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  1. The Boston Massacre

    the boston massacre. ... Probably one of the most important reasons why the British are
    to blame for the Boston Massacre is their unnecessary behavior. ...

  2. Boston Massacre

    Boston Massacre. The Boston Massacre was an extremely important event in American
    History. ... The Boston Massacre was a defining moment in American history. ...

  3. Boston Massacre

    Boston Massacre. The Boston Massacre is considered by many historians to
    be the first battle of the Revolutionary War. The fatal ...

  4. Boston Massacre

    boston massacre. ... In the case of the Boston Massacre the truth was stretched
    so much that the event is still pretty much open to debate. ...

  5. Boston Massacre

    Boston Massacre. Eric Wong November 15, 2006 In American history, March 5th, 1770
    was a very important date because it was the day known as the Boston Massacre. ...

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The Boston Massacre

Submitted by buckshots14872 on June 21, 2005

Category: American History
Words: 2738 | Pages: 11
Views: 226
Popularity Rank: 53,390
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

The Boston Massacre was and is still a debatable Massacre. The event occurred on March 5, 1776. It involved the rope workers of the colonial Boston and two British regiments, the twenty-ninth and the fourteenth regiments. Eleven people were shot in the incident; five people were killed and the other six were merely wounded. The soldiers and the captain, Thomas Preston, were all put on trial. All were acquitted of charges of murder, however the two soldiers who fired first, Private Mathew Killroy, and Private William Montgomery, the two soldiers were guilty of manslaughter. The causes were numerous for this event. There had been a nation wide long-term dislike towards the British, and a growing hatred towards them by the people of Boston. Even before the two regiments were sent in to monitor Boston there was a growing feud before the two sides.
The population of Boston in 1765 was over twenty thousand people, and it was the second largest city in the country. The city was split up into two political factions, the loyalists, also known as the "Tories" were loyal to the British nation and respected and followed their policies. The other group was the Patriots, they too pledged alliance with the British, but they also believed strongly in their colonial rights, and more often then not went against parliamentary decisions. America still had not declared independence from England in 1765, and was expected to follow the rules of the parliament and the King. The government like all other states was structured differently, but the people elected their representatives. Unlike the British who let the people vote, but they are "indirectly represented" by Parliament. The stamp act was one of the first things Britain did to upset the colonies. John Adams who was a prospering young lawyer at the time, called the Stamp Act "That enormous engine, fabricated by the British Parliament, for battering down all the rights and liberties of America." The stamp act put a tax on...

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