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Boston Massacre-- An Anonymous Patriot Account
From A Short Narrative of the Horrid Massacre in
Boston. Printed by the Order of the Town of Boston. 1776.
The Horrid
Massacre in Boston, Perpetrated in the Evening of the Fifth day of March,
1770, By Soldiers of the Twenty-ninth Regiment which with the Fourteenth
Regiment were then quartered there; with some observations on the state of
things prior to that Catastrophe
At the end of
the late French and Indian in which this province bore so distinguished a
part, a happy union subsisted between Great Britain and the colonies. This
was unfortunately interrupted by the Stamp Act; but it was in some measure
restored by the repeal of it. It was again interrupted by other acts of
parliament for taxing America; and by the appointment of a Board of
Commissioners, in pursuance of an act, which by the face of it was made
for the relief and encouragement of commerce, but which in its operation,
it was apprehended, would have, and it has in fact had, a contrary effect.
By the said act the said Commissioners were "to be resident in some
convenient part of his Majesty's dominions in America." This must be
understood to be in some part convenient for the whole. But it does not
appear that, in fixing the place of their residence, the convenience of
the whole was at all consulted, for Boston, being very far from the centre
of the colonies, could not be the place most convenient for the whole.
Judging by the act, it may seem this town was intended to be favored, by
the Commissioners being appointed to reside here; and that the consequence
of that residence would be the relief and encouragement of commerce; but
the reverse has been the constant and uniform effect of it; so that the
commerce of the town, from the embarrassments in which it has been lately
involved, is greatly reduced.
The residence
of the Commissioners here has been detrimental, not only to the commerce,
but to the political interests of the town and province; and not only so,
but we can trace from it the causes of the late horrid massacre. Soon
after their arrival here in November, 1767, instead of confining
themselves to the proper business of their office, they became partizans
of Governor Bernard in his political schemes; and had the weakness and
temerity to infringe upon one of the most essential rights of the house of
commons of this province-that of giving their votes with freedom, and not
being accountable therefor but to their constituents. One of the members
of that house, Capt. Timothy Folgier, having voted in some affair contrary
to the mind of the said Commissioners, was for so doing dismissed from the
office he held under them.
These
proceedings of theirs, the difficulty of access to them on
office-business, and a supercilious behavior, rendered them disgustful to
people in general, who in consequence thereof treated them with neglect.
This probably stimulated them to resent it; and to make their resentment
felt, they and their coadjutor, Governor Bernard, made such
representations to his Majesty's ministers as they thought best calculated
to bring the displeasure of the nation upon the town and province; and in
order that those representations might have the more weight, they are said
to have contrived and executed plans for exciting disturbances and
tumults, which otherwise would probably never have existed; and, when
excited, to have transmitted to the ministry the most exaggerated accounts
of them. …
Unfortunately
for us, they have been too successful in their said representations,
which, in conjunction with Governor Bernard's, have occasioned his
Majesty's faithful subjects of this town and province to be treated as
enemies and rebels, by an invasion of the town by sea and land; to which
the approaches were made with all the circumspection usual where a
vigorous opposition is expected. While the town was surrounded by a
considerable number of his Majesty's ships of war, two regiments landed
and took possession of it; and to support these, two other regiments
arrived some time after from Ireland; one of which landed at Castle
Island, and the other in the town.
Thus were we,
in aggravation of our other embarrassments, embarrassed with troops,
forced upon us contrary to our inclination-contrary to the spirit of Magna
Charta-contrary to the very letter of the Bill of Rights, in which it is
declared, that the raising or keeping a standing army within the kingdom
in time of peace, unless it be with the consent of parliament, is against
law, and without the desire of the civil magistrates, to aid whom was the
pretence for sending the troops hither; who were quartered in the town in
direct violation of an act of parliament for quartering troops in America;
and all this in consequence of the representations of the said
Commissioners and the said Governor, as appears by their memorials and
letters lately published.
As they were
the procuring cause of troops being sent hither, they must therefore be
the remote and a blameable cause of all the disturbances and bloodshed
that have taken place in consequence of that measure.
