At some point during our education most of us, hopefully, learned about Paul Revere, the man who rode into history on the night of April 18, 1775, to alert the colonial militia that the British were coming. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow immortalized Revere in his famous poem, “Paul Revere’s Ride.”
Revere wasn’t the only rider that night. There were other patriots – including William Dawes – who galloped into the darkness to warn the colonials. But, perhaps because their names weren’t captured in verse, fame eluded them.
Born in Massachusetts Bay in 1741, Warren was the son of a prosperous farmer. Although his father died while Joseph was a teenager, his mother saw to it that he got an education. Warren graduated from Harvard College in 1759, and, after teaching school for a year, he began studying medicine.
He married a young heiress named Elizabeth Hooten, and together they had four children. Sadly, Elizabeth died in 1772, when she was just 26. Dr. Warren was suddenly a 31-year-old widower with four young children. Those circumstances might have broken many men, but Warren was made of sterner stuff.
In those days, Boston was alive with revolutionary fever, and Warren was drawn to the cause. He joined the Sons of Liberty, where he developed close ties with John Hancock and the firebrand Samuel Adams. No mere follower, Warren – intelligent, gregarious, witty – quickly became one of the group’s leaders.
Boston Tea Party
Paul Revere’s Ride
In mid-April, many of the other leaders – fearing arrest – left Boston. But Warren, not one to run from danger, remained. On the afternoon of April 18, he received reports from his intelligence network that the British were preparing a raid to destroy munitions stored in Concord, several miles outside Boston. With that news, Warren ordered Revere, Dawes and the others to spread the word – the British are coming.
These are the people we should remember and celebrate as our nation turns 249 years old. They gave us the gift of freedom; we owe them our undying gratitude.
Happy Fourth of July everyone.





