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  1. Joseph Warren was just 14 and about to enter Harvard in 1755 when his father was killed falling off a ladder while picking apples. His mother, Mary Stevens Warren, mortgaged the farm to send him to Harvard, though she probably could have used more of his help to run it.

  2. Doctor Joseph Warren (1741-1775) was a physician from Boston, Massachusetts, who became an important political leader of the Patriot movement during the early years of the American Revolution (c. 1765-1789). Known for dispatching Paul Revere on his midnight ride and for his premature death at the Battle of Bunker Hill, Warren is considered a ...

  3. Although much of Joseph Warren’s journals, personal correspondence, and written articles were destroyed as a means of eluding persecution, Founding Martyr is based on rich primary sources, and as a consequence Di Spigna manages to compensate for some of the voids left by prior biographies and to correct previous misconceptions about one of America’s most underappreciated founding fathers.

  4. 13 de dez. de 2023 · Joseph Warren’s death at age 34 cut short not only his own life but the possibilities and influence that he could have had on the American Revolution. Many have suggested that Warren would have had an important role in American history, with at least one source noting that had Warren lived, George Washington would have “remained in obscurity.”

  5. Abstract. As his fellow soldiers ran past him, Joseph Warren stood bravely on Bunker Hill. It was June 17, 1775, and British troops were fighting the colonists in one of the early battles of the American Revolution. The British had already attempted two major assaults that day, and the third would end with Warren's death.

  6. Many have never heard of Dr. Joseph Warren – even many of us in Boston. This is because he was killed on the field of battle early in the struggle against Great Britain – well before the Declaration of Independence was signed in 1776. He lost his life fighting for America even before George Washington arrived in Cambridge to take command of ...

  7. Joseph Warren, né en 1741 et mort en 1775, était reconnu, à son époque, comme le véritable architecte de la Révolution américaine. Il était l’une des figures de proue de la « Tea Party » les plus connues de l’Histoire. Il a écrit une série de Résolutions qui a servi comme plan au premier Gouvernement américain autonome.