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{{short description|18th-century African-American stevedore; first victim of the Boston Massacre}}
[[Image:Black Admiral.jpg|thumb|right|A stylized portrait of Crispus Attucks.]]
{{about|the 18th century American||}}
'''Crispus Attucks''' (c.[[1723]]–[[March 5]], [[1770]]) was a seaman of Native American and African descent from Framingham, Massachusetts who was killed at the [[Boston Massacre]].
{{pp-protected|small=yes}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Crispus Attucks
| image = Crispus Attucks.jpg
| image_size =
| caption = Speculative portrait of what Attucks might have looked like
| birth_name = Crispus Attucks
| birth_date = {{circa|1723}}
| birth_place = [[Framingham]], [[Province of Massachusetts Bay|Massachusetts Bay]], [[British America]]
| death_date = March 5, 1770 (approximately aged 47)
| death_place = [[Boston]], Massachusetts Bay, British America
| known_for = Death in the [[Boston Massacre]]
| occupation = Whaler, sailor, stevedore<ref>{{cite web |title=Africans in America – Part 2 – Crispus Attucks |publisher=[[PBS]] |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part2/2p24.html |access-date=1 November 2011}}</ref>
}}


'''Crispus Attucks''' ({{circa|1723}} – March 5, 1770) was an American whaler, sailor, and [[stevedore]] of [[African Americans|African]] and [[Native Americans in the United States|Native American]] descent who is traditionally regarded as the first person killed in the [[Boston Massacre]], and as a result the first American [[Killed in action|killed]] in the [[American Revolution]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Africans in America: Crispus Attucks |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part2/2p24.html |website=PBS |access-date=18 May 2022 |quote=In 1770, Crispus Attucks, a black man, became the first casualty of the American Revolution when he was shot and killed in what became known as the Boston Massacre. Although Attucks was credited as the leader and instigator of the event, debate raged for over as century as to whether he was a hero and a patriot, or a rabble-rousing villain.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Crispus Attucks |url=https://www.biography.com/military-figure/crispus-attucks |website=Biography.com |date=26 March 2021 |access-date=18 May 2022 |quote=Crispus Attucks was an African American man killed during the Boston Massacre and believed to be the first casualty of the American Revolution.}}</ref><ref name="Dixon">{{Cite book |last=Dixon |first=Chris |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HPxsDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA54 |title=African Americans and the Pacific War, 1941–1945: Race, Nationality, and the Fight for Freedom |date=2018 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |quote= While Attucks is widely remembered as the first American casualty of the Revolutionary War, eleven-year-old Christopher Seider had been shot a few weeks earlier by the British.|isbn=978-1108577434 |page=54}}</ref>
Very little is known for certain about his life. He is known to have been born on the Indian Lands in Framingham, Massachusetts. The Attucks were a leading family living for nearly a century on the Praying Indian Lands. There exists no record that Crispus Attucks was either an escaped slave or an African-American but he may well have been either an apprentice or indentured servant to one William Brown of Framingham.


Although he is widely remembered as the first American casualty of the [[American Revolutionary War]], 11-year-old [[Christopher Seider]] was shot a few weeks earlier by customs officer Ebenezer Richardson on February 22, 1770.<ref name="Dixon" /><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.newenglandhistoricalsociety.com/christopher-seider-the-first-casualty-in-the-american-revolutionary-cause/|title=Christopher Seider: The First Casualty in the American Revolutionary Cause|date=2015-07-31|website=New England Historical Society|language=en-US|access-date=2019-02-05}}</ref> Historians disagree on whether Attucks was a free man or an escaped slave, but most agree that he was of [[Wampanoag]] and African descent.<ref name="Kachun">{{cite book |last1=Kachun |first1=Mitchell |title=First Martyr of Liberty: Crispus Attucks in American Memory |date=2017 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=New York |isbn=978-0190092498}}{{page?|date=December 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Crispus Attucks Family |url=http://www.crispusattucksmuseum.org/crispus-attucks-family/ |publisher=The Crispus Attucks Museum |access-date=4 January 2020}}</ref> Two major sources of eyewitness testimony about the Boston Massacre published in 1770 did not refer to him as black or as a Negro; it appears he was instead viewed by Bostonians as being of mixed ethnicity. According to a contemporaneous account in the ''[[Pennsylvania Gazette]]'', he was a "[[Mulattoe]] man, named Crispus Attucks, who was born in [[Framingham, Massachusetts|Framingham]], but lately belonged to New Providence, and was here in order to go for [[Province of North Carolina|North Carolina]]."<ref name="pgaz2">{{cite news |title=Boston, March 12 |work=[[Pennsylvania Gazette]] |date=March 22, 1770 |page=2 |first= |last= }}</ref>
All existing records refer to a runaway servant named Crispus and to him being a mulatto which suggests an ancestry of white, American Indian, and African. This was common among the Praying Indians of Natick and Framingham, Massachusetts at that time. An October 2, 1750 advertisement placed in the Boston Gazette may refer to Crispus Attucks although the advertisement mentions only the name Crispus which was a fairly common name. It read: "ran away from his Master William Brown on the 30th of Sept. last, a mulatto Fellow, about 27 years of age, named Crispus, 6 Feet two inches high, short curl'd Hair, his Knees near together than common: had on a light colour'd Bearskin Coat." Master William Brown offered a reward of £10 for his return.


