Boston Massacre
The British had decided in 1763 to keep an army in the colonies and to tax
the colonists to pay for it. Then the British Parliament passed the Quartering
Act in 1765. Colonists had to house British soldiers and give each one candle
and five pints of beer a day. Go back to England!! the townspeople yelled as
4,000 Redcoats got off their ships, and marched through the streets of Boston.
It was 1768 and the Redcoats moved to Boston to make sure the people there paid
their taxes. For two years the Redcoats were there, they threatened each other,
fist fights broke out, townspeople threw eggs at the Redcoats, people trained
their dogs to bite the Redcoats, and people also called them names.For instance,
kids called them lobster backs and bloody backs. Also, it was very crowded onthe
streets, because there was about 20,000 people in Boston. By Sunday night, March
4th, 1770, Boston was boiling..... A little after eight, soldiers, armed with
cudgels and tongs, emerged from Murray's Barracks near the center of the town.
To the surprise of almost no one, a crowd-- composed largely, a hostile witness
said, 'of saucy boys, Negroes, and mulattoes, Irish Teagues and outlandish Jack
Tars'-- Gathered and traded insults with the soldiers. In the center of this
crowd an imposing man who was no stranger to 'white people's quarrels.' His name
was Crispus Attucks, and he was a Massachusetts native who had escaped from
slavery ans sailed the seas. Tall, brawny, with a look that 'was enough to
terrify any person,' Attucks was well known around the docks in lower Boston.
Needless to say, he was not a proper Bostonian, a fact that has pained
innumerable historians.
He was instead a proper rebel, a drifter, a man who
loved freedom and knew what it was worth. He was about forty-seven on this
memorable night, and he had that undefinable quality called presence. When he
spoke, men listened. Where he commanded, men acted..... It was Attucks,
according to eyewitnesses, who shaped and dominated the action on the night of
the event known to history as the Boston Massacre. And when the people faltered,
it was Attucks, according to almost all contemporary reports, who rallied them
and urged them to stand their ground. The people, responding to his leadership,
stood firm; so did the soldiers. The two sides exchanged insults, and a fight
flared. Attucks, who seems to have been everywhere on this night, led a group of
citizens who drove the soldiers back to the gate of the barracks. The soldiers
rallied and drove the Boston crowd back. On March 5th, British troops were
quartered in the city to discourage demonstrations against the Townshend Acts
which imposed duties on imports to the colonies. As a result of the constant
harassment and some boys in their teens who began throwing snowballs(some with
rocks in them), the Redcoats had to start defending themselves. They began to
fire at the colonists. Once the smoke cleared from the guns, five townspeople
were dead, and others were hurt.
The people who died were: Crispus Attucks,
killed by two snowballs entering his head, Samuel Gray, a worker at a rope walk
was killed also by two snowballs entering his head, James Coldwell, a mate on an
American ship was killed instantly when two snowballs entered his back, Samuel
Maverick, who was a young seventeen year old male was mortally wounded and died
the next morning, and Patrick Carr, a feather maker died as well. Paul Revere
created a woodcut of the massacre. The woodcut was a Masterpiece of Propaganda
meaning it was a lie. The woodcut was copied and sent throughout the colonies.
Attached was this poem: Unhappy Boston! See thy sons deplore. Thy hallowed walk
besmear'd with guiltless give! The woodcut caused colonists to want independene.
The eight soldiers and their commanding officer, were tried for murder, and were
defended by the American lawyers John Adams and Josiah Quincey. Two were
declared guilty of manslaughter and after claiming benefit of clergy were
branded on the thumb; the others including the officer, were acquited. The funny
thing about the Boston Massacre was that there was not a massacre at all, but a
street fight between a Boston mob and a squad of British soldiers. It was called
a 'massacre' because several colonists were killed by the soldiers. The name was
invented by speechmakers and used tohelp stir the anger of the crowds. The
Boston Massacre was one of the events which led up to the Revolutionary War.
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