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DDH - Revolutionary Doctor

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Manage episode 423094360 series 1204415
Content provided by dave@thedavebowmanshow.com. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by dave@thedavebowmanshow.com or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
On February 22, 1770, eleven year old Christopher Seider was killed in the streets of Boston. He is generally considered by historians to be the first person to die in the American Revolution. The British Taxes imposed in 1767 under the Townsend Acts led a firestorm of Colonial protests, particularly - and to no one's surprise - in Boston. The Colonials had boycotted British imports since the implementation of the Acts, but it mean that Boston (and other) merchants were struggling to make any profit at all selling American made goods of rougher and lesser quality. In early 1770, one Boston merchant, Theophilus Lille, announced - very publically - that he had had enough and was breaking the boycott and would sell British goods. The resulting riot ended with the death of Seider, who would draw his final breath in the surgery of Dr. Joseph Warren. Two weeks later, snowballs hurled by angry Colonials would lead to shots being fire and the next five Americans will fall in the Revolution. Dr. Joseph Warren, seeing that much more was now at stake than a mere political disagreement, would become a vocal advocate for the ideas of the growing American Revolution. And he would become one of the first of the fallen...
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746 episodes

Artwork
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Manage episode 423094360 series 1204415
Content provided by dave@thedavebowmanshow.com. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by dave@thedavebowmanshow.com or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
On February 22, 1770, eleven year old Christopher Seider was killed in the streets of Boston. He is generally considered by historians to be the first person to die in the American Revolution. The British Taxes imposed in 1767 under the Townsend Acts led a firestorm of Colonial protests, particularly - and to no one's surprise - in Boston. The Colonials had boycotted British imports since the implementation of the Acts, but it mean that Boston (and other) merchants were struggling to make any profit at all selling American made goods of rougher and lesser quality. In early 1770, one Boston merchant, Theophilus Lille, announced - very publically - that he had had enough and was breaking the boycott and would sell British goods. The resulting riot ended with the death of Seider, who would draw his final breath in the surgery of Dr. Joseph Warren. Two weeks later, snowballs hurled by angry Colonials would lead to shots being fire and the next five Americans will fall in the Revolution. Dr. Joseph Warren, seeing that much more was now at stake than a mere political disagreement, would become a vocal advocate for the ideas of the growing American Revolution. And he would become one of the first of the fallen...
  continue reading

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