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Topic: American <b>Revolutionary<



  
 Samuel Adams - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Samuel Adams (September 27, 1722– October 2, 1803) was an <b>Americanb> revolutionary and organizer of the Boston Tea Party.
Adams was one of the major proponents of the Suffolk Resolves drafted in response to the Intolerable Acts, and adopted in September 1774.
Additionally, Adams was a member of the conventions that drafted the first Massachusetts state constitution in 1779, and the second one in 1788.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Adams

  
 MSN Encarta - Samuel Adams
Adams was a delegate to the Second Continental Congress, which convened at Philadelphia in May 1775, and he subsequently signed the Declaration of Independence.
Adams, Samuel (1722-1803), <b>Americanb> patriot, one of the leaders of resistance to British policy in Massachusetts before the <b>Americanb> Revolution.
In 1779, Adams was a member of the committee that drafted the Massachusetts State constitution, and he was instrumental also in securing the ratification by Massachusetts of the U.S. Constitution in 1788.
http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761569134/Samuel_Adams.html

  
 <b>Americanb> Popular Revolutionary Alliance - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
At the last legislative elections, 8 April 2001, the party won 19.7 % of the popular vote and 26 out of 120 seats in the Congress of the Republic.
However, the APRA manage to get enough votes to be in virtual control of both Chamber of Deputies and Senate.
APRA is a member of the Socialist International; however, it has not presented itself as a socialist party for the last half century.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Popular_Revolutionary_Alliance   (785 words)

  
 Samuel Adams <b>Americanb> Patriot & Politician
Adams served Massachusetts again at the Second Continental Congress where he was an advocate for independence and confederation for the <b>Americanb> Colonies.
Biography of <b>Americanb> purtian, patriot and founding father from the "Library of <b>Americanb> Biographies"
Adams served Continental Congress until his return to Boston in 1781.
http://www.lucidcafe.com/library/95sep/adams.html   (785 words)

  
 The Patriot Resource: Samuel Adams
Samuel was born in Boston on September 27, 1722.
Samuel Adams' father, Old Samuel Adams, was a deacon in the Old South Church in Boston.
Deacon Adams also served as justice of the peace, selectman and a Boston representative to the Massachusetts House of Representatives.
http://www.patriotresource.com/people/samadams.html   (785 words)

  
 Account of a Declaration; Biographies
Britain and was a signer of that treaty, which ended the Revolutionary War, in 1783.
Samuel Chase was born in Maryland on the seventeenth of April, 1741.
Adams retired from the Congress in 1781 and returned to Massachusetts to become a leading member of that states convention to form a constitution.
http://www.leftjustified.com/leftjust/lib/sc/ht/decl/gbioa-e.html   (785 words)

  
 John Gray - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Gray (<b>Americanb> Revolutionary War) is one of the candidates for the last surviving veteran of the <b>Americanb> Revolutionary War
John Gray (North Carolina) was a member of the North Carolina General Assembly in the late 18th century.
John Gray (Canadian politician) - mayor of Oshawa, ON John Gray (Canadian author), author of Paul Martin: The Power of Ambition.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gray   (230 words)

  
 Reader's Companion to <b>Americanb> History - -ADAMS, SAMUEL
An organizer of Boston's Sons of Liberty, he played a key role from 1765 until the end of the War of Independence in Patriot opposition to what Adams believed was a British plot to destroy constitutional liberty.
The son of a Boston merchant and maltster, Adams was a 1740 graduate of Harvard College where he publicly defended the thesis that it is "lawful to resist the Supreme Magistrate, if the Commonwealth cannot be otherwise preserved." Adherence to this principle was ever afterward a central theme in his career.
Three years later, when Thomas Jefferson was elected to the presidency over his cousin John, Samuel congratulated the Virginian on the triumph of democratic republicanism.
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/rcah/html/rc_001100_adamssamuel.htm   (230 words)

  
 Sam Adams
After the Revolution his influence in Massachusetts was never as great, although he continued to be active in state politics, serving as lieutenant governor (1789-93) and as governor (1794-97).
Adams organized the protest against the Stamp Act (1765) and was a founder of the Sons of Liberty.
Undoubtedly the most influential member of the lower house of the Massachusetts legislature (1765-74), he drafted most of the major protest documents, including the Circular Letter (1768) against the Townshend Acts.
http://www.americanrevwar.homestead.com/files/ADAMS2.HTM   (230 words)

  
 Commanding Heights : Peru on PBS
The Castro-influenced, Aprista-led Movement of the Revolutionary Left (MIR) is born.
APRA drops its support of Fujimori and boycotts elections for a new congress.
Toledo launches a national reconciliation and ends antiterrorism laws, but his economic policy disappoints his low-income constituency, and his popularity plummets.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/commandingheights/lo/countries/pe/pe_full.html   (3196 words)

