![]() |
| A thought we love of being children of God and the place suffering fits in His plan. |
![]() |
| View of Longfellow Chapel in Cambridge from Longfellow house front porch |
![]() |
| Longfellow Chapel, Cambridge, MA |


![]() |
| Henry Wadsworth Longfellow |
![]() |
| This home has been preserved for many years with original furnishings and pictures. |
The above is only a small portion of the poem. Longfellow was a poet, not a pure historian. He focused much on mythology and legend. Paul Revere never made it to Concord Bridge as his poem memorializes. He was stopped by a patrol of British officers who were out on the road to stop any express riders from Boston. They captured Revere (and let him go a few hours later without his horse). He walked back to Lexington where it is said he was in time to witness part of the battle on Lexington Green. William Dawes was actually the one to get all the way to Concord with the alarm. Paul Revere was more well known at the time and some think Longfellow thought it was easier to write a poem and rhyme with the well-known Paul Revere than William Dawes. All I know is that the alarm was given and the patriots responded.
Joseph Warren would not just send out Paul Revere that night, but would commission William Dawes to make the ride to warn the colonial minutemen as well.
In 1896, American poet Helen F. Moore would be among the first to correct this minor oversight of history when she composed a parody of Longfellow's poem with her own version:
Tis all very well for the children to hear
Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere;
But why should my name be quite forgot,
Who rode as boldly and well, God wot?
Why should I ask? The reason is clear-
My name was Dawes and his Revere.
The end of the poem:
![]() |
| Part of Battle Road - Paul Revere and William Dawes would have ridden through a similar area very close to this point. We love to walk in this area. |
![]() |
| Senior Missionary meeting with President and Sister Brough. Approximately six more couples have arrived since we have been here, but we are the only ones assigned to WSRS. |
![]() |
| Welfare and Self-Reliance Committee meeting with some of the leadership of Hingham, MA Stake. Numbers are lower due to summer vacations. |
![]() |
| Sister Parker is hard at work at her desk. |
![]() |
| Elder Parker is hard at work at his desk in the laundry room. |
![]() |
| We spend lots of time on the computer! |
![]() |
| Sister Parker had to buy these small bananas as we had never seen such small ones before! |
![]() |
| They didn't taste quite as good as the regular ones. Notice our Walmart flowers on the counter behind. Just like the ones we buy at home! Cheap and they last for a couple of weeks! |
![]() |
| Reading the Book of Mormon. |
![]() |
| We're hoping to find something with the ocean and a lighthouse to decorate our blank wall but haven't had much shopping time yet. It has to be "packable" to take home when we return. |

We love serving this mission together. We know God is a God of miracles. We have seen them in our lives, this mission, and we have seen them in our family. I hope you enjoy this little video on "The Miracle."
https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/media/video/2018-03-0050-the-miracle?lang=eng