i think George Washington
There is no town between Boston and Lexington. The distance is about. 5 miles between the two. He never made it to Lexington because he fell off his horse soon after leaving Boston.
He rode from Boston to Lexington
Paul Revere
Paul Revere rode west from Boston to Lexington. Wentworth Cheswell rode north to Hew Hampshire and Vermont. Samuel Prescott rode south towards Rhode Island
Paul Revere rode into Lexington to warn the colonists. That's where the saying "The British are coming" comes from.
He rode from Boston to Lexington Massachusetts.
paul
There is no town between Boston and Lexington. The distance is about. 5 miles between the two. He never made it to Lexington because he fell off his horse soon after leaving Boston.
He rode from Boston to Lexington
Paul Revere
Paul Revere rode west from Boston to Lexington. Wentworth Cheswell rode north to Hew Hampshire and Vermont. Samuel Prescott rode south towards Rhode Island
Paul Revere, a Boston silversmith, rode through Middlesex County, Massachusetts on the eve of the Battle of Lexington and Concord to warn the nearby minutemen that the red coats were coming. He also brought the word to Sam Adams and John Hancock.
Paul Revere rode into Lexington to warn the colonists. That's where the saying "The British are coming" comes from.
Samuel Prescott not Paul Revere
Lexington.
Perhaps you at thinking of Paul Revere who rode though Massachusetts. He lived in Boston a city in that state. He left Massachusetts at times to watch British troop movements.
Paul Revere rode from Boston to Concord and Lexington. The little known fact is that Wentworth Cheswill rode with him and separated to head on to New Hampshire and Vermont. Wentworth is also the first African American elected to public office (in 1783, 1785 and 1795),