enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mercy Otis Warren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercy_Otis_Warren

    Mercy Otis Warren (September 25, 1728 – October 19, 1814) was an American activist poet, playwright, and pamphleteer during the American Revolution. During the years before the Revolution, she had published poems and plays that attacked royal authority in Massachusetts and urged colonists to resist British infringements on colonial rights and ...

  3. File:Mrs James Warren (Mercy Otis), by John Singleton Copley.jpg

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mrs_James_Warren...

    Usage on ca.wikipedia.org Mercy Otis Warren; Usage on cy.wikipedia.org Mercy Otis Warren; Usage on de.wikipedia.org 14. September; Liste der 999 Frauen des Heritage Floor; Liste der 999 Frauen des Heritage Floor/Anne Hutchinson; Mercy Otis Warren; Usage on en.wikiquote.org Mercy Otis Warren; Usage on en.wikisource.org Author:Mercy Otis Warren

  4. Charles Warren (author) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Warren_(author)

    Warren was born in Boston, Massachusetts, a great-great-grandson of Mercy Otis Warren and the son of lawyer Winslow Warren (collector of the Port of Boston) and Mary Lincoln Tinkham. The family moved to Dedham, Massachusetts , when Charles was three, where his biographer notes the family "remained active and loyal Democrats in a bastion of ...

  5. History of the Rise, Progress, and Termination of the ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Rise...

    Note the singeing of the title page. History of the Rise, Progress, and Termination of the American Revolution is a book by Mercy Otis Warren.Warren was a correspondent with many political leaders of the American Revolution, including Samuel Adams, John Hancock, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, and George Washington.

  6. List of playwrights from the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_playwrights_from...

    Zoe Akins; Edward Albee; Eva Allen Alberti; Woody Allen; Franco Ambriz; Jane Anderson; Maxwell Anderson; Robert Woodruff Anderson; Maya Angelou; Jacob M. Appel

  7. Death discography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_discography

    The discography of Death consists of seven studio albums and four live albums. Death was an American death metal band formed in 1984. The band's founder, Chuck Schuldiner, is considered "a pioneering force in death metal". [1] The band ceased to exist after Schuldiner died of brain cancer in 2001, [2] though it remains an enduring death metal ...

  8. Don Covay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Covay

    Covay was born in Orangeburg, South Carolina.His father, a Baptist preacher, died when Covay was eight. [3] He resettled in Washington, D.C., with his mother Helen Zimmerman Randolph and his siblings in the early 1950s and initially sang in the Cherry Keys, [note 1] his family's gospel quartet.

  9. The Liberty Song - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Liberty_Song

    The Liberty Song" is a pre-American Revolutionary War song with lyrics by Founding Father John Dickinson [1] (not by Mrs. Mercy Otis Warren of Plymouth, Massachusetts). [2] The song is set to the tune of " Heart of Oak ", the anthem of the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom .