The Boston Massacre: A Family History

Paul Revere's iconic engraving of the "Boston Massacre" of 1770 shows colonists and British soldiers facing each other across a clear divide, breached only by gunfire. In The Boston Massacre: A Family History, history professor Serena Zabin (Dangerous Economies) argues that prior to the violence of March 5, 1770, the two groups were in fact linked together through complicated social, spatial and even familial connections.

Zabin drills into fascinating details of relationships between Bostonians and the unwelcome soldiers quartered in their midst. Many were housed in tents on Boston Commons, but others, especially men with families, rented rooms in Boston homes. All of them patronized Boston businesses. Beyond these casual points of connection, Zabin considers the effects of marriages, seductions and affairs. She looks at instances of members of one group serving as godparents for children of the other group, at roles played by soldiers' wives, at soldiers working side jobs for Bostonians and at pub brawls. She outlines the social relationships between British officers and the Bostonian elite.

Having established the depth and intricacy of these relationships, Zabin weighs the events of March 5, 1770, the mass of contradictory accounts of those events and the trials that followed. She demonstrates how attorneys on both sides erased those relationships from their arguments, creating their own versions of the gulf between Bostonians and British soldiers that appears in Revere's engraving.

The Boston Massacre is a well-written and eye-opening addition to the social history of colonial America. --Pamela Toler, blogging at History in the Margins

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