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Engraving by Paul Revere. larger image |
In a post-massacre trial, six soldiers were found not guilty, and two more -- the only two proven to have fired -- were found guilty of manslaughter. Their officer, Captain Preston, was acquitted when the jury was unable to determine whether he had ordered the troops to fire. John Adams acted as the defense attorney.
Samuel Adams dubbed the event "the Boston Massacre" and used it for propaganda purposes. He argued that the significance lay not in the number of deaths, but in the involvement of ordinary working Americans in an important revolutionary event. Following the funerals of the five men, which was the largest gathering ever on the North American continent at that time, Bostonians gathered at the Old South Church[?] to demand that the British troops be removed from the city.
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