Propaganda in the American Colonies
Boston Massacre greatly exaggerates Anti-British Sentiments
Michael Streich
The
On the evening of March 5th,
1770, a crowd of angry Bostonians, many unemployed, confronted a group of
British “red coats” or “lobster backs.” Taunted by the crowd, the soldiers
eventually fired, leaving five dead. This became the Boston Massacre. But it
was Paul Revere’s engraving of the event, based on a drawing made by Henry
Pelham that created anti-British fervor throughout the colonies.
According to the lithograph,
there is no impression that the British soldiers were surrounded by the mob.
The incident began when a group numbering about twenty people started to intimidate
a lone sentry, Hugh White. After retreating to the customs house, he was
supported by seven others, commanded by Captain Thomas Preston. By now the mob
had grown in numbers.
According to eye witness
accounts, later used in the public trail of the soldiers, struck one of the
soldiers with a club, causing a shot to be fired. Although the order to “shoot”
was heard by witnesses, Preston denied giving the order and other witnesses
claimed that it came from a direction away from where
The classic engraving does
not show the crude weapons used by some members of the mob nor does it show any
snow on the ground. The Boston Massacre encounter was not the first time angry
mobs threw stones wrapped in snow. March 5th was the culmination of
three days of provocation. None of the above facts are portrayed in the
Paintings, Patriotism, and
Propaganda
The story of the Boston
Massacre is not alone in presenting false facts in order to achieve a desired
response. Patriotism can do much the same. The classic painting of Teddy
Roosevelt at the forefront of the Rough Rider’s charge up
The 1851 picture of George
Washington crossing the
Sources:
Robert Harvey, “A Few Bloody Noses:” The Realities and
Mythologies of the American Revolution (
Henry Wiencek, An Imperfect God: George Washington, His
Slaves, and the Creation of
Hiller B. Zobel, The
See also Howard Zinn’s A People’s History on-line version.
[1] quoted in Nikolai
Tolstoy, Stalin’s Secret War: A startling
expose of his crimes against the Russian people. (New York: Holt, Rinehart
and Winston, 1981) p. 19
Copyright Michael Streich; no reprints without written permission.
No comments:
Post a Comment