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In Their Own Words

Paul Revere (In Their Own Words

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This book brings Paul Revere's legendary midnight ride to life, and reveals that Revere was active in many of the events that led to the Revolution. Readers will also learn about other famous Americans of the time, including John Hancock and Sam Adams.

128 pages, Library Binding

First published August 7, 2000

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About the author

George Sullivan

364 books12 followers
George Sullivan is a best-selling nonfiction author with more than 100 books to his credit. He lives in New York City.

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5 stars
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4 stars
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3 stars
30 (38%)
2 stars
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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Farrah.
412 reviews
December 15, 2019
The stars are for the information and the pictures Sullivan managed to collect; the writing and flow is crap.

Here's what I learned:

1756: French & Indian War
-French/Indian were allies vs English
-France wanted more land-->fought English (with aid of colonists)-->England wins!

Taxes
-Expensive war, so England taxes sugar and stamps = Stamp Act --> Townshend Acts (tax evth)
-Colonists refuse to pay and the tyrant King George III gets mad
-1773-->Boston Tea Party (3 ships: Eleanor, Dartmouth, Beaver)
-Coercive Acts (colonists called Intolerable Acts) named new Governor Gage and new rules to coerce colonists

Fighting
-As tensions arise b/w colonists and British, a Br. guard fights with a kid and it escalates to 5 deaths=Boston massacre
-Suffolk Resolves (people of MA form own govt)
-Paul Revere carries to Continental Congress Sam and John Adams (Massachusetts) George
Washington (Virginia)
-Old North Church (Boston lantern site)-->One if by land, two if by sea
"The regulars are coming Out!"
First shots of Revolutionary War were in Lexington
The Battle of Bunker Hill is actually the Battle on Breed's Hill
The American revolution (1775-1783) and ended with the Treaty of Paris
Too many Brits in Boston generated a new capital, Watertown
Federalists were colonists who supported the federal Constitution
The war of 1812 was known as the second Revolutionary war
372 reviews1 follower
July 4, 2025
The 52 Book Club's 2025 Challenge - Summer Challenge - # - +/- 30 Pages of Previous Book

Ha! I got it within 1 page.

Kids book I had at home and it fit the prompt. It was fun reading about an original patriot. This would be a great book to have in my classroom.
Profile Image for Mel.
581 reviews
May 19, 2015
The history of Paul Revere based on his own writing. Imagine that.
Paul was a junior named after his father, though his father's name was originally Apollos Rivoire. Paul junior went to school, but when he came of age he became an apprentice to his father who was a silversmith. Paul was quite good at this and when his father passed away he supported the family.
Paul is infamous for the one ride telling the colonists the regulars were coming, but this didn't happen until 1861 with the poem of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
Paul was more than a patriot who is known for one ride at night. He was more than a silversmith. He had a military career that only had one incident that didn't end well. Afterwards he was said to have behaved in a cowardly manner. This was not acceptable to him. He fought for a military court hearing and was cleared of any wrongdoing in 1782.
He outlived two wives and had eight children with each wife.
He had many business ventures and made many bells for the area. They pealed on the day of his death.
This was a quick and informative read. I'd recommend it for upper elementary.
Profile Image for Dayna Smith.
3,245 reviews11 followers
August 10, 2016
This is a series of nonfiction biographies of famous people. The books are written in a way that is easy to understand and are full of pictures, illustrations, and graphics that are sure to intrigue young readers. The series includes: Helen Keller, Abraham Lincoln, Lewis & Clark, Paul Revere, Pocahontas, The Wright Brothers, and Thomas Edison. These are great books to introduce readers to nonfiction.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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