American Minute with Bill FedererHe sent Paul Revere on his Midnight Ride… |
Dr. Joseph Warren
sent Paul Revere and William Dawes on their midnight ride to warn Lexington and Concord that the government was coming to seize their guns.
The British were also headed to Pastor Jonas Clarke’s home to arrest two anti-government activists: Tea Party leader Samuel Adams and businessman John Hancock, who was targeted by the King’s tax collectors, having had his ship Liberty confiscated. Dr. Joseph Warren, born JUNE 11, 1741 was a Harvard graduate and a successful doctor in Boston. Joseph Warren left his medical career when the British passed the hated Stamp Act of 1765. After the Boston Tea Party, King George III decided in 1774 to punished the colonists by enacting Intolerable Acts: -blocking Boston’s harbor until citizens reimbursed the East India Tea Company; -quartering British soldiers in private homes; -allowing British officials to be unaccountable for their crimes; and -replacing Massachusetts’ elected officials with royal appointees. In protest, Dr. Joseph Warren and Samuel Adams organized the Massachusetts Provincial Congress. In September of 1774, Dr. Joseph Warren wrote the Suffolk Resolves, urging Massachusetts to establish a free state, boycott British goods, form militias and no longer be loyal to a king who violates their rights: “Whereas…the vengeance but not the wisdom of Great Britain, which of old persecuted, scourged, and exiled our fugitive parents from their native shores, now pursues us, their guiltless children, with unrelenting severity… It is an indispensable duty which we owe to God, our country, ourselves and posterity, by all lawful ways and means in our power to maintain, defend and preserve those civil and religious rights and liberties, for which many of our fathers fought, bled and died, and to hand them down entire to future generations.” Get the book, Miracles in American History-32 Amazing Stories of Answered Prayer Dr. Joseph Warren became President of the Massachusetts Provincial Congress, April of 1775. In June of 1775, as British ships entered Boston’s harbor, 34-year-old Dr. Joseph Warren joined the militia. Though appointed a Major General by the Provincial Congress, Warren chose to serve as a private, acknowledging that General Israel Putnam and Colonel William Prescott had more military experience. On June 17, 1775, Dr. Joseph Warren asked to be placed where the heaviest fighting would be and Putnam pointed to Bunker Hill. Warren fought in the redoubt, repelling the British soldiers, till he ran out of ammunition. The British made a third and final assault on the hill, and Dr. Joseph Warren was killed instantly by a musket ball in the head. The British stripped his body, bayoneted it until it was unrecognizable, then shoved it into a ditch. Ten month later, Paul Revere helped identify his remains by examining an artificial tooth he had placed in his jaw. A monument marks where Dr. Joseph Warren died.
“If you perform your part, you must have the strongest confidence that the same Almighty Being who protected your pious and venerable forefathers, who enabled them to turn a barren wilderness into a fruitful field, who so often made bare His arm for their salvation, will still be mindful of you, their offspring…” Dr. Joseph Warren continued: “May this Almighty Being graciously preside in all our councils. May He direct us to such measures as He Himself shall approve, and be pleased to bless. May our land be a land of liberty, the seat of virtue, the asylum of the oppressed, a name and a praise in the whole earth, until the last shock of time shall bury the empires of the world in one common undistinguishable ruin!” For God’s Glory Alone Ministries Thanks Bill Federer & www.AmericanMinute.com
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