Boston Massacre
Incident on March 5, 1770 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Boston Massacre happened when five civilians (people who were not in the military) were shot and killed by 9 British soldiers on March 5, 1770.[1] It was in Boston, Massachusetts, which was a British colony at the time. The event happened at night when a large mob got together outside of the Custom House. One British soldier named Hugh White had hit a boy who had insulted his commanding officer. The boy ran away and came back with a large mob of angry people. More British soldiers came to help protect Hugh White from the people. The mob threw snowballs with clams inside them and hit them with wooden clubs. As the mob got larger and larger the scene became more and more chaotic. Someone in the crowd yelled "fire". In the confusion, some of the soldiers fired into the crowd. Crispus Attucks, an African-American man, was one of the first people killed.[2]
The Boston Massacre | |
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![]() Engraving of the Massacre by Paul Revere | |
Location | Boston, Massachusetts Bay Colony, British America |
Date | March 5, 1770 |
Attack type | Shooting |
Deaths | 5 |
Injured | 7 |
Perpetrators | British Army |
Trial
Eight British soldiers went to court after the Boston Massacre. Only two of them, Hugh Montgomery and Matthew Killroy, were found guilty of manslaughter in court. Their punishment was to have the palms of their hands branded (have their palms marked with a burn). John Adams was the lawyer who defended the British soldiers. He knew that many people would be upset with him for defending the soldiers, but he believed that everybody deserved a fair trial.[3] (Adams would later become the President of the United States).
After the Boston Massacre
Paul Revere, a man who worked with metals in Boston, made an engraving of the British soldiers shooting into the crowd, depicted as violent. Many people saw the engraving and became angry. A few years later, the American Revolution started, and the colonies would become an independent country, the United States of America.
Photo gallery
- Hover over each photo to view label detail
- Portrait of what Crispus Attucks may have looked like
- Obituary of Massacre victim Patrick Carr, published on March 19, 1770, with an engraving of his coffin by Paul Revere
- John Adams defended the accused British soldiers
- Lithograph from 1856 focusing on Crispus Attucks, who had by then become an important symbol for abolitionists.[4]
- A gray brick circle now marks the site of the Massacre, in front of the Old State House
References
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