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George Robert Twelves Hewes (August 25, 1742 – November 5, 1840) [2] was a participant in the political protests in Boston at the onset of the American Revolution, and one of the last survivors of the Boston Tea Party and the Boston Massacre.
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In The New York Times, novelist Colson Whitehead called the book "a luminous feat of generosity and humanism". [32] Time magazine listed it as one of its top ten novels of 2017, [33] and Paste ranked it the fifth-best novel of the 2010s. [34] In 2024, The New York Times named it the 18th-best book of the 21st century. [35]
On January 25, 1774, according to the account in the Massachusetts Gazette, Hewes saw Malcolm threatening to strike a boy with his cane. When Hewes intervened to stop Malcolm, both men began arguing, and Malcolm insisted that Hewes should not interfere in the business of a gentleman. When Hewes replied that at least he had never been tarred and ...
Joseph Hewes (July 9, 1730 [1] [a] – November 10, 1779 [3] [4]) was an American Founding Father and a signer of the Continental Association and U.S. Declaration of Independence. [5] Hewes was a native of Princeton, New Jersey, where he was born in 1730.
In an 1874 article in The American Historical Record, Jebe B. Fisher recounts a passage in the memoirs of Boston Tea Party participant George R.T. Hewes, which stated that at the time of the massacre, Attucks "was a Nantucket Indian, belonging onboard a whale ship of Mr. Folgers, then in the harbor, and he remembers a distinct war whoop which ...
In his review of the book in The Wall Street Journal, Brendan Miniter called a Patriot's History a "fluent account of America from the discovery of the Continent up to the present day", [8] and wrote that the book serves to "remind us what a few good individuals can do in just a few short centuries." [9]