USA HISTORY

THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION 1775 1783

LEXINGTON CONCORD AND BUNKER HILL THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION BEGINS

Question [CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
Why would the writings of Mercy Otis Warren be informative to a historian?
A
She wrote one of the earliest histories about the Revolutionary War.
B
She recorded the proceeding at the Boston Massacre trial.
C
She was the first American women to publish a novel set in the colonies.
D
She contributed to the writing of the Declaration of Independence.
Explanation: 

Detailed explanation-1: -For her work, during the revolution, she has also been called the founding mother of America. Thus, the writings of Mercy Otis Warren will be informative to a historian since she wrote one of the earliest histories about the Revolutionary War.

Detailed explanation-2: -Warren published political satires and pamphlets during the imperial crisis, serving as a key propagandist for patriot leaders in Massachusetts. Her plays and pamphlets were published in local Massachusetts newspapers, such as the Massachusetts Spy and the Boston Gazette, which appealed to Patriot readers.

Detailed explanation-3: -In 1790, she published Poems, Dramatic and Miscellaneous, a collection that included two verse dramas. But by far Warren’s most important literary work was History of the Rise, Progress, and Termination of the American Revolution (1805), a 3-volume history she had begun in the late 1770s.

Detailed explanation-4: -She is considered by some to be the first American woman to write primarily for the public rather than for herself. Mercy Otis was born to a prosperous Cape Cod family. One of her brothers was the political activist and firebrand James Otis, who was early involved in events leading to the American Revolution.

Detailed explanation-5: -David Ramsay is considered to be one of the first major historians of the American Revolution. His significant contributions to American literature include two volumes of History of the Revolution in South Carolina (1785), History of the American Revolution (1787), and The Life of George Washington (1807).

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