We shall next
attend to the conduct of the troops, and to some circumstances relative to
them. Governor Bernard without consulting the Council, having given up the
State House to the troops at their landing, they took possession of the
chambers, where the representatives of the province and the courts of law
held their meetings; and (except the council-chamber) of all other parts
of that house; in which they continued a considerable time, to the great
annoyance of those courts while they sat, and of the merchants and
gentlemen of the town, who had always made the lower floor of it their
exchange. They [the merchants] had a right so to do, as the property of it
was in the town; but they were deprived of that right by mere power. The
said Governor soon after, by every stratagem and by every method but a
forcibly entry, endeavored to get possession of the manufactory-house, to
make a barrack of it for the troops; and for that purpose caused it to be
besieged by the troops, and the people in it to be used very cruelly; The
General Court, at the first session after the arrival of the troops,
viewed it in this light, and applied to Governor Bernard to cause such a
nuisance to be removed; but to no purpose. the challenging the inhabitants
by sentinels posted in all parts of the town before the lodgings of
officers, which (for about six months, while it lasted), occasioned many
quarrels and uneasiness.
Capt. Wilson,
of the 59th, exciting the negroes of the town to take away their masters'
lives and property, and repair to the army for protection, which was fully
proved against him. The attack of a party of soldiers on some of the
magistrates of the town-the repeated rescues of soldiers from peace
officers-the firing of a loaded musket in a public street, to the
endangering a great number of peaceable inhabitants-the frequent wounding
of persons by their bayonets and cutlasses, and the numerous instances of
bad behavior in the soldiery, made us early sensible that the troops were
not sent here for any benefit to the town or province, and that we had no
good to expect from such conservators of the peace.
It was not
expected, however, that such an outrage and massacre, as happened here on
the evening of the fifth instant, would have been perpetrated. There were
then killed and wounded, by a discharge of musketry, eleven of his
Majesty's subjects, viz.:
Mr. Samuel
Gray, killed on the spot by a ball entering his head.
Crispus
Attucks, a mulatto, killed on the spot, two balls entering his breast.
Mr. James
Caldwell, killed on the spot, by two balls entering his back.
Mr. Samuel
Maverick, a youth of seventeen years of age, mortally wounded; he died the
next
morning.
Mr. Patrick
Carr mortally wounded; he died the 14th instant.
Christopher
Monk and John Clark, youths about seventeen years of age, dangerously
wounded. It
is apprehended they will die.
Mr. Edward
Payne, merchant, standing at his door; wounded.
Messrs. John
Green, Robert Patterson, and David Parker; all danger- ously wounded.
The actors in
this dreadful tragedy were a party of soldiers commanded by Capt. Preston
of the 29th regiment. This party, including the Captain, consisted of
eight, who are all committed to jail.
There are
depositions in this affair which mention, that several guns were fired at
the same time from the Custom-house; before which this shocking scene was
exhibited. Into this matter inquisition is now making. In the meantime it
may be proper to insert here the substance of some of those depositions.
Benjamin
Frizell, on the evening of the 5th of March, having taken his station near
the west corner of the Custom-house in King street, before and at the time
of the soldiers firing their guns, declares (among other things) that the
first discharge was only of one gun, the next of two guns, upon which he
the deponent thinks he saw a man stumble; the third discharge was of three
guns, upon which he thinks he saw two men fall; and immediately after were
discharged five guns, two of which were by soldiers on his right hand; the
other three, as appeared to the deponent, were discharged from the
balcony, or the chamber window of the Custom-house, the flashes appearing
on the left hand, and higher than the right hand flashes appeared to be,
and of which the deponent was very sensible, although his eyes were much
turned to the soldiers, who were all on his right hand.
What gave
occasion to the melancholy event of that evening seems to have been this.
A difference having happened near Mr. Grays ropewalk, between a soldier
and a man belonging to it, the soldier challenged the ropemakers to a
boxing match. The challenge was accepted by one of them, and the soldier
worsted. He ran to the barrack in the neighborhood, and returned with
several of his companions. The fray was renewed, and the soldiers were
driven off. They soon returned with recruits and were again worsted. This
happened several times, till at length a considerable body of soldiers was
collected, and they also were driven off, the ropemakers having been
joined by their brethren of the contiguous ropewalks. By this time Mr.
Gray being alarmed interposed, and with the assistance of some gentlemen
prevented any further disturbance. To satisfy the soldiers and punish the
man who had been the occasion of the first difference, and as an example
to the rest, he turned him out of his service; and waited on Col.
