History Daily - The Boston Massacre
Episode Date: March 5, 2026March 5, 1770. A street fight between British soldiers and American colonists turns into a bloodbath, escalating a conflict that will lead to the War of Independence. This episode originally aired in ...2024. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more. History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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Is it a new cotio, Ki-kharis.
Hae asuntolanae muttomastomast from Apspankist,
Paikokkotcomptomptus.
Avaeanahawk, S-pankx,
Suomen Mutkottomimpank.
It's the evening of March 5th, 1770,
in the city of Boston in the British colony of Massachusetts.
An angry crowd is gathered outside the customs house.
52-year-old Captain Thomas Preston
pushes his way through the mob
with a small squad of British soldiers following behind.
But the side of the side of the soldiers,
sight of their guns and bayonets does nothing to calm the locals who only jeer more loudly
and start flinging snowballs at Captain Preston and his men.
Tensions between British troops and Boston's locals have been simmering for months.
The American colonists want more freedom to rule themselves, but their rulers in London
want to maintain direct control.
An hour ago, Captain Preston heard rumors of unrest in this part of the city, and he's been
ordered to defuse the situation before it gets out at hand.
Captain Preston reaches the front of the crowd.
A single sentry stands in front of the Customs House entrance.
Captain Preston hurries over to him to find out what's going on.
A young guard visibly sighs with relief.
He reports that the crowd is demanding that he hand over a British officer
who supposedly owes money to a local tradesman.
A terrified officer is sheltering inside the customs house, afraid for his life.
Captain Preston turns and takes in the size of the crowd properly for the first time.
He was only expecting a few hot-headed radicals,
but instead there are at least 50 boys and men,
many of them carrying clubs, their faces twisted in anger.
Plus, the side of the uniformed British soldiers
has only added fuel to the fire.
The number of Bostonians in the street is growing rapidly,
and it's not just snowballs that fly through the air now.
The crowd begins throwing rocks at Captain Preston and his men,
and when one colonists gets a little too close,
one of Captain Preston's soldiers jabs out with his bayonet.
Before Preston can intervene, a brawl breaks out.
The captain is pushed and shoved by the locals until gunfire rings out,
and the crowd falls back in panic.
Captain Preston orders his men to cease fire, but it's too late.
Several bodies lie on the snow-covered street as the colonists back away in horror and anger.
Eleven civilians are shot during the fight at Boston's Customs House,
and five of the colonists will die of their wounds.
It's a skirmish that will have far-reaching consequences.
Few Bostonians were advocates for independence from Britain before the soldiers opened fire.
But now, in the new blood-stained snow of the city,
the seeds of the American Revolution will be planted on March 5, 1770.
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S-pank, Suomen Mutquettomimpan.
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From Noisor
in Airship,
I'm Lindsay Graham
and this is
History Daily.
History is made
every day.
On this podcast,
every day,
we tell the true
stories of the
people and events
that shaped our world.
Today is March 5th,
177,
The Boston Massacre. It's late afternoon, October 2, 1768, in Boston Harbor,
18 months before the confrontation at the Customs House. Captain Thomas Preston stands on the
deck of a British warship, watching as the city gets closer and closer. Preston is one of more
than 1,000 soldiers who have been quickly reassigned from Ireland to the American colonies, where
military occupation of Boston is about to begin. Friction between Great Britain and its 13
colonies in North America has been building for months. A year ago, the British Parliament
passed new legislation imposing additional taxes on all kinds of goods imported into the colonies,
from expensive materials like China and glass to everyday staples like paper and tea. And
many American colonists felt like the British government was taking advantage of them.
They had no representation in Parliament, but still had to pay taxes, levies, and fees.
It was a lousy deal, and the colonists were tired of it.
Sensing this mounting discontent, the British King George III decided he had to act.
But rather than make any of the legislative changes that the colonists were asking for,
he instead responded with a show of force.
Dispatching a fleet of ships and 1,000 soldiers to Boston,
he gave orders to keep the peace and stamp out any unrest.
Today, Captain Preston's part of the task force is arriving,
and he's not expecting a warm welcome.
Captain Preston descends the gangplank and steps on to north of the city.
