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  1. The Boston Massacre was one of the events that led to the American Revolution . In 1770 in Boston , Massachusetts , a group of British soldiers shot their muskets into a crowd. Five colonists were killed.

  2. The Boston Massacre happened on March 5, 1770. It was a combination of events that included British soldiers present in Boston, Massachusetts, and anti-British feelings by the colonists. When the British opened fire on a group of colonists that were throwing sticks and snowballs at them, five of the colonists were killed. This situation was.

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  4. bostonhistory.squarespace.com › s › Boston-MassacreImagesTHE BOSTON MASSACRE IN IMAGES

    1. “The Bloody Massacre,” engraving by Paul Revere, 1770 (on display in the Old State House) 2.“The Boston Massacre, March 5, 1770,” John Bufford’s 1857 chromolithograph of William L. Champney’s 1856 drawing (on display in the Old State House) • Timelines 1. American Revolution: 1765-1776 2. Abolition of Slavery: 1808-1896

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    • Historical Background
    • The Night at King Street
    • The Aftermath
    In 1765, a secret society called the Sons of Liberty was formed opposing the implementation of the Stamp Act. The Stamp Act was passed by the British Parliament on March 22, 1765, which required Am...
    Two years later, colonists were further outraged by the passage of the Townshend Acts. They were a series of laws that set new taxes on British imported goods such as tea, paper, glass, and paint....
    Since then mobs and riots emerged. Under the request of Governor Francis Bernard, British troops were sent to Boston to protect colonial officials in 1768.
    On March 5, 1770, the Twenty-Ninth Regiment led by Captain Thomas Preston met a large taunting crowd of American civilians in front of the Customs House on King Street in Boston, Massachusetts. The...
    During the incident, British soldiers who were stationed in Boston opened fire and killed five men and injured six others after some local Boston people had been shouting and threatening them. The...
    Over 50 men were threatening the soldiers and throwing objects at them before the shots were fired. Many local Bostonians did not agree with the British army being in their city.
    The five men who died in the incident were Crispus Attucks, Samuel Gray, James Caldwell, Samuel Maverick and Patrick Carr. Crispus Attucks, an escaped slave, was thought to be the first American ca...
    Thousands of Boston residents attended the funeral of the victims as they walked towards the Liberty Tree. Samuel Adams chaired the committee that investigated the incident on the side of the colon...
    On November 27, 1770, Captain Preston and eight of his men were brought to trial. In defense of the soldiers were Josiah Quincy Jr. and John Adams, who became the second President of the United Sta...
    All eight soldiers involved in the incident were arrested. Six of them were released and two were charged with manslaughter. Their punishment was ‘branding of the thumb’.
    The soldiers were Corporal William Wemms, Private Hugh Montgomery, Private James Hartigan, Private William McCauley, Private Hugh White, Private Matthew Kilroy, Private William Warren, and Private...
  6. Imagining the Boston Massacre asks students to consider images of the one of the most important and controversial events of the Revolutionary era. This lesson invites students to examine and interpret depictions of the Boston Massacre—the deadly confrontation between Bostonians and British troops on the evening of March 5, 1770—by examining ...

  7. The Boston Massacre. The Boston Massacre is a name given later to a deadly confrontation between British soldiers and American colonists in Boston on March 5, 1770. A disagreement escalated to a shouting match, a crowd gathered, more soldiers arrived, and the soldiers fired their guns into the crowd, killing three people right away and injuring ...

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