The Revere Express

Our blog content is provided by past and present staff, outside researchers, and interns. We try to provide a wide variety of content and add new articles often! Browse below to find areas that interest you. 

Washing Day at the Revere House

By Alexandra Powell Woman Hanging out LaundryFrom the series of Six Studies of Men and Women (Zes studie-beeltjes, Naer ‘t leeven geteekend door J. Lauwers, en geëtst door J. De Frey)Johannes Pieter de Frey, Dutch, 1770 – 1834. After Jacobus Johannes Lauwers, Belgian,...

Boston Baked Beans: A Case Study in Culinary Tradition

By Alexandra Powell During one of the educational programs we offer here at the Revere House, “The Revere Children and the Siege of Boston,” we task students with preparing Paul Revere Jr.  for an extended stay home alone. It is the spring of 1775 and Paul Revere has...

“Missing” Revere Letter Returns to the Paul Revere House

By Emily HolmesEditor’s Note: This Revere Express post is adapted from the Fall 2014 issue of The Revere House Gazette. It has been reformed for use as a companion piece to Monday’s post by Nina Rodwin. Shortly after the Siege of Boston began in the spring of 1775,...

“Git a pass”: Paul Revere and the Siege of Boston

By Nina RodwinHistorians have a clear picture of Paul Revere’s activities and whereabouts during the Midnight Ride, but there is much less information regarding his actions during the week after April 18, 1775. Letters from Revere’s wife, Rachel, suggest that Paul may...

That Old Deluder Satan: Puritan Emphasis on Compulsory Education

By Ruaidhrí CroftonBy the mid 18th century, Boston had established itself as a significant port within Britain’s North American colonies. As the town’s population reached nearly 15,000, the community boasted a number of meeting houses for worship, wharves and...

Remembering Paul Revere

Today, May 10th, is the anniversary of Paul Revere’s death in 1818. Revere was 83 when he passed from natural causes, closing out a life both “honorable and useful” according to his obituary in the Columbian Centinel. For the Paul Revere House staff, this is a strange...

Windows into Daily Life During the British Occupation of Boston

Writing from different sides of the conflict, both Sarah Winslow Deming in her journal, and Ann Hulton in her letters, provide windows into daily life in Boston during the periods of British Occupation between 1768 and 1776. The historical facts of the Occupation are...