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Paul_Revere_(laywer,_great_grandson),_signature.jpg (487 × 179 pixels, file size: 34 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The Paul Revere Pottery was a woman-run American art pottery founded during the Progressive Era in Boston, Massachusetts in the United States. It emerged as a subgroup of the Saturday Evening Girls Club (S.E.G.).
Portrait of Paul Joseph Revere by Margaret Maclay Bogardus. He was born in Suffolk County, Massachusetts. He was the grandson and namesake of Revolutionary War patriot Paul Revere. He was one of the three grandsons of Paul Revere who fought for the Union, another being Joseph Warren Revere. He graduated from Harvard University in 1852. [1]
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The Saturday Evening Girls club (1899–1969) was a Progressive Era reading group for young immigrant women in Boston's North End.The club hosted educational discussions and lectures as well as social events, published a newspaper called the S. E. G. News, and operated the acclaimed Paul Revere Pottery.
Joseph Warren Revere (May 17, 1812 – April 20, 1880) was a career United States Navy and Army officer. He was the grandson of American Revolutionary War figure Paul Revere. He was an amateur artist and autobiographer, publishing two novels: A Tour of Duty in California (1849) and Keel and Saddle (1872).
English: PAUL REVERE From the crayon portrait made by Fevret de Saint-Mémin in 1804, reproduced in Early American Craftsmen by Walter A. Dyer (The Century Company, New York, 1915) Date lithograph, c. 1915, after original drawing made in 1804
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