Attucks became an icon of the [[Abolitionism in the United States|anti-slavery movement]] in the mid-19th century. Supporters of the abolition movement lauded him for playing a heroic role in the history of the United States.<ref>{{cite journal |first=Mitch |last=Kachun |title=From Forgotten Founder to Indispensable Icon: Crispus Attucks, Black Citizenship, and Collective Memory |journal=Journal of the Early Republic |volume=29 |number=2 |date=Summer 2009 |pages=249–286|doi=10.1353/jer.0.0072|s2cid=144216986 |url=}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |first=Mitch |last=Kachun |title=First Martyr of Liberty: Crispus Attucks in American Memory |place=New York |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2017 |isbn=978-0199910861 |page= }}{{page?|date=December 2022}}</ref>
Attucks had become a sailor and laborer, and was believed to have owned the second-largest collection of antique watch fobs in Massachusetts. He is remembered for being part of a crowd of 30 or more workers protesting against the presence of [[Kingdom of Great Britain|British]] troops in [[Boston]]. Boston had been under military occupation since [[1768]]. Colonial sailors resented the presence of the British because of the danger of [[Impressment|press gang]]s. Other workers in Boston were disturbed because British soldiers worked part-time jobs at low wages in order to supplement their army pay, which potentially took away jobs and drove down wages for the colonial workers. Revolutionaries such as [[Samuel Adams]] actively encouraged these protests against the soldiers.


== Early life and ethnic origins ==
[[Image:Boston massacre2.gif|thumb|300px|left|This chromolithograph by John Bufford after William L. Champey, ca. 1856, of the [[Boston Massacre]] prominently features a black man believed to be Crispus Attucks.]] In the 1850s, the abolitionists of Boston put forth the story that the first matyr of the Revolutionary War was a black man named Crispus Attucks even though there were no written records to that effect and he is always referred to as being a mulatto. It should also be noted that Paul Revere's contemporary engraving of the Massacre does not depict a black man among the victims.
Attucks was born in [[Framingham, Massachusetts]]. Town histories of Framingham written in 1847 and 1887 describe him as a slave of Deacon William Brown, though it is unclear whether Brown was his original owner. In 1750, Brown advertised for the return of a runaway slave named Crispas. In the advertisement, Brown describes Attucks and his clothing when he was last seen. He also said that a reward of 10 pounds would be given to whoever found and returned Attucks to him. Attucks's status at the time of the massacre as a free person or a [[runaway slave]] has been a matter of debate for historians.{{cn|date=March 2023}}


Attucks became a sailor and whaler, and he spent much of his life at sea or working around the docks along the Atlantic seaboard. In an 1874 article in ''The American Historical Record'', Jebe B. Fisher recounts a passage in the memoirs of [[Boston Tea Party]] participant [[George Robert Twelves Hewes|George R.T. Hewes]], which stated that at the time of the massacre, Attucks "was a Nantucket Indian, belonging onboard a whale ship of Mr. Folgers, then in the harbor, and he remembers a distinct war whoop which he yelled... the mob whistling, screaming, and rending like an Indian yell."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Thatcher |first=Benjamin Bussey |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U6IEAAAAYAAJ |title=Traits of the Tea Party: Being a Memoir of George R.T. Hewes, One of the Last of Its Survivors : with a History of that Transaction, Reminiscences of the Massacre, and the Siege, and Other Stories of Old Times |date=1835 |publisher=Harper & Brothers |pages=103–104 |language=en}}</ref> Many historians believe{{Weasel inline|date=March 2023}} Attucks went by the alias Michael Johnson in order to avoid being caught after his escape from slavery. He may only have been temporarily in Boston in early 1770, having recently returned from a voyage to the [[Bahamas]]. He was due to leave shortly afterward on a ship for [[Province of North Carolina|North Carolina]].<ref>Parr & Swope, p. 45.</ref><ref>Kachun, "From Forgotten Founder to Indispensable Icon."</ref>
Tensions had been rising over the weekend when the crowd appeared before the British barracks, where some teenage boys were involved in an incident with the soldiers. Attucks has been often depicted as one of the leaders of the crowd, waving a club and urging an attack on the heavily outnumbered troops. Eventually, despite attempts by their officer to prevent it, the eight soldiers of the [[29th Regiment of Foot]] fired, massacring five members of the crowd: Attucks and four other men.


Though he is commonly described as an [[African American]] in popular culture, two major sources of eyewitness testimony about the Massacre, both published in 1770, did not refer to Attucks as "black" or as a "Negro," but rather as a mulatto and an [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Indian]]. In an account from Philadelphia's ''[[Pennsylvania Gazette]]'', a man who may have been Attucks was referred to as a "[[Mulattoe]] man, named Crispas, who was born in Framingham, but lately belonged to New-Providence, and was here in order to go for North Carolina."<ref name="pgaz2"/> However, during Attucks's time, mulatto was often used to describe skin tone rather than ethnicity, and sometimes referred to full-blooded Native Americans.<ref>[[Mulatto#cite note-6]]</ref>{{Circular reference|date=February 2018}} In ''Potter's American Monthly'', the interchangeability of the two terms is demonstrated by court transcripts from the Attucks trial: <blockquote>Question: Did you see a mulatto among the persons who surrounded the soldiers?<br />
John Adams, Samuel Adams's cousin, successfully defended the British soldiers against a charge of murder, calling the crowd "a motley rabble of saucy boys, negroes and molattoes, Irish teagues and outlandish jack tarrs."
Answer: I did not observe...<br />
Question: Did they seem to be sailors or townsmen?<br />
Answer: They were dressed some of them in the habits of sailors.<br />
Question: Did you know the Indian who was killed?<br />
Answer: No.<br />
Question: Did you see any of them press on the soldiers with a cordwood stick?<br />
Answer: No.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xdkrWslzIAIC&q=%22peter+attucks%22&pg=PA533 | title=Potter's American Monthly: An Illustrated Magazine of History, Literature, Science and Art| year=1872}}</ref></blockquote> Historians differ in opinion on Attucks's heritage: some assert his family had intermarried with African slaves, while others maintain he had no African heritage. It is widely acknowledged that Attucks had considerable Native American heritage.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xdkrWslzIAIC&q=jb+fisher+crispus+attucks&pg=PA531 |title = Potter's American Monthly: An Illustrated Magazine of History, Literature, Science and Art|year = 1872}}</ref>