America for the first time. He gathers his troops and marches them out of the harbor, past the
grim faces of the Bostonians who gathered to watch the ships come in. Despite this difficult start,
for almost two years after his arrival, Captain Preston's soldiers live alongside the citizens of
Boston in peace. Many of them form friendships with their neighbors, and some of the single soldiers
even marry local women. As an experienced and respected officer, Captain Preston soon garners
a reputation as a steady pair of hands who's trusted by the Bostonians. But despite the best
efforts of men like Preston, resentment grows at the presence of British troops in the city. Some
Bostonians are annoyed to find their local watering holes flooded with British officers, while
others resent the military tents that take over Boston common. Most of all, the people of Boston
load the feeling of being under constant surveillance. They don't like being watched or mistrusted.
On March 5, 1770, those tensions explode into violence thanks to a simple misunderstanding.
A wigmaker's apprentice named Edward Garrick wrongfully accuses a British officer of not paying his bill.
The disagreement soon escalates, with more and more townspeople gathering to take Garrick's side.
When the officer is pushed and shoved by the crowd, a century guarding the nearby customs house
intervenes to defend the British officer and ushers him through the door to safety.
But the sentry soon finds himself facing down an increasingly angry mob.
As the crowd yells insults and threats,
the sentry realizes just how outnumbered he is
and sends a messenger to ask for urgent backup.
The century is relieved when he sees Captain Preston arrive,
just the kind of man you want around in a crisis.
But even the experience Captain Preston is alarmed
by the fractious crowd of Bostonians,
now wielding clubs and bludgeon's.
And then, over the next few minutes,
the disturbance takes a fatal turn.
As the rioters taunt the soldiers daring them to fire and pelting them with snowballs,
one of the British soldiers loses his nerve and fires his gun.
In the chaos that follows, the other soldiers think that Preston has given the order to shoot
and fire their weapons as well directly into the crown.
Captain Preston screams a cease fire and tries to regain control over his men, but his face is grim.
He knows this is a disaster.
And as the dust settles and blood seeps into the snow,
know, the colonists try to save the men who were shot, but three are already dead.
Ropemaker Samuel Gray, Mariner James Caldwell, and Crispus Addicts, a black sailor who
escaped slavery 20 years earlier.
Samuel Maverick, a 17-year-old apprentice, will die the next day.
The fifth and final victim of the Boston Massacre, as this confrontation becomes known,
will die two weeks later.
But by then, the fallout from the incident will have already inflamed anti-British sentiment
in the colony.
And that rebellious feeling will only grow
when Captain Preston and his men go on trial
for murder.
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without corkoes and culloes.
It's October 24th, 1770 in Boston, seven months after the massacre.
Forty-year-old lawyer John Adams walked through the marketplace near the waterfront
where merchants and sellers are busy setting out their wares.
Stalls overflow with merchandise in the hope of a good day's business.
locals are expecting the nearby Fanule Hall to be packed today and bring in plenty of customers.
That's because the hall will be host to the much-anticipated trial of Captain Thomas Preston,
and John Adams is here to play a major part in the legal arguments.
Within hours of the Boston Massacre, a colonial court issued a warrant for the arrest of Captain Preston
and the soldiers under his command.
The British soldiers turned themselves into the sheriff, and not long after they were all charged with murder,
While the wheels of justice began to turn, word of what had happened spread rapidly through the colony of Massachusetts.
Almost overnight, the previously well-liked Captain Preston became public enemy number one.
Stories circulated that Preston had deliberately given the order to fire and that he and his soldiers had committed mass murder.
The perception of Preston as a ruthless killer was then only strengthened by sensational press coverage in Boston.
An illustration by engraver Henry Pelham depicted the British soldiers standing in formation before the crowd,
deploying their weapons in unison, like a firing squad.
Pelham's engraving was widely reproduced in pamphlets by Paul Revere,
a leader in the anti-British organization, The Sons of Liberty.
In Revere's pamphlets, the illustration was accompanied by a caption which described the soldiers
as fierce barbarians grinning over their prey.
Thanks to this propaganda, most Bostonians quickly made up their minds.
minds about Captain Preston's guilt. But today, it's John Adams' responsibility to defend Preston
in court. As one of Boston's most renowned lawyers, Adams takes his responsibility seriously,
even though he's an unlikely choice as Preston's defense attorney. Adams is a leading voice in
colonial politics and has argued in the past for more American representation in British Parliament.
