BostonMassacre250

BostonMassacre250

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The Boston Massacre happened on March 5, 1770 and was the first event to spark the American Revoluti

03/05/2020

A wonderful dinner for those in Boston to commemorate the 250th Anniversary of the event that sparked the Revolutionary War.

Photos from DAR President General's post 03/04/2020

So excited to kick off our commemoration event today!

03/04/2020

Here's the hashtag!

A Map of the Massacre to Explore 03/02/2020

Boston has changed in the last 250 years - the Old State House, then known as the Town House, is the only structure still standing from the location of the Boston Massacre. So what did that area - where the Revolution began - really look like? Luckily, Paul Revere created a map of the scene that may have been used in the trials of the British soldiers.

Historian, J.L. Bell of Boston 1775 explores this map in a blog post below.

A Map of the Massacre to Explore I mentioned this in a comment a few days back, but thought it deserved more space. The Boston Public Library’s Rare Books and Manuscript...

2020 Boston Massacre Events | Revolution 250 03/01/2020

Thank you to our friends at Revolution250 for including our wreath laying ceremony among your 250 events!

2020 Boston Massacre Events | Revolution 250 FIRE! Voices of the Boston Massacre Gallery Talk Fri Feb 21st 2:00pm - 3:00pm Massachusetts Historical Society, 1154 Boylston St, Boston, MA 02215, USA Amanda Norton of the Adams Papers will walk visitors through our exhibition of the Boston Massacre, which explores and reinterprets the events of Ma...

Episode 228: Eric Hinderaker, The Boston Massacre - Ben Franklin's World 02/29/2020

What was Boston like under military occupation in 1770? What were Bostonians reactions to the shooting on King Street - and, what were the British reactions? This, and more, is explored in the Ben Franklin's World podcast episode with author Eric Hinderaker. Listen as historian Liz Covart and Hinderaker discuss the Boston Massacre - the facts and how both sides used the Massacre to further their causes.

Episode 228: Eric Hinderaker, The Boston Massacre - Ben Franklin's World Eric Hinderaker, distinguished professor of History at the University of Utah and author of Boston’s Massacre, investigates the Boston Massacre.

Photos from BostonMassacre250's post 02/28/2020

Six years after the Boston Massacre, the Old State House finally saw freedom realized: the Declaration of Independence was first read from its balcony in 1776 to joyous Bostonians. Centuries later, the document is still read every year from the balcony, with patriotic revelers lining the street. Every July 4th, the Boston Tea Party Chapter, NSDAR hands out American flags to those in the crowd. Last year, they handed out 600 flags!

Photos courtesy of the Boston Tea Party chapter, 2019 and 2018.

02/26/2020

Paul Revere lived in the North End, just beyond the Old State House, when the Boston Massacre occurred. In addition to being the engraver of the "Bloody Massacre perpetrated on King Street," Revere was a silversmith, a Son of Liberty, and businessman. In 1895, the Paul Revere Chapter, NSDAR placed a plaque on his house to help bring attention and save it from demolition. The Paul Revere Memorial Association was formed just a few years later and the The Paul Revere House opened to the public in April 1908.

Almost a century later in 2012, the Paul Revere Chapter sponsored a grant from the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution for their brand new Education & Visitor Center. The new Center offers more exhibits and space for thousands of visitors a year to learn the revolutionary history of Revere.

Photo courtesy of the Paul Revere Chapter, 2019.

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