Biographer Mitch Kachun, as well as multiple 19th century Framingham town histories, have drawn a connection between Attucks and John Attuck of [[Framingham]], a [[Narragansett tribe|Narragansett]] man who was hanged in Framingham in 1676 during [[King Philip's War]].<ref>Parr & Swope, p. 44.</ref><ref>Kachun, "From Forgotten Founder to Indispensable Icon"</ref> The word for "deer" in the Narragansett language is "Attuck."<ref>Roger Williams, ''A key into the language of America'' p. 106 (London: [[Gregory Dexter]], 1643)</ref><ref>{{cite journal |url=https://allthingsliberty.com/2014/03/the-hidden-life-of-crispus-attucks/#_edn2 |title=The hidden life of Crispus Attucks |first=Jerome J. |last=Palliser |date=March 5, 2014 |journal=Journal of the American Revolution}}</ref> Kachun also noted a possible connection to a probable [[Praying Indian|Natick]] woman and possible Attucks mother or relative named Nanny Peterattucks, who is described as a 'negro woman' in the 1747 estate inventory of Framingham slaveholder Joseph Buckminster and, along with Jacob Peterattucks, as 'probable descendant of John Attuck, the Indian' in an 1847 history of Framingham.<ref>Kachun, "From Forgotten Founder to Indispensable Icon" p. 26</ref><ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/historyofframing00templ | page=[https://archive.org/details/historyofframing00templ/page/668 668] | quote=peterattucks, jacob. |title = History of Framingham, Massachusetts: Early Known as Danforth's Farms, 1640–1880; with a Genealogical Register| publisher=town of Framingham |last1 = Temple|first1 = Josiah Howard|year = 1887}}</ref> Other sources refer to their surname as Peter Attucks. In a 1747 history of the Hoosac Valley, an African [[Militia (United States)|colonial militiaman]] named Moses Peter Attucks, living in nearby [[Leicester, Massachusetts|Leicester]], is described as a 'negro slave of John White; elsewhere he is listed as Moses Attucks<ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/originsinwillia01perrgoog | page=[https://archive.org/details/originsinwillia01perrgoog/page/n252 234] | quote=peter attucks. | title=Origins in Williamstown| publisher=Charles Scribner's Sons | last1=Perry| first1=Arthur Latham| year=1894}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924028853624 | page=[https://archive.org/details/cu31924028853624/page/533 533] | quote=peter attucks. | title=The Hoosac Valley: Its Legends and Its History| publisher=G.P. Putnam's Sons | last1=Niles| first1=Grace Greylock| year=1912}}</ref> Jacob Peterattucks and Nanny Peterattucks are recorded as slaves with Joseph Buckminster in 1730, and in 1740 Jacob with Thomas Buckminster, who was appointed by Framingham in 1739 to lead a commission for the preservation of deer in the area.<ref>{{Cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WdVmp-xPbNoC&q=captain+thomas+buckminster+framingham&pg=PA46 |title = A History of Framingham, Massachusetts|isbn = 978-1429022736|last1 = Barry|first1 = William|date = 2010| publisher=Applewood Books }}</ref> Historian [[William C. Nell]] reported an 1860 letter from a Natick resident, also printed in an 1860 edition of [[The Liberator (newspaper)|''The Liberator'']] newspaper that read,
Samuel Adams, on the other hand, gave the event the name of the Boston Massacre and assured that it would not be forgotten. The five who were killed were buried as heroes in the [[Granary Burying Ground]], despite laws against burying blacks with whites. This further suggests that Crispus Attucks was not considered a black man.


<blockquote>Several persons are now living in Natick who remember the Attucks family, viz., Cris, who was killed March 5th; Sam, whose name was abbreviated into Sam Attucks, or Smattox; Sal, also known as Slattox; and Peter, called Pea Tattox [...] my mother, still living, aged 89, remembers Sal in particular, who used to be called the gourd-shell [[squaw]], from the fact that she used to carry her rum in a gourd shell [...] the whole family are said to be the children of Jacob Peter Attucks... it has been conjectured that they are of Indian blood, but all who knew the descendants describe them as negroes.<ref>{{Cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xRe7QTtXaFcC&q=William+C.+Nell+%22peter+attucks%22&pg=PA675 |title = William Cooper Nell, Nineteenth-century African American Abolitionist, Historian, Integrationist: Selected Writings from 1832–1874|isbn = 978-1574780192|last1 = Nell|first1 = William Cooper|year = 2002| publisher=Black Classic Press }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/34578337/ |title=16 Mar 1860, Page 2 – The Liberator at |publisher=Newspapers.com |date= |accessdate=2022-06-05}}</ref></blockquote>
Some controversy remains over whether Attucks was a revolutionary leader or simply a rabble rouser; it is possible he was both. The Boston Massacre was an important event that underscored the commitment of ordinary Americans to the ideas of the coming revolution.


The letter continues, "his sister [Sal] used to say that if they had not killed Cris, Cris would have killed them."
[[Martin Luther King, Jr.|The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.]] referred to Crispus Attucks in the introduction of ''"Why We Can't Wait"'' as a specific example of a man whose contribution to history has been overlooked by standard histories.


Prince Yonger has been posited as the father of Attucks. However, according to Framingham town histories, Yonger did not arrive in Massachusetts until 1725, after Attucks was born, and did not marry Nanny Peterattucks until 1737, after which point they had children, who are noted in multiple town histories but among whom Crispus is not mentioned: "a son, who died young, and Phebe, who never married." It is possible Yonger became Attucks' stepfather in 1737, though it is unclear whether Attucks had permanently left his mother's home by that point.<ref>{{Cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WdVmp-xPbNoC&q=Prince&pg=PA46 |title = A History of Framingham, Massachusetts|isbn = 978-1429022736|last1 = Barry|first1 = William|date = 2010| publisher=Applewood Books }}</ref> Neither Phebe nor the son are recorded with the Attucks or Peterattucks surname.
Crispus Attucks is also the name of a late 1990s hardcore band from Washington D.C.
==External links==
*[http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part2/2p24.html Africans in America biography]
*[http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/treasures/trr046.html The Murder of Crispus Attucks] Library of Congress exhibit, including trial documents.


