Posted on 02/20/2017 12:19:29 PM PST by EveningStar
Do you know who Paul Revere is? He is one of America's key historical figures. Want to know what he did? Eric Metaxas, New York Times #1 bestselling author, shares the remarkable story.
(Excerpt) Read more at prageru.com ...
Listen my children and you shall hear
Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere,
On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-five;
Hardly a man is now alive
Who remembers that famous day and year.
“The Mercury of the Revolution” David Hackett Fischer
He was Muslim refugee, illegally came from Chile and grand parents were black.
LOL!
After all, when Paul Revere made his ride, all of the colonists were British.
I've always believed that his alarm was more specific: "The Regulars are coming!" or maybe "The Redcoats are coming!" or something that implied that it was British regular military forces that were on their way.
I’ve read some things regarding accents of the period, that would seem to indicate that what we know today to be British, really wasn’t back then. I don’t know. How could anyone alive today really “know”.
It would make sense if it had occurred in an area settled primarily by people who didn’t come from Great Britain.
There are oddly similar stories from other parts of the colonies:
http://highered411.com/Readings/BETSY%20DOWDY.pdf
Quite true.
If you owned a piece of silverware he produced I guarantee you would care.
This is just a few miles from my house:
And I love the PragerU stuff...I plug it every chance I get!
I love “Turn”...:)
I have never heard anyone around here refer to Concord as Greater Boston, but I suppose it is how someone defines it.
It is pretty impressive that he rode that distance in the dark on that horse, and it is easy to imagine the misery of the British as they tried to retreat back to Boston with the Colonials picking at them every step of the way.
I hate to be the one to tear down this American legend, but Revere faced court martial for cowardice as a result of his performance at the Pebnobscot bay expedition. Gen. Wadsworth was his C.O., he brought the charges, and his grandson was Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. The Penobscot Bay expedition was Americas worst naval defeat until Pearl Harbour. It’s a long story. Hero? Marginal sort of, but the making of him a hero was politics.
History buffs will appriciate Bernard Cornwall’s “The Fort” for a detailed account.
That would be Mark Lindsay, who had/has a decent solo career:
https://youtu.be/0n00BsxP2e8
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