Joseph Warren: The Forgotten Man of the Revolution Firebrands were an important part of the American Revolution, but the most underappreciated Firebrand was, perhaps, Joseph Warren. He, the eldest of four sons, was born in Roxbury, Massachusetts in June, 1741 where his family had been living for half a century (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov). He continued the tradition, living in Boston prior to the Revolution. Though his father, Joseph Warren, a farmer, died when Warren was just 14, he was raised thinking and feeling like a true American. This early exposure to American ideologies would influence and promote him later in life with his fight for freedom and to convince other colonists of the freedom they deserved. Though his family was poor, he received an excellent education, graduating from Harvard in 1759. He went on to study medicine with Dr. James Lloyd. In 1760, he was appointed master of the Roxbury grammar …show more content…
He became interested in politics early on. Because of this early education, he was able to contribute several articles in the Boston “Gazette” in relation to the Stamp Act, under the pseudonym, A True Patriot. According to www.foresthillstrust.org, he drew up the document stating the opinions of the people of Massachusetts during the First Continental Congress. This document, call the Suffolk Resolves, stated 19 resolves declaring that the king had lost the colonists’ loyalty, and that they should take up arms and defend themselves and their freedom. He was also part of the large protest group against the king, the Sons of Liberty. But, he is most famous for sending Paul Revere and William Dawes on their iconic midnight ride to warn the patriots of invading British troops. If it weren’t for Warren and his informant, Revere and Dawes wouldn’t have been about to warn the colonists or John Hancock and Samuel Adams about the invading British