the British troops' movements, they joined forces to continue their mission together. Their meeting was crucial in coordinating the alarm ahead of the Battles of Lexington and Concord.
They first met at prescotts house when superbowl I was on, they had chips and dip and other lovely things
There were three men along with Paul Revere; William Dawes, Samuel PrescottThe person in the tower was Robert John Nuemon in the Old North Church.Improved Answer: Paul Revere was the only one who got caught by the british patrol. Dr. Samuel Prescott was picked up on his way back from "Courting his lady fair" Aka a date. Rode with Paul from Boston. when Revere was caught by british patrol Dr. Samuel Prescott jumped into the forest and told concord to hide theyre powder, shot, and cannons. Dawes being the big burly guy that he was, fell into the brush trying to copy Prescott. Cheswell rode north to New Hampshire. The Northern people came down and joined the fight as the British were heading back to Boston and continued helping during the Battle of Bunker (Reeds) Hill.
The Poem is just that---poetry. It is Not Historical.He got some of the main points right, but others he did not.The man who made the ride was named Paul Revere.However, the lamps were hung in Christ's Church. The Old North Church had a hill by it and no one could've seen the light.Paul Revere was on the same shore- not the opposite shore- ready to spread the alarm. However, Longfellow doesn't mention his partner, William Dawes or the other partner (whose name escapes me...)Paul Revere acually failed to finsih his ride, because he was stopped by a British patrol. They took his horse, and let him live.But lets not forget Dawes! Dawes was the one who DID finish the ride and another professor also rode along.. (can't seem to remember his name).Actually William Dawes was stopped by The british aswell...The man who finished the ride was Samuel Prescott.......Who was from Lexington and met up with Dawes and Revere as they headed for Concord...They were all confronted by four British troops Paul Revere was captured and his Horse was taken (He made back to lexington on foot in time to see the end of the battle) while Dawes and Samuel Prescott used the surrounding forest to lose the British,Dawes was later captured But Prescott made it (probably because of his intimate knowledge of the surrounding Woods)....
Paul Revere and William Dawes arrived at Lexington during the night. They continued on to Concord in the night and were joined by a local, Dr. Prescott. The 3 were stopped by a British patrol. Dr. Prescott galloped off in the night to take the warning to Concord and Revere was captured. The British army did not arrive in Lexington until just about the time the sun was coming up. Revere was captured sometime before then.
he had to meet his friend
William Dawes and Samuel Prescott
They first met at prescotts house when superbowl I was on, they had chips and dip and other lovely things
There were three men along with Paul Revere; William Dawes, Samuel PrescottThe person in the tower was Robert John Nuemon in the Old North Church.Improved Answer: Paul Revere was the only one who got caught by the british patrol. Dr. Samuel Prescott was picked up on his way back from "Courting his lady fair" Aka a date. Rode with Paul from Boston. when Revere was caught by british patrol Dr. Samuel Prescott jumped into the forest and told concord to hide theyre powder, shot, and cannons. Dawes being the big burly guy that he was, fell into the brush trying to copy Prescott. Cheswell rode north to New Hampshire. The Northern people came down and joined the fight as the British were heading back to Boston and continued helping during the Battle of Bunker (Reeds) Hill.
The Poem is just that---poetry. It is Not Historical.He got some of the main points right, but others he did not.The man who made the ride was named Paul Revere.However, the lamps were hung in Christ's Church. The Old North Church had a hill by it and no one could've seen the light.Paul Revere was on the same shore- not the opposite shore- ready to spread the alarm. However, Longfellow doesn't mention his partner, William Dawes or the other partner (whose name escapes me...)Paul Revere acually failed to finsih his ride, because he was stopped by a British patrol. They took his horse, and let him live.But lets not forget Dawes! Dawes was the one who DID finish the ride and another professor also rode along.. (can't seem to remember his name).Actually William Dawes was stopped by The british aswell...The man who finished the ride was Samuel Prescott.......Who was from Lexington and met up with Dawes and Revere as they headed for Concord...They were all confronted by four British troops Paul Revere was captured and his Horse was taken (He made back to lexington on foot in time to see the end of the battle) while Dawes and Samuel Prescott used the surrounding forest to lose the British,Dawes was later captured But Prescott made it (probably because of his intimate knowledge of the surrounding Woods)....
Paul Revere and William Dawes arrived at Lexington during the night. They continued on to Concord in the night and were joined by a local, Dr. Prescott. The 3 were stopped by a British patrol. Dr. Prescott galloped off in the night to take the warning to Concord and Revere was captured. The British army did not arrive in Lexington until just about the time the sun was coming up. Revere was captured sometime before then.
I dnt no
he had to meet his friend
Billy dressed up as a drunken farmer to cross the land and warn the rebels that the British are coming.Paul was to do the same but different route.
He played one of the messengers that had met William Dawes later during the ride, who was also a messenger carrying the same message as Revere. They were both sent by the Sons Of Liberty and some patriot groups. William and Paul then met Dr. Prescott. Then the night of the midnight ride, Paul and the others got caught by the British. But Paul escaped. Then soon Paul heard the message by leaders running up and down some streets yelling, "The Regulars are out!" and then everyone was up and fighting the first revolutionary war.
Paul Revere and William Dawes were American patriots known for their midnight rides on April 18, 1775, during the lead-up to the American Revolution. Their mission was to warn colonial militias about the approaching British forces, signaling that "the British are coming." Revere's ride has been famously immortalized in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem, while both men played crucial roles in mobilizing the colonial resistance against British rule. Their efforts contributed significantly to the early stages of the Revolutionary War.
-He was of French -He was a silversmith by trade -He sometimes worked as an amateur dentist -He was also known for his art -He led a spy ring -Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s poem about Paul Revere’s ride got many of the facts wrong. For one thing, Revere was not alone on his mission to warn the patriots that the British were approaching Lexington. Two other men, William Dawes and Samuel Prescott, rode alongside him, and by the end of the night as many as 40 men on horseback were spreading the word across Boston’s Middlesex County. Revere also never reached Concord, as the poem says.He and the two other riders were overtaken by the British so they split up and headed in different directions. Revere was captured by the British at Lexington and Dawes lost his way after falling off his horse, leaving Prescott—a young physician—the task of alerting Concord’s residents. -Paul Revere never shouted “The British are coming!” as he passed from town to town. The operation was meant to be conducted as discreetly as possible since many of the British troops were hiding out in the Massachusetts countryside. If anything, Revere may have told other rebels that the “Regulars”—a term used to designate British soldiers—were on the move. -A borrowed horse served as his worthy steed on the night of April 18, 1775. It is believed that the Charlestown merchant John Larkin loaned him a horse, which was later confiscated by the British. According to a Larkin family genealogy published in 1930, the name of the lost mare was Brown Beauty.
the dawes act