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To: Madame Dufarge

Here’s a link to more of the testimony and an excerpt:

http://www.answers.com/topic/slave-andrew-s-testimony-in-the-boston-massacre-trial-1770

“The trials of the soldiers involved in the Boston Massacre of 5 March 1770 were short ones, lasting no longer than a few days in October and December. The counsel for the defense, John Adams (1735–1826), emphasized the violence of the colonial mob and the instigation of the British soldiers by the sailor and runaway slave Crispus Attucks. In an attempt to play on the prejudices of many of his fellow colonists, Adams, later the second president of the United States, decried the throng of Bostonians as having been incited by a “rabble of Negroes” and Irish.

The ploy, in conjunction with the graphic evidence presented here, was successful. Captain Thomas Preston, leader of the British, and four of his men were acquitted outright. Two soldiers were convicted of the lesser charge of manslaughter, branded on the hands with the letter “M,” and released.”


101 posted on 02/27/2009 10:00:34 AM PST by 21twelve
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To: 21twelve

Thanks, appreciate it.


108 posted on 02/27/2009 10:09:52 AM PST by Madame Dufarge
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