Second Coming, etc." (Portland, 1879 ; 2d ed., re- written and enlarged, 1884) ; " Our Father's Book, or the Divine Authority and Origin of the Bible " (Boston, 1885) ; " The Book of Revelation, a Study" (New York, 1886): and "The Stanley Families in America" (Portland, 1887).
WARREN, James, Revolutionary leader, b. in
Plymouth, Mass., 28 Sept., 1726; d. there, 27 Nov.,
1808. He was graduated at Harvard in 1745, and
became a prosperous merchant in Plymouth. In
1766 he was chosen a member of the colonial as-
sembly, where he served until its final dissolution
in 1774. He took a prominent part in the estab-
lishment of the system of committees of corre-
spondence in 1772. After the death of Gen. Joseph
Warren at Bunker Hill, he was chosen to succeed
him as president of the Provincial congress of
Massachusetts. The connection between his family
and that of Joseph Warren, if there be any, is to be
sought in England before 1600. — His wife, Mercy,
author, b. in Barnstable, Mass., 25 Sept., 1728; d.
in Plymouth, 19 Oct., 1814, was a sister of the il-
lustrious orator James Otis, and married James
Warren in 1754. She was one of the most highly
educated and brilliant women of her time, and her
friendship was much prized by such men as Jeffer-
son and the Adamses. Throughout her life she
was an intimate friend of Abigail Adams. One of
her earliest writings was " The Group," a dramatic
piece in two acts, in which Gov. Hutchinson and
other Tories were satirized. " The Squabble of the
Sea-Nymphs" gives an account of the Boston tea-
party, somewhat
after the style of
the " Rape of the
Lock." Her two
tragedies, " The
Sack of Rome " and
" The Ladies of
Castile," were well
thought of in their
day. These werecol-
lected in "Poems,
Dramatic and Mis-
cellaneous " (Bos-
ton, 1790). A work
of much greater
importance is her
" History of the
American Revolu-
tion " (3 vols., Bos-
ton, 1805), which is
valuable because of
the personal ac-
quaintance of the
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writer with so many of the characters. There is a sketch of Mrs. Warren in Mrs. Elizabeth F. Ellet's " Women of the Revolution " (New York, 1856).
WARREN, Joseph, physician, b. in Roxbury,
Mass., 11 June, 1741 ; d. in Charlestown, Mass., 17
June, 1775. He was descended from Peter Warren,
whose name appears on the town records of Bos-
ton in 1659, where he is called " mariner." Peter's
second son, Joseph, built a house in 1720 in what
is now Warren street, Roxbury, and died there in
1729. A view of the homestead is presented on
page 365. His son, Joseph, b. in 1696, married, 29
May, 1740, Mary, daughter of Dr. Samuel Stevens,
of Roxbury, and the subject of this sketch was
their eldest child. Joseph Warren, the father, was
a thrifty farmer, much respected bv his townsmen,
by whom he was elected to several offices of trust.
He was interested in fruit-raising, and introduced
into that part of the country the apple long known
as the "Warren russet." in October, 1755, while
gathering fruit in his orchard, he fell from the
ladder and was instantly killed. His son, Joseph,
was graduated at Harvard in 1759, and in the fol-
lowing year was appointed master of the Roxbury
grammar-school. He studied medicine with Dr.
James Lloyd, and
began to practise
his profession in
1764. He married,
6 Sept., 1764, Miss
Elizabeth Hooton,
a young lady who
had inherited an
ample fortune.
The passage of the
stamp -act in the
following year led
Dr. Warren to pub-
lish several able ar-
ticles in the Boston
"Gazette." About
this time began his
intimate friend-
ship with Samuel
Adams, who con-
ceived a warm ad-
miration for him,
and soon came to
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regard him as a stanch and clear-headed ally, who could be depended upon under all circumstances. On the occasion of the Townshend acts, Dr. War- ren's articles, published under the signature of "A True Patriot," aroused the anger of Gov. Francis Bernard, who brought the matter before his coun- cil, and endeavored to prosecute Messrs. Edes and Gill, the publishers of the " Gazette," for giving currency to seditious libels ; but the grand jury refused to find a bill against these gentlemen. The affair created much excitement in Boston, and led Gov. Bernard to write to Lord Hillsborough, secretary of state for the colonies, recommending the arrest of the publishers on a charge of treason. In the affair of the sloop " Liberty," in June, 1768, Dr. Warren was one of the committee appointed to wait upon the governor at his country-seat at Jamaica Plain, and protest against the impressment of seamen and the vexatious enforcement of the revenue laws. He was present at every town-meeting held in Boston, from the arrival of the British troops in October, 1768, to their removal in March, 1770, and he was one of the committee of safety appointed after the so-called " massacre " on 5 March, n July he was appointed on a committee to consider the condition of the town, and send a report to England. It was apparently of him that a Tory pamphleteer wrote: " One of our most bawling demagogues and voluminous writers is a crazy doctor." In March, 1772, he delivered the anniversary oration upon the "massacre"; in November his name was recorded immediately after those of James Otis and Samuel Adams in the list of the first committee of correspondence. During the next two years he was in active co-operation with Samuel Adams, and when, in August. 1774, that leader went to attend the meeting of the Continental congress at Philadelphia, the leadership of the party in Boston devolved upon Dr. Warren. On 9 Sept., 1774, the towns of Suffolk county met in convention at Milton, and Dr. Warren read a paper drawn up bv him- self, and since known as the "Suffolk resolves.*' The resolutions, which were adopted unanimously, declared that a king who violates the chartered rights of his people forfeits their allegiance ; they declared the regulating act null and void, and ordered all the officers appointed under it to resign their offices at