  
 Documents from the Continental Congress and the Constitutional Convention, 1774-1789 - America During the Age of Revolution, 1764-1775 - (<b>Americanb> Memory from the Library of Congress)
<b>Americanb> colonists responded to the Sugar Act and the Currency Act with protest.
Documents from the Continental Congress and the Constitutional Convention, 1774-1789 - America During the Age of Revolution, 1764-1775 - (<b>Americanb> Memory from the Library of Congress)
The British further angered <b>Americanb> colonists with the Quartering Act, which required the colonies to provide barracks and supplies to British troops.
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/ammem/bdsds/timeline.html   (3196 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Books: Samuel Adams : The Father of <b>Americanb> Independence
Samuel Adams: Son of Liberty, Father of Revolution (Oxford Portraits) by Benjamin Irvin
Fradin, Dennis: Samuel Adams (The Father of <b>Americanb> Independence).
Samuel Adams was one of the most important of the patriot leaders, but one about whom little is said these days.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0395825105?v=glance   (3196 words)

  
 Revolutionary history
Non-profit group that interprets the lives of the soldiers and women of the Continental Army in the <b>Americanb> Revolutionary War.
African <b>Americanb> poet Phillis Wheatley and statesman Benjamin Franklin were members of Old South's congregation.
That was the decision on December 16, 1773, when 5,000 angry colonists gathered at the Old South Meeting House to protest a tax and started a revolution with the Boston Tea Party.
http://www.boston-online.com/History/Revolutionary   (3196 words)

  
 Captain Robert Gray
In his early twenties he served in the navy during the Revolutionary War, probably aboard a privateer.
Despite the information given him by the <b>Americanb>, Vancouver believed that he could not have passed any "safe navigable opening".
John Kendrick was at the helm of the Columbia and Capt. Robert Gray was in charge of the Lady Washington.
http://www.oregonpioneers.com/gray.htm   (1043 words)

  
 Samuel Adams
Samuel Adams was a member (1774–81) of the Continental Congress, but after independence was declared his influence declined; the “radical” was replaced by more conservative leaders, who tended to look upon Adams as an irresponsible agitator.
Adams, Samuel, 1722–1803, political leader in the <b>Americanb> Revolution, signer of the Declaration of Independence, b.
With the help of such men as John Hancock he organized the revolutionary Sons of Liberty and helped to foment revolt through the Committees of Correspondence.
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0802441.html   (1043 words)

  
 Gray Family
David Gray served as a militia Captain in the Revolutionary War, and probably went with his brother Joseph to Washington Co. VA after the war.
Roster of Soldiers from North Carolina in the <b>Americanb> Revolution.
John Gray was in Randolph Co. NC by the time of the Revolution, marrying Jannet Greer here in 1776 and serving as a Captain in the 3rd NC regiment in 1778.
http://www.duke.edu/web/chlamy/gray.html   (465 words)

  
 <b>Americanb> Revolution. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
John Sullivan led an expedition (1779) against the British and Native Americans in upper New York.
It is also called the <b>Americanb> War of Independence.
Some of the more radical Revolutionary leaders were disappointed in the turn toward conservatism when the Revolution was over, but liberty and democracy had been fixed as the highest ideals of the United States.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/am/AmerRev.html   (2493 words)

  
 Samuel Adams
Described as a firebrand, a revolutionary, and a patriot, the young Adams was perhaps the most vocal of his generation to demand independence from Great Britain.
Signer of the Declaration of Independence who was also a former governor of Massachusetts and a ringleader of the <b>Americanb> Revolution, along with his cousin, John.
He believed in the higher cause of independence, and he didn't often let laws that he thought unjust stand in his way.
http://www.socialstudiesforkids.com/wwww/us/samueladamsdef.htm   (2493 words)

  
 Essay World - The biggest online essay resource site - 091-001
The book covers the life and times, as well as the adventures of Samuel Adams, the <b>Americanb> revolutionary and political leader.
The <b>Americanb> Revolution is reported as being integral to the Enlightenment and the influence of prominent figures such as Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin are also noted.
The writer demonstrates that Franklin changed his initial position of support for Whitefield and used his skilled pen whenever possible to deflate the power of the <b>Americanb> church that he felt had the possibility of infringing on personal freedoms.
http://www.essayworld.com/topics/091-001.html   (2493 words)

  
 African <b>Americanb> Freedom Fighters: Soldiers for Liberty
Attucks' martyrdom is said to have acted as a catalyst for the <b>Americanb> colonists' eventual war for liberty and freedom from British rule.
Despite discriminatory practices and segregated units, Black Americans proved their valor, and 1,300 were eventually commissioned and promoted to the ranks of officers in the United States Military for their duty in World War I. Six major units served in this war: the 92nd, 93rd, 369th, 370th, 371st, 372nd.
<b>Americanb> history, at its best, is filled with records of the early colonial settlers searching for a place where the principles of freedom could be expressed and practiced.
http://www.liu.edu/cwis/cwp/library/aaffsfl.htm   (10712 words)

  
 Patrick Henry
His Stamp Act Resolutions were, arguably, the first shot fired in the Revolutionary War.
Patrick Henry's personality was a curious antidote to the stern honor of Washington, the refined logic of Jefferson, and the well-tempered industry of Franklin.
In 1799, President Adams appointed him envoy to France, but failing health required him to decline this office too.
http://www.ushistory.org/declaration/related/henry.htm   (10712 words)

