Concord Museum curator David Wood explores how the legend of Paul Revere’s Ride and the start of the American Revolution are depicted in great works of American literature and art.
Esther Forbes (1891-1967)Paul Revere and the World he Lived InBoston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1942American Antiquarian SocietyGift of Esther Forbes, 1942
Paul Revere's Ride, March-Two StepComposed and published by E.T. Paull (1858-1924)Lithographed by A. Hoen & Co. (active 1853-1981)New York, 1905American Antiquarian Society
Charles Kendrick, (-1914)Paul Revere's Ride, 1900WatercolorAmerican Antiquarian Society, McLoughlin Brothers Art ArchiveGift of Herbert H. Hosmer, 1978
Paul Revere (1735-1818)Tea service, 1773Silver, woodWorcester Art MuseumThe gift of Frances Thomas and Eliza Sturgis Paine in memory of Frederick William Paine; Gift of Frances Thomas and Bessie Sturgis Paine in memory of Frederick William Paine;…
Paul Revere (1735-1818)Christening basin, 1762SilverCape Ann MuseumGift of First Parish (Unitarian) Church of Gloucester, 1950, 1512.01Conserved with support from the Richard C. von Hess Foundation and the Henry Luce Foundation
Paul Revere (1735-1818) after a design by Joseph Chadwick (-1783)Westerly View of the Colledges [Colleges] in Cambridge New England, 1767Engraving, hand-coloredAmerican Antiquarian SocietyGift of Mrs. Henry E. Warner, 1950