There are many cities named Revere, however there are only a few places officially named after Paul Revere (as opposed to another Revere).
Revere, Massachusetts took its name in 1871.
Paul Revere Village in Karlsruhe, Germany used to be a US Army station of some sort.
Those are the only two cities that were readily apparent in research, and even then the Village in Germany may or may not be an actual village, but rather could be the name of a building.
Further, a village is not a city, so that too may not count, even if it is an actual village.
Yes
Type your answer here... yes there are
No new ones for over a century.
Revere lived in Boston and had his business there. I doubt he came into contact with any Native Americans.
three children
no
Yes
he didn't have any.
Laura Secord was a Canadian patriot, something of a (Pauline Revere) type, that is a dispatch rider- a trade rendered obsolete by teletype, code machines, et al. I don"t know much about her but she should be on the web as an Historical character. There is a brand of Candies popular in Canada named after her. I am not aware of any candies named in honor of Paul Revere. Peter Paul Mounds, yes, OId Nick ( very yuletide!) but not Paul Revere, to my knowledge.
Type your answer here... yes there are
No new ones for over a century.
Revere lived in Boston and had his business there. I doubt he came into contact with any Native Americans.
It has been falling apart for ages!
All of them, they're HIS children.
three children
i wanna know cause its for a school preject
On the night of April 17, 1775 the Son's of Liberty were meeting in Concord and they knew that the British were gathering troops in Boston to soon march to find any weapons or powder that the colonials may have hidden. They hired Paul Revere, for 30 shillings, to ride if the troops came ashore at Charelstown. They did and Revere began his ride, but didn't finish it because he was arrested by the British patrol between Boston and Concord. Two men, Prescott and Dawes came along, saw Revere in trouble, and rode to Concord to warn the men meeting there. Later, that morning, the battle at Lexington happened and then the one at the Bridge of Concord. The only reason we think of Revere and this event is because a 100 years AFTER it happened Longfellow wrote a poem called The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere. In the poem he states that Revere called out "the British are coming." That alone is not something that would have happened because the people in the colonies thought of themselves as British.