Comparison Of Crispus Attucks And The Boston Massacre

709 Words3 Pages

Crispus Attucks was born a slave in the town called Framingham, Massachusetts. Crispus Father was married to a woman who originated from Natick tribe. Back in 1750 William Brown was a slave owner in Framingham and advertised for the return of a runaway slave named Crispus. Crispus status was a free man or a runaway slave has been matter of debate of historians. He was temporarily in Boston by the early 1770’s and recently returned from a voyage from the Bahamas. John Adams defended most of the accused British soldiers because they were charged with murder. But to years later the United states Founding father Samuel Adams named the event the Boston Massacre to help assure it would not be forgotten. John Copley created an image of event. But …show more content…

Crispus Attucks was ibe if the first men to die for a American Revolution. Crispus had gathered 40 to 50 patriots, armed with clubs, sticks and snowballs, and approached the British soldiers. Crispus Attucks was the first to celebrate the Boston Massacre of 1770. But four other Americans died that the same night of action. Five people actually died but Mr. Adams termed it was a Massacre of innocent citizens but the tyrannical mother country. Revere Published a poem and a drawing of a famous incident in the Boston Gazette on March 12, 1770. Crispus Attucks named from the accounts of the American Revolution was gonna dismiss the boston massacre because they thought it was a irrelevant incident in the struggle for an American Independence. Attucks sacrifice without doubt puts him me category as prominent African American heroes Frederick Douglass, Sojourner Truth, and Harriet Tubman. Attucks has became an icon of an anti slavery movement back in the nineteenth century as a hero who stood up and died defending the freedom and rights to …show more content…

Mr. Adams became the second President of the United states from 1797 to 1801. The jury was acquitted six of the soldiers on all charges to: William Wemms, William M’Cauley, Hugh White, William Warren, James Carroll and James Hartigan were found not guilty. But Hugh and Matthew were not found guilty of murder but they were guilty of manslaughter. Slavery was abolished in 1863 when Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. There was a monument to the victims of the Boston Massacre. The Monument was opposed by some of the members of the Massachusetts Society and many city officials are arguing about it appropriateness, historical distortion and political