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A silversmith, merchant, entrepreneur, family man, and patriotic citizen, Revere led a full and successful life. His surviving daybooks, kept intermittently between 1761 and 1797 (now in the Massachusetts Historical Society), offer a valuable window on the workings of an eighteenth-century silversmith’s business.
Sep 19, 2020 · Revere’s older sons joined him in business after going to writing school for their primary school years. Paul Jr. was in the silversmith business, and Joseph Warren ultimately followed his father into his foundry and copper ventures.
Jul 18, 2017 · Paul Revere and his sons, Joseph Warren Revere and Paul Revere Jr. (the second of Paul’s children named as a result of the death of the first Paul Revere Jr.) adopted a solution that they first introduced to America: copper sheathing.
Young Paul Revere had 11 siblings. He was the second oldest child and the eldest surviving son. He attended the North Writing School between the ages of 7 and 13 probably because his father planned him to continue the tradition of silversmith trade.
Amos Lincoln 1753-1829. Twice Paul Revere’s Son-in-Law. Why were Lincoln and Boston a familiar surname in 18th Century New England? Boston, Massachusetts, was settled by Puritans from the hamlet of Boston in Lincolnshire, England.
As the oldest son of a famous Patriot, you meet many of the important figures of the American Revolution. After the legendary “midnight ride,” your father cannot safely return to Boston. Your family joins him, but you must stay behind to look after the family property.
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Born in Boston's North End in December, 1734, Paul Revere was the son of Apollos Rivoire, a French Huguenot (Protestant) immigrant, and Deborah Hitchbourn, daughter of a local artisan family. Rivoire, who changed his name to Paul Revere some time after immigrating, was a goldsmith and eventually the head of a large household.