==Boston Massacre==
[[Category:Black people before 1800|Attucks, Crispus]]
{{Main|Boston Massacre}}
[[Category:People from Massachusetts|Attucks, Crispus]]
[[File:William L. Champney The Boston Massacre, March 5, 1770.jpg|thumb|280px|right|This 19th-century [[lithograph]] is a variation of the famous engraving of the [[Boston Massacre]] by Paul Revere. Produced soon before the [[American Civil War]] and long after the event depicted, this image emphasizes Crispus Attucks, who had become a symbol for abolitionists. ([[John Henry Bufford|John Bufford]] after William L. Champey, {{circa|1856}})<ref>Thomas H. O'Connor, ''The Hub: Boston Past and Present'' (Boston: [[Northeastern University Press]], 2001), p. 56.</ref>]]
[[Category:American slaves|Attucks, Crispus]]
In the fall of 1768, [[British Army|British troops]] were sent to Boston to maintain order amid growing [[Colonial history of the United States | colonial]] unrest which had led to a spate of attacks on local officials following the introduction of the [[Stamp Act (1765)|Stamp Act]] and the subsequent [[Townshend Acts]]. Radical [[Patriot (American Revolution)|Whigs]] had coordinated [[Dock (maritime)|waterfront]] mobs against the authorities. The presence of troops, instead of reducing tensions, served to further inflame them.
[[Category:Deaths by firearm|Attucks, Crispus]]

[[Category:African Americans|Attucks, Crispus]]
After dusk on March 5, 1770, a wigmaker's apprentice mistakenly accused a British officer of not paying a bill. The officer ignored his insults but a sentry intervened after the boy began physically assaulting the officer. Both townspeople and nine soldiers of the [[29th (Worcestershire) Regiment of Foot|29th Regiment of Foot]] gathered. The colonists threw snowballs and debris at the soldiers. A group of men including Attucks approached the [[Old State House (Boston)|Old State House]] armed with [[Club (weapon)|clubs and sticks]]. A soldier was struck with a piece of wood, an act some witnesses claimed was done by Attucks. Other witnesses stated that Attucks was "leaning upon a stick" when the soldiers opened fire.<ref>''The Trial of William Wemms, James Hartegan, William M'Cauley, Hugh White, Matthew Killroy, William Warren, John Carrol, and Hugh Montgomery, soldiers in His Majesty's 29th Regiment of Foot, for the murder of Crispus Attucks, Samuel Gray, Samuel Maverick, James Caldwell, and Patrick Carr, on Monday-evening, the 5th of March,1867 at the Superior Court of Judicature, Court of Assize, and General Goal Delivery, held at Boston, the 27th day of November, 1770, by adjournment, before the Hon. Benjamin Lynde, John Cushing, Peter Oliver, and Chris Metzler, Esquires, justices of said court'' (Boston: [[John Fleeming|J. Fleeming]], 1770); and ''A Short Narrative of the Horrid Massacre in Boston'' (New York: John Doggett, Jr., 1849).</ref>
[[Category:African Americans in the American Revolution|Attucks, Crispus]]

[[Category:1723 births|Attucks, Crispus]]
Five colonists were killed and six were wounded. Attucks took two ricocheted bullets in the chest and was believed to be the first to die.<ref>''The Trial of William Wemms''; and ''A Short Narrative of the Horrid Massacre in Boston.''</ref> County coroners Robert Pierpoint and Thomas Crafts Jr. conducted an autopsy on Attucks.<ref>Hiller B. Zobel, ''The Boston Massacre.'' (W. W. Norton and Company, 1970).{{ISBN?}}{{page?|date=December 2022}}</ref> He was "felled by two bullets to his chest, one of them 'goring the right lobe of the lungs and a great part of the liver most horribly'."<ref>{{Cite book|last=Hoock|first=Holger|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/953617831|title=Scars of Independence: America's Violent Birth|publisher=[[Crown Publishing Group|Crown]]|year=2017|isbn=978-0804137287|edition=1st|location=New York|page=7|oclc=953617831}}</ref> Attucks' body was carried to [[Faneuil Hall]], where it [[lay in state]] until Thursday, March 8, when he and the other victims were buried together in the same grave site in Boston's [[Granary Burying Ground]]. He had lived for approximately 47 years.
[[Category:1770 deaths|Attucks, Crispus]]

== Reaction and trials ==
[[File:Boston Massacre, Boston Gazette newspaper clipping, 1770-03-12.png|thumb|''Boston Gazette'' newspaper report, March 12, 1770, four days after the funeral. The illustration of the coffins shows the initials of the four victims buried March 8.]]
[[John Adams]] successfully defended most of the accused soldiers against a charge of murder. Two were found guilty of manslaughter. Faced with the prospect of hanging, the soldiers pleaded ''[[benefit of clergy]]'', and were instead [[Branding persons#As punishment|branded]] on their thumbs. In his arguments, Adams called the crowd "a motley rabble of saucy boys, [[negro]]s and molattoes, [[Taig|Irish teagues]] and outlandish [[Jack Tar]]rs."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.loc.gov/exhibits/treasures/trr046.html|title=The Murder of Crispus Attucks.|website=[[Library of Congress]] }}</ref> In particular, he charged Attucks with having "undertaken to be the hero of the night," and with having precipitated a conflict by his "mad behavior."<ref>{{Appletons'|wstitle=Attucks, Crispus|year=1900|inline=1}}</ref>