  
 <b>Americanb> Revolution
<b>Americanb> Revolutionary War Soldiers and Their Descendants ~ register your ancestor and find other descendants
Little Known Facts about the <b>Americanb> Revolutionary War
With the passage of the stamp act by the British Parliament on March 22, 1765, the <b>Americanb> Colonies rebelled against helping boost the treasury of the English government which was low due to European wars.
http://home.ptd.net/~nikki/american.htm   (10712 words)

  
 Archiving Early America
A more popular claim is that the movement began in Boston, Massachusetts through the leadership of one Samuel Adams (a well known <b>Americanb> Revolutionary firebrand) in early 1765.
For the <b>Americanb> "armchair historian," this <b>Americanb> Revolutionary organization conjures up a myriad of confusing images.
Essentially, the Sons of Liberty organized into patriotic chapters as a result of the Stamp Tax imposed by the British government on the <b>Americanb> colonists in 1765.
http://www.earlyamerica.com/review/fall96/sons.html   (10712 words)

  
 The Buckeye Chronicles - Noble County and John Gray
John Gray, the last surviving soldier of the <b>Americanb> Revolutionary War, lived in Noble County and died there of old age near the town of Hiramsburg in 1868.
The Buckeye Chronicles - Noble County and John Gray
Gray was born at Mount Vernon, Va., in 1764.
http://www.lkwdpl.org/buckeye/buck21.htm   (253 words)

  
 <b>Americanb> Revolution - War At Sea
Another of America's new Naval Officers was John Barry, (1745–1803), regarded as one of the most skillful and daring <b>Americanb> commanders in the Revolutionary War.
This was the first capture in action of a British vessel by a commissioned <b>Americanb> warship.
That year John Paul Jones, the most brilliant <b>Americanb> naval officer of the Revolution, struck at the English border port of Whitehaven, on the Irish Sea, spiking the guns of the fort and destroying some of the vessels at the dock.
http://www.americanrevwar.homestead.com/files/SEA.HTM   (1706 words)

  
 Amw
One member of the <b>Americanb> Popular Revolutionary Alliance (apra) political party, Andrés de los Ríos Bernardini, was forcibly disappeared for 22 days, and upon release reported having been mistreated.
On June 1, the day after a delegation from the Organization of <b>Americanb> States (oas) led by Uruguayan Foreign Minister Héctor Gros Espiell left Peru, President Fujimori called elections for November 22-more than a month after the October 18 deadline set by the oas.
The elected leaders of the Senate and House of Deputies were temporarily placed under house arrest, and one prominent senator was beaten by police when he tried to attend a protest meeting in Lima.
http://www.hrw.org/reports/1993/WR93/Amw-09.htm   (5609 words)

  
 americas.org - Elections Hurt Ruling Party
Leading the opposition was 1985–1990 President Alan García& center-left <b>Americanb> Popular Revolutionary Alliance Party (APRA), whose members are known as Apristas.
His approval rating at the time of his election in June 2001 was close to 60 percent but now hovers between 20 and 25 percent, the lowest of any South <b>Americanb> leader.
In an election in which voting was mandatory, 15 million people elected 50 presidents and vice presidents to newly established regional governments along with 229 members of regional councils and 1,800 mayors.
http://www.americas.org/item_10783   (368 words)

  
 Formation of the Aprista movement (from Peru) --  Encyclopædia Britannica
The <b>Americanb> Popular Revolutionary Alliance (APRA), known as the “Aprista movement,” was formed in 1924 in Mexico City by Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre, an intellectual then in exile.
Washington, who was born a slave, believed that African <b>Americanb> leaders should concentrate on improving the economic situation of blacks by promoting industrial training.
The Supreme Court had outlawed segregation in schools, Central High School in Little Rock, Ark., had been integrated, and African Americans had successfully defeated some Jim Crow laws in the South.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-28016   (877 words)

  
 Chapter 6: The War of 1812
Dearborn had had a good record in the Revolutionary War and had served as Jefferson's Secretary of War.
On the <b>Americanb> side, both General Brown and General Scott were severely wounded, Scott so badly that he saw no further service during the war.
<b>Americanb> strategy had centered on the conquest of Canada and the harassment of British shipping; but the land campaign failed, and during most of the war the Navy was bottled up behind a tight British blockade of the North <b>Americanb> coast.
http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/books/amh/amh-06.htm   (8946 words)

  
 FAMILY STUFF
His father was William L. Gray, Scottish-<b>Americanb>, of Cambridge, New York, who married into the Mohawks of Akwesasne following his service as an <b>Americanb> Revolutionary War soldier, and who became an important interpreter.
The legend of John Gray, the fur hunter and Native rights activist and organizer of what may well have been the first labor strikes in the <b>Americanb> West, has carried well through the generations.
John Gray's wife, a Caughnawaga Mohawk, Marienne Neketichon, was born ca.
http://www.hunterbear.org/family_stuff.htm   (915 words)

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