James Warren (politician)

James Warren (September 28, 1726 – November 28, 1808) was the President of the Massachusetts Provincial Congress and a Paymaster General of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War, among other positions. He was born, and died, in Plymouth, Massachusetts. He was not related to the brothers Joseph Warren and John Warren, two other notable Warrens from Massachusetts during the Revolution with which he is sometimes confused because of their similar names and roles.

Warren graduated from Harvard in 1745, and in 1754 married his second cousin Mercy Otis Warren, a historian and playwright. He was a descendant of Mayflower passengers Richard Warren and Edward Doty; his wife Mercy was also descended from Edward Doty. He and Mercy had five sons. During the time of the Revolution, she hosted political meetings in her home, and in 1772, she published her play, The Adulateur. After the war, in 1790, Mrs. Warren published a volume of poetry in her name. In 1805, she wrote History of the American Revolution. She died in Plymouth in 1814.

Warren was a pronounced Anti-Federalist, one who opposed the new Constitution. As such, both he and Mercy went to work, he submitting essays to the local newspaper as "Helvitius Priscus", she writing a pamphlet (Observations on the new Constitution) under the pen-name "A Columbian Patriot".

Warren was more active in the early days of the Revolution than in the war itself. He was a member of the Sons of Liberty, and he fought in the Battle of Bunker Hill. He was commissioned a general in the Massachusetts militia, but because he refused to serve under Continental Army officers of lesser rank, he took no part in the war after the action moved away from Boston.

James Warren is buried on Burial Hill in Plymouth, Massachusetts.