Two years later [[Founding Fathers of the United States|United States Founding Father]] [[Samuel Adams]], a cousin of John Adams, named the event the "Boston Massacre," and helped ensure it would not be forgotten.<ref>Fradin, Dennis B. Samuel ''Adams: The Father of American Independence''. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1998. pp. 63–66 {{ISBN?}}</ref> Boston artist [[Henry Pelham (engraver)|Henry Pelham]] (half-brother of the celebrated portrait painter [[John Singleton Copley]]) created an image of the event. [[Paul Revere]] made a copy from which prints were made and distributed. Some copies of the print show a dark-skinned man with chest wounds, presumably representing Crispus Attucks. Other copies of the print show no difference in the skin tones of the victims.<ref>"Paul Revere’s engraving of the Boston Massacre, 1770", description of item in collection of The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, accessed August 22, 2016 at http://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-by-era/road-revolution/resources/paul-revere%E2%80%99s-engraving-boston-massacre-1770</ref>

The five who were killed were buried as heroes in the [[Granary Burying Ground]], which also contains the graves of [[Samuel Adams]], [[John Hancock]], and other notable figures.<ref name=bostongranary>{{cite web|url = http://www.cityofboston.gov/parks/hbgi/Granary.asp|title = Granary – City of Boston|publisher = City of Boston|location = [[Boston, Massachusetts]]|access-date = 4 August 2011|quote = The gravestones' original haphazard configuration was rearranged into straighter rows over to [sic] the years to accommodate both nineteenth-century aesthetics and the modern lawnmower.}}</ref> Customs of the period discouraged the burial of black people and white people together, with "black burials relegated to the rear or far side of the cemetery.<ref>{{cite book|last=Knoblock|first=Glenn|title=African American Historic Burial Grounds and Gravesites of New England|publisher=McFarland|date=2016|page=91|language=en|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R-07CwAAQBAJ&q=black+burials+relegated&pg=PA91|isbn=978-1476620428}}</ref> Such a practice was not completely unknown, however. [[Prince Hall]], for example, was interred in [[Copp's Hill]] Burying Ground in the [[North End, Boston, Massachusetts|North End]] of Boston 39.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.cityofboston.gov/parks/hbgi/CoppsHill.asp|title=Copp's Hill {{!}} Historic Burying Grounds {{!}} City of Boston|website=cityofboston.gov|date=14 July 2016 |language=en|access-date=2017-06-08}}</ref>

== Legacy and honors ==
[[File:Boston Massacre victims headstone (36128).jpg|thumb|right|Crispus Attucks' grave in the [[Granary Burying Ground]]]]
* 1858, Boston-area abolitionists, including [[William Cooper Nell]], established "Crispus Attucks Day" to commemorate him.
* 1886, the places where Crispus Attucks and Samuel Gray fell were marked by circles on the pavement. Within each circle, a hub with spokes leads out to form a wheel.
* 1888, [[Boston Massacre Monument|a monument honoring Attucks and the other victims of the Boston Massacre]] was erected on [[Boston Common (park)|Boston Common]]. It is over 25 feet high and about 10 feet wide. The "bas-relief" (raised portion on the face of the main part of the monument) portrays the Boston Massacre, with Attucks lying in the foreground. Under the scene is the date, March 5, 1770. Above the bas-relief stands a female figure, ''Free America'', holding the broken chain of oppression in her right hand. Beneath her right foot, she crushes the royal crown of England. At the left of the figure is an eagle. Thirteen stars are cut into one of the faces of the monument. Beneath these stars in raised letters are the names of the five men who were killed that day: Crispus Attucks, Samuel Gray, James Caldwell, Samuel Maverick, and Patrick Carr. Some men died a day later.[[File:AttucksMiddleSchoolHouston.JPG|thumb|left|Crispus Attucks Middle School, [[Sunnyside, Houston|Sunnyside]], [[Houston]], [[Texas]]]] Although that year leaders of the [[Massachusetts Historical Society]] and the [[New England Historic Genealogical Society]] opposed the creation of the Crispus Attucks memorial, since the 20th century both organizations have acknowledged his role and promoted interest in black history and [[genealogy]].
* 1940, Attucks was honored with 1 of the 33 [[diorama]]s at the [[American Negro Exposition]] in Chicago.<ref>{{cite web|title=American Negro Exposition 1863–1940, July 4 to Sept. 2, 1940, Chicago, IL|url=http://livinghistoryofillinois.com/pdf_files/American%20Negro%20Exposition%201863-1940,%20July%204%20to%20Sept.%202,%201940,%20Chicago,%20IL.pdf|url-status=live|website=Living History of Illinois|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170303060218/http://livinghistoryofillinois.com/pdf_files/American%20Negro%20Exposition%201863-1940,%20July%204%20to%20Sept.%202,%201940,%20Chicago,%20IL.pdf |archive-date=2017-03-03 }}</ref>
* 1998, the [[United States Treasury]] released the "[[Black Revolutionary War Patriots Silver Dollar]]" coin featuring Attucks' image on the obverse side. Funds from sales of the coin were intended for a proposed [[National Liberty Memorial|Black Revolutionary War Patriots Memorial]] in [[Washington, D.C.]]<ref>[http://www.usmint.gov/kids/coinNews/coinOfTheMonth/2000/02.cfm USmint.gov] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151225032651/http://www.usmint.gov/kids/coinNews/coinOfTheMonth/2000/02.cfm |date=2015-12-25 }}, [[United States Mint]]: "Plinky's Coin of the Month February 2000"</ref>
* 2002, the Afrocentrist scholar [[Molefi Kete Asante]] listed Crispus Attucks as among the [[100 Greatest African Americans]].<ref>Molefi Kete Asante, ''100 Greatest African Americans: A Biographical Encyclopedia'' (Amherst, NY: [[Prometheus Books]], 2002).</ref>
* Institutions named for Attucks include the [[Crispus Attucks High School]] in [[Indianapolis, Indiana]]; [[Attucks High School]] in [[Hopkinsville, Kentucky]]; Attucks Middle School in [[Sunnyside, Houston|Sunnyside]], [[Houston]], [[Texas]]; the [[Crispus Attucks Elementary School]] in [[Kansas City, Missouri]]; the Attucks Middle School in [[Dania Beach, Florida]]; the [[Attucks Theatre]] in [[Norfolk, Virginia]]; the Crispus Attucks Association in York, Pennsylvania; Crispus Attucks Road in [[Spring Valley, New York]]; Crispus Attucks Elementary School in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn; Crispus Attucks Park in Carbondale, Illinois; Crispus Attucks Elementary School in East St. Louis, Illinois; [[Bloomingdale (Washington, D.C.)#Crispus Attucks Park|Crispus Attucks Park]] in Washington, DC; the Crispus Attucks Center in [[Dorchester, Massachusetts]]; Crispus Attucks Place, a residential street in [[Roxbury, Boston]], Massachusetts; and the Crispus Attucks Bridge in [[Framingham, Massachusetts]].
* The [[Wellcome Library]], in London, owns a notebook bound in what a note with it claims is Attucks' skin,<ref>{{cite web | url=https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A_notebook_allegedly_covered_in_human_skin_Wellcome_L0043480.jpg | title=A notebook allegedly covered in human skin }}</ref> although the library believes the book's leather actually comes from camel, horse, or goat.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Schuessler |first1=Jennifer |last2=Jacobs |first2=Julia |date=19 April 2024 |title=Books Bound in Human Skin: An Ethical Quandary at the Library |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/19/arts/books-human-skin-harvard.html |newspaper=[[The New York Times]] |access-date=19 April 2024}} </ref>