Dalrymple, the commanding officer of the troops, and with him concerted
measures for preventing further mischief. Though this affair ended thus,
it made a strong impression on the minds of the soldiers in general, who
thought the honor of the regiment
concerned to
revenge those repeated repulses. For this purpose they seem to have formed
a combination to commit some outrage upon the inhabitants of the town
indiscriminately; and this was to be done on the evening of the 5th
instant or soon after; as appears by the depositions of the following
persons, viz.:
William
Newhall declares, that on Thursday night the 1st of March instant, he met
four soldiers of the 29th regiment, and that he heard them say, "there
were a great many that would eat their dinners on Monday ext, that should
not eat any on Tuesday." <
Daniel Calfe
declares, that on Saturday evening the 3d of March, a camp-woman, wife to
James McDeed, a grenadier of the 29th, came into his father's shop, and
the people talking about the affrays at the ropewalks, and blaming the
soldiers for the part they had acted in it, the woman said, "the soldiers
were in the right;" adding, "that before Tuesday or Wednesday night they
would wet their swords or bayonets in New England people's blood."
Samuel Drowne
declares that, about nine o'clock of the evening of the fifth of March
current, standing at his own door in Cornhill, he saw about fourteen or
fifteen soldiers of the 29th regiment, who came from Murray's barracks,
armed with naked cutlasses, swords, &c., and came upon the inhabitants of
the town, then standing or walking in Coruhffl, and abused some, and
violently assaulted others as they met them; most of whom were without so
much as a stick in their hand to defend themselves, as he very clearly
could discern, it being moonlight, and himself being one of the assaulted
persons. All or most of the said soldiers he saw go into King street (some
of them through Royal Exchange lane), and there followed them, and soon
discovered them to be quarrelling and fighting with the people whom they
saw there, which he thinks were not more than a dozen, when the soldiers
came first, armed as aforesaid. Of those dozen people, the most of them
were gentlemen, standing together a little below the Town House, upon the
Exchange. At the appearance of those soldiers so armed, the most of the
twelve persons went off, some of them being first assaulted.
The violent
proceedings of this party, and their going into King street, "quarrelling
and fighting with the people whom they saw there" (mentioned in Mr.
Drowne's deposition), was immediately introductory to the grand
catastrophe.
These
assailants, who issued from Murray's barracks (so called), after attacking
and wounding divers persons in Cornhill, as abovementioned, being armed,
proceeded (most of them) up the Royal Exchange lane into King street;
where, making a short stop, and after assaulting and driving away the few
they met there, they brandished their arms and cried out, "where are the
boogers! where are the cowards!" At this time there were very few persons
in the street beside themselves. This party in proceeding from Exchange
lane into King street, must pass the sentry posted at the westerly corner
of the Custom House, which butts on that lane and fronts on that street.
This is needful to be mentioned, as near that spot and in that street the
bloody tragedy was acted, and the street actors in it were stationed:
their station being but a few feet from the front side of the said Custom
House. The outrageous behavior and the threats of the said party
occasioned the ringing of the meeting-house bell near the head of King
street, which bell ringing quick, as for fire, it presently brought out a
number of inhabitants, who being soon sensible of the occasion of it, were
naturally led to King street, where the said party had made a stop but a
little while before, and where their stopping had drawn together a number
of boys, round the sentry at the Custom House. whether the boys mistook
the sentry for one of the said party, and thence took occasion to differ
with him, or whether he first affronted them, which is affirmed in several
depositions,-however that may be, there was much foul
language
between them, and some of them, in consequence of his pushing at them with
his bayonet, threw snowballs at him, which occasioned him to knock hastily
at the door of the Custom House. From hence two persons thereupon
proceeded immediately to the main-guard, which was posted opposite to the
State House, at a small distance, near the head of the said street. The
officer on guard was Capt. Preston, who with seven or eight soldiers, with
fire-arms and charged bayonets, issued from the guardhouse, and in great
haste posted himself and his soldiers in front of the Custom House, near
the corner aforesaid. In passing to this station the soldiers pushed
several persons with their bayonets, driving through the people in so
rough a manner that it appeared they intended to create a disturbance.
This occasioned some snowballs to be thrown at them which seems to have
been the only provocation that was given. Mr. Knox (between whom and Capt.
Preston there was some conversation on the spot) declares, that while he
was talking with Capt. Preston, the soldiers of his detachment had
attacked the people with their bayonets and that there was not the least
provocation given to Capt. Preston of his party; the backs of the people
being toward them when
the people
were attacked. He also declares, that Capt. Preston seemed to be in great
haste and much agitated, and that, according to his opinion, there were
not then present in King street above seventy or eighty persons at the
extent.
The said
party was formed into a half circle; and within a short time after they
had been posted at the Custom House, began to fire upon the people.
Captain
Preston is said to have ordered them to fire, and to have repeated that
order. One gun was fired first; then others in succession and with
deliberation, till ten or a dozen guns were fired; or till that number of
discharges were made from the guns that were fired. By which means eleven
persons were killed and wounded, as above represented.
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