But Adams' primary loyalty is to the law. He believes deeply in justice for all and that every man
has the right to a fair trial. And given the emotional fallout of the Boston Massacre,
it's clear to him that Preston and his fellow soldiers are unlikely to get anything that
resembles fair. After the court in Faniel Hall is called to order, Captain Preston is summoned
to the dock. Numerous eyewitnesses then testify about what happened on the night in question.
But as they each tell their stories, Adams picks out the inconsistencies in their conflicting accounts.
It soon becomes clear that the gunfire occurred amidst a chaotic situation.
situation. Under questioning, nobody is able to say with any certainty that they heard Preston
shout an order to fire. The jury is convinced by Adams' argument, and Preston is acquitted.
The following month is the turn of Preston's soldiers to face trial. Adams again is arguing for
the defense, but he faces a tougher task to get these men cleared. After all, the jury knows that
some of them fired the fatal shots. So in an attempt to absolve them of blame, Adams argues that the
soldiers acted in self-defense. He claims that they had a justifiable fear for their lives
since they were outnumbered by an angry crowd. Adams causes consternation amongst his fellow
Bostonians when he describes the mob as a motley rabble and blames black sailor and former slave
Crispus Attacks as the one who grabbed a British rifle and kick-started violence. In the end,
Adams appeals to the jury to set aside any partisan anti-British views and look only at the hard evidence.
And thanks to his persuasive arguments, all but two of the soldiers are acquitted,
and even the two men found guilty receive a lesser conviction of manslaughter.
As punishment, they are each branded on the thumb with the letter M.
And brutal and painful, though the branding is, it's a lenient sentence.
None of the British soldiers will face the death penalty for killing any of the five colonists.
Captain Preston and his men get off lightly,
but the damage has been done to Britain's authority in North America.
The real outcome of the trial is more anger among the colonists.
Thanks to the Boston Massacre, the independence movement will grow from a fringe,
extreme viewpoint to a mainstream opinion, and one day the five victims of the Boston Massacre
will come to be known as the first casualties of the American Revolution.
It's the night of April 18, 1775, on the outskirts of Boston, five years after the Boston
massacre.
40-year-old Paul Revere spurs his horse.
into a gallop, heading west on the road toward Lexington on the most important mission of his life.
British troops are on the march, and Paul has to warn a garrison of American militia before it's
too late. In the aftermath of the Boston Massacre, the anti-British resistance movement rapidly
gathered momentum. Tension between the colonists and their London-based governors reached ahead in
1773 when a Sons of Liberty protest destroyed a shipment of tea in the Boston Harbor.
Their defiance against British taxation only escalated the dispute into a full-blown crisis.
Massachusetts colonial government was suspended by London,
but the Sons of Liberty formed an alternative independent assembly and summoned volunteer militias to defend it.
Knowing that Britain would surely respond with a show of force,
the Massachusetts colonists established a system of signals to warn of any impending British approach by land or sea.
And earlier tonight, Revere spotted one of those signals.
a single lantern in the steeple of Boston's Old North Church.
So as British soldiers gather on Boston Common,
Revere is riding to Lexington to warn the local militia what's coming.
Riding through the night, Revere's warning gives the militia time to prepare.
The next morning, British troops arrive in Lexington
and the neighboring town of Concord,
where the colonists' military stores are held.
The British plan was to catch the colonists by surprise,
but instead they find hundreds of armed volunteers
waiting for them. The two sides exchanged gunfire, but the British are so vastly outnumbered
that they're forced to retreat back to Boston. These battles of Lexington and Concord
marked the beginning of the American War of Independence. But the revolution began in spirit
five years earlier when British soldiers fired on and killed five colonists amid the chaos
of the Boston Massacre on March 5, 1770.
Next, on History Daily, March 6, 1933,
Eleanor Roosevelt is the first First Lady to hold her own press conference, creating a weekly
tradition that lasts years.
From Noisor and Ayrship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited and executive produced by me,
Lindsay Graham, audio editing by Muhammad Shazid, sound designed by Gabriel Gould, music by
Lindsey Graham.
This episode is written and researched by Emma Dibden, edited by Scott Reeves, managing producer
Emily Burke.
Executive producers are William Simpson for Airship and
I'm Pascal Hughes for Noisor.