== In popular culture ==
* "First man to die for the flag we now hold high was a black man" is a line from [[Stevie Wonder]]'s 1976 song "[[Black Man (song)|Black Man]]".<ref>{{Cite book|last=Wilson|first=Ivy G.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W97QCwAAQBAJ|title=Specters of Democracy: Blackness and the Aesthetics of Politics in the Antebellum U.S.|date=2011|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0199714049|page=169|language=en}}</ref>
* "Crispus Attucks, the first blasted" is a line from [[Nas]]'s 2008 song "[[Untitled Nas album|You Can't Stop Us Now]]".
* The poet [[John Boyle O'Reilly]] wrote the following poem when the monument was finally unveiled:

<blockquote>And to honor Crispus Attucks who was the leader and voice that day: The first to defy, and the first to die, with Maverick, Carr, and Gray. Call it riot or revolution, or mob or crowd as you may, such deaths have been seeds of nations, such lives shall be honored for aye [...]</blockquote>
* [[Melvin Tolson]] begins his poem "Dark Symphony" with the lines: "Black Crispus Attucks taught / Us how to die / Before white Patrick Henry’s bugle breath / Uttered the Vertical / Transmitting cry: / 'Yea, give me liberty or give me death.'"
* [[Martin Luther King Jr.]] referred to Crispus Attucks in the introduction of ''[[Why We Can't Wait]]'' (1964) as an example of a man whose contribution to history provided a potent message of moral courage.
* In the successful sitcom ''[[The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air]]'', [[Will Smith (The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air)|Will Smith]] names Crispus Attucks as one of many inspirational African-American figures in history when he tries to explain why he is failing history.
* In February 2012, [[Wayne Brady]], [[J. B. Smoove]], and [[Michael K. Williams|Michael Kenneth Williams]], as well as [[Keith David]], appeared in a satirical rap music video about Crispus Attucks.<ref name=FOD_video>{{cite web |last = Brady |first = Wayne |title = Crispus Attucks 'Today Was a Good Day' with Wayne Brady, JB Smoove & Michael Kenneth Williams |date = 16 February 2012 |url = http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/bc018e0780/crispus-attucks-today-was-a-good-day-with-wayne-brady-jb-smoove-michael-kenneth-williams?playlist=featured_videos |access-date = 17 February 2012 }}</ref>
* In the [[Netflix]] series ''[[Luke Cage (TV series)|Luke Cage]]'', based on the [[Marvel Comics]] character of the [[Luke Cage|same name]], there is a housing development called the Crispus Attucks Complex, named in honor of Attucks. Cage also explains Attucks' role in the Boston Massacre at the end of the second episode of the series.<ref>{{cite web |last = Schremph |first = Kelly |title = Is The Crispus Attucks Complex A Real Place? 'Luke Cage' Is Putting An Important Figure In The Spotlight |date = 30 September 2016 |url = https://www.bustle.com/articles/187031-is-the-crispus-attucks-complex-a-real-place-luke-cage-is-putting-an-important-figure-in |access-date = 30 September 2016 }}</ref>
* [[Spike Lee]]'s 2020 film ''[[Da 5 Bloods]]'' refers to Crispus Attucks.

== References ==
{{reflist|35em}}
* Kachun, Mitch. ''[https://global.oup.com/academic/product/first-martyr-of-liberty-9780199731619?cc=us&lang=en& First Martyr of Liberty: Crispus Attucks in American Memory]''. New York: Oxford University Press, 2017.
* Nell, William C. ''[[The Colored Patriots of the American Revolution]]'', 1855.
* Parr, James L. & Swope, Kevin A. ''Framingham: Legends and Lore''. The History Press, 2009.

== External links ==
* [https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part2/2p24.html "Crispus Attucks"], ''Africans in America'', PBS
* [http://www.crispusattucks.org/ Crispus Attucks Association, Inc.]
* {{cite BDA1906 |wstitle= Attucks, Crispus |volume= 1 |page= 161 |year=1906 |short=}}
* [https://www.loc.gov/exhibits/treasures/trr046.html "The Murder of Crispus Attucks"], Library of Congress exhibit, including trial documents.
* [http://www.framingham.com/history/profiles/crispus/trial.htm "Trial of Murderers"], Framingham Website
* [https://archive.org/details/DestinationFreedom/DF_48-06-27_ep001-The_Knock-Kneed_Man.mp3 "The Knock-Kneed Man" a radio presentation], by [[Richard Durham]], in the series ''[[Destination Freedom]]''

{{Boston African American community pre-Civil War|state=expanded}}
{{African American topics}}
{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Attucks, Crispus}}
[[Category:1720s births]]
[[Category:1770 deaths]]
[[Category:Boston Massacre]]
[[Category:People from Framingham, Massachusetts]]
[[Category:Deaths by firearm in Massachusetts]]
[[Category:African-American history in Boston]]
[[Category:Wampanoag people]]
[[Category:Burials at Granary Burying Ground]]
[[Category:People of Massachusetts in the American Revolution]]
[[Category:Black Patriots]]
[[Category:Murdered African-American people]]
[[Category:Murdered Native American people]]
[[Category:Native American history of Massachusetts]]
[[Category:Native Americans in the American Revolution]]
[[Category:Native American people from Massachusetts]]
[[Category:18th-century American slaves]]
[[Category:Black Native American people]]

Latest revision as of 04:32, 26 December 2024

Crispus Attucks
Speculative portrait of what Attucks might have looked like
Born
Crispus Attucks

c. 1723
DiedMarch 5, 1770 (approximately aged 47)
Boston, Massachusetts Bay, British America
Occupation(s)Whaler, sailor, stevedore[1]
Known forDeath in the Boston Massacre

Crispus Attucks (c. 1723 – March 5, 1770) was an American whaler, sailor, and stevedore of African and Native American descent who is traditionally regarded as the first person killed in the Boston Massacre, and as a result the first American killed in the American Revolution.[2][3][4]

Although he is widely remembered as the first American casualty of the American Revolutionary War, 11-year-old Christopher Seider was shot a few weeks earlier by customs officer Ebenezer Richardson on February 22, 1770.[4][5] Historians disagree on whether Attucks was a free man or an escaped slave, but most agree that he was of Wampanoag and African descent.[6][7] Two major sources of eyewitness testimony about the Boston Massacre published in 1770 did not refer to him as black or as a Negro; it appears he was instead viewed by Bostonians as being of mixed ethnicity. According to a contemporaneous account in the Pennsylvania Gazette, he was a "Mulattoe man, named Crispus Attucks, who was born in Framingham, but lately belonged to New Providence, and was here in order to go for North Carolina."[8]

Attucks became an icon of the anti-slavery movement in the mid-19th century. Supporters of the abolition movement lauded him for playing a heroic role in the history of the United States.[9][10]

Early life and ethnic origins

Attucks was born in Framingham, Massachusetts. Town histories of Framingham written in 1847 and 1887 describe him as a slave of Deacon William Brown, though it is unclear whether Brown was his original owner. In 1750, Brown advertised for the return of a runaway slave named Crispas. In the advertisement, Brown describes Attucks and his clothing when he was last seen. He also said that a reward of 10 pounds would be given to whoever found and returned Attucks to him. Attucks's status at the time of the massacre as a free person or a runaway slave has been a matter of debate for historians.[citation needed]

Attucks became a sailor and whaler, and he spent much of his life at sea or working around the docks along the Atlantic seaboard. In an 1874 article in The American Historical Record, Jebe B. Fisher recounts a passage in the memoirs of Boston Tea Party participant George R.T. Hewes, which stated that at the time of the massacre, Attucks "was a Nantucket Indian, belonging onboard a whale ship of Mr. Folgers, then in the harbor, and he remembers a distinct war whoop which he yelled... the mob whistling, screaming, and rending like an Indian yell."[11] Many historians believe[weasel words] Attucks went by the alias Michael Johnson in order to avoid being caught after his escape from slavery. He may only have been temporarily in Boston in early 1770, having recently returned from a voyage to the Bahamas. He was due to leave shortly afterward on a ship for North Carolina.[12][13]

Though he is commonly described as an African American in popular culture, two major sources of eyewitness testimony about the Massacre, both published in 1770, did not refer to Attucks as "black" or as a "Negro," but rather as a mulatto and an Indian. In an account from Philadelphia's Pennsylvania Gazette, a man who may have been Attucks was referred to as a "Mulattoe man, named Crispas, who was born in Framingham, but lately belonged to New-Providence, and was here in order to go for North Carolina."[8] However, during Attucks's time, mulatto was often used to describe skin tone rather than ethnicity, and sometimes referred to full-blooded Native Americans.[14][circular reference] In Potter's American Monthly, the interchangeability of the two terms is demonstrated by court transcripts from the Attucks trial:

Question: Did you see a mulatto among the persons who surrounded the soldiers?

Answer: I did not observe...
Question: Did they seem to be sailors or townsmen?
Answer: They were dressed some of them in the habits of sailors.
Question: Did you know the Indian who was killed?
Answer: No.
Question: Did you see any of them press on the soldiers with a cordwood stick?

Answer: No.[15]

Historians differ in opinion on Attucks's heritage: some assert his family had intermarried with African slaves, while others maintain he had no African heritage. It is widely acknowledged that Attucks had considerable Native American heritage.[16]

Biographer Mitch Kachun, as well as multiple 19th century Framingham town histories, have drawn a connection between Attucks and John Attuck of Framingham, a Narragansett man who was hanged in Framingham in 1676 during King Philip's War.[17][18] The word for "deer" in the Narragansett language is "Attuck."[19][20] Kachun also noted a possible connection to a probable Natick woman and possible Attucks mother or relative named Nanny Peterattucks, who is described as a 'negro woman' in the 1747 estate inventory of Framingham slaveholder Joseph Buckminster and, along with Jacob Peterattucks, as 'probable descendant of John Attuck, the Indian' in an 1847 history of Framingham.[21][22] Other sources refer to their surname as Peter Attucks. In a 1747 history of the Hoosac Valley, an African colonial militiaman named Moses Peter Attucks, living in nearby Leicester, is described as a 'negro slave of John White; elsewhere he is listed as Moses Attucks[23][24] Jacob Peterattucks and Nanny Peterattucks are recorded as slaves with Joseph Buckminster in 1730, and in 1740 Jacob with Thomas Buckminster, who was appointed by Framingham in 1739 to lead a commission for the preservation of deer in the area.[25] Historian William C. Nell reported an 1860 letter from a Natick resident, also printed in an 1860 edition of The Liberator newspaper that read,

Several persons are now living in Natick who remember the Attucks family, viz., Cris, who was killed March 5th; Sam, whose name was abbreviated into Sam Attucks, or Smattox; Sal, also known as Slattox; and Peter, called Pea Tattox [...] my mother, still living, aged 89, remembers Sal in particular, who used to be called the gourd-shell squaw, from the fact that she used to carry her rum in a gourd shell [...] the whole family are said to be the children of Jacob Peter Attucks... it has been conjectured that they are of Indian blood, but all who knew the descendants describe them as negroes.[26][27]

The letter continues, "his sister [Sal] used to say that if they had not killed Cris, Cris would have killed them."

Prince Yonger has been posited as the father of Attucks. However, according to Framingham town histories, Yonger did not arrive in Massachusetts until 1725, after Attucks was born, and did not marry Nanny Peterattucks until 1737, after which point they had children, who are noted in multiple town histories but among whom Crispus is not mentioned: "a son, who died young, and Phebe, who never married." It is possible Yonger became Attucks' stepfather in 1737, though it is unclear whether Attucks had permanently left his mother's home by that point.[28] Neither Phebe nor the son are recorded with the Attucks or Peterattucks surname.

Boston Massacre

This 19th-century lithograph is a variation of the famous engraving of the Boston Massacre by Paul Revere. Produced soon before the American Civil War and long after the event depicted, this image emphasizes Crispus Attucks, who had become a symbol for abolitionists. (John Bufford after William L. Champey, c. 1856)[29]

In the fall of 1768, British troops were sent to Boston to maintain order amid growing colonial unrest which had led to a spate of attacks on local officials following the introduction of the Stamp Act and the subsequent Townshend Acts. Radical Whigs had coordinated waterfront mobs against the authorities. The presence of troops, instead of reducing tensions, served to further inflame them.

After dusk on March 5, 1770, a wigmaker's apprentice mistakenly accused a British officer of not paying a bill. The officer ignored his insults but a sentry intervened after the boy began physically assaulting the officer. Both townspeople and nine soldiers of the 29th Regiment of Foot gathered. The colonists threw snowballs and debris at the soldiers. A group of men including Attucks approached the Old State House armed with clubs and sticks. A soldier was struck with a piece of wood, an act some witnesses claimed was done by Attucks. Other witnesses stated that Attucks was "leaning upon a stick" when the soldiers opened fire.[30]

Five colonists were killed and six were wounded. Attucks took two ricocheted bullets in the chest and was believed to be the first to die.[31] County coroners Robert Pierpoint and Thomas Crafts Jr. conducted an autopsy on Attucks.[32] He was "felled by two bullets to his chest, one of them 'goring the right lobe of the lungs and a great part of the liver most horribly'."[33] Attucks' body was carried to Faneuil Hall, where it lay in state until Thursday, March 8, when he and the other victims were buried together in the same grave site in Boston's Granary Burying Ground. He had lived for approximately 47 years.

Reaction and trials

Boston Gazette newspaper report, March 12, 1770, four days after the funeral. The illustration of the coffins shows the initials of the four victims buried March 8.

John Adams successfully defended most of the accused soldiers against a charge of murder. Two were found guilty of manslaughter. Faced with the prospect of hanging, the soldiers pleaded benefit of clergy, and were instead branded on their thumbs. In his arguments, Adams called the crowd "a motley rabble of saucy boys, negros and molattoes, Irish teagues and outlandish Jack Tarrs."[34] In particular, he charged Attucks with having "undertaken to be the hero of the night," and with having precipitated a conflict by his "mad behavior."[35]

Two years later United States Founding Father Samuel Adams, a cousin of John Adams, named the event the "Boston Massacre," and helped ensure it would not be forgotten.[36] Boston artist Henry Pelham (half-brother of the celebrated portrait painter John Singleton Copley) created an image of the event. Paul Revere made a copy from which prints were made and distributed. Some copies of the print show a dark-skinned man with chest wounds, presumably representing Crispus Attucks. Other copies of the print show no difference in the skin tones of the victims.[37]

The five who were killed were buried as heroes in the Granary Burying Ground, which also contains the graves of Samuel Adams, John Hancock, and other notable figures.[38] Customs of the period discouraged the burial of black people and white people together, with "black burials relegated to the rear or far side of the cemetery.[39] Such a practice was not completely unknown, however. Prince Hall, for example, was interred in Copp's Hill Burying Ground in the North End of Boston 39.[40]

Legacy and honors

Crispus Attucks' grave in the Granary Burying Ground

And to honor Crispus Attucks who was the leader and voice that day: The first to defy, and the first to die, with Maverick, Carr, and Gray. Call it riot or revolution, or mob or crowd as you may, such deaths have been seeds of nations, such lives shall be honored for aye [...]

  • Melvin Tolson begins his poem "Dark Symphony" with the lines: "Black Crispus Attucks taught / Us how to die / Before white Patrick Henry’s bugle breath / Uttered the Vertical / Transmitting cry: / 'Yea, give me liberty or give me death.'"
  • Martin Luther King Jr. referred to Crispus Attