
Life and Times of Joseph Warren - Free Audiobook
Author(s): Richard Frothingham, Jr.,
1 / 24Preface
- 1. Preface
- 2. Chapter 1 - The Early Days - 1741-1763
- 3. Chapter 2 - Principles and Party - 1763-1767
- 4. Chapter 3 - Connection With The Press - 1767 to March, 1768
- 5. Chapter 4 - Connection With Public Meetings - 1768, March to June
- 6. Chapter 5 - Protest Against A Standing Army - 1768, July to October
- 7. Chapter 6 Part 1- The Boston Massacre and A Civic Triumph - October 1768 to March 1770
- 8. Chapter 6 Part 2 - The Boston Massacre and A Civic Triumph - October 1768 to March 1770
- 9. Chapter 7 - Oration on The Massacre - March 1770 to March 1772
- 10. Chapter 8 - Committees of Correspondence - March 1772 to January 1773
- 11. Chapter 9 Part 1 - Destruction of The Tea - 1773, January to December
- 12. Chapter 9 Part 2 - Destruction of The Tea - 1773, January to December
- 13. Chapter 10 Part 1 - Boston Port Act and The American Union - December 1773 to June 1774
- 14. Chapter 10 Part 2 - Boston Port Act and The American Union - December 1773 to June 1774
- 15. Chapter 11 Part 1 - The Regulating Act and The Suffolk Resolves - 1774, June to September
- 16. Chapter 11 Part 2 - The Regulating Act and The Suffolk Resolves - 1774, June to September
- 17. Chapter 12 Part 1- Massachusetts and The General Congress - September 1774 to January 1775
- 18. Chapter 12 Part 2- Massachusetts and The General Congress - September 1774 to January 1775
- 19. Chapter 13 - Warren’s Second Oration - 1775, January to March
- 20. Chapter 14 - The Nineteenth of April - 1775, From the Fifth of March to The 19th of April
- 21. Chapter 15 Part 1 - Sixty Days of Service - From the 19th of April to the 17th of June
- 22. Chapter 15 Part 2 - Sixty Days of Service - From the 19th of April to the 17th of June
- 23. Chapter 16 - The Closing Scene - 1775, the Seventeenth of June
- 24. Appendix
About
Joseph Warren was one of the popular leaders of Boston during the early stage of the American Revolution. He grasped its basis idea of civil freedom, and aimed to impress on the public mind its dignity and glory. By ten years of devotion to the patriot cause, he rose to be the head of public affairs in Massachusetts, and became one of the most prominent characters of New England. Warren, through life, was a man of action, whose words were deeds. To repel the aggressions of arbitrary power, and to maintain the principles of liberty, he wrote in the political journals, was zealous in the private clubs, and was a leader in the public meetings. - Summary by Richard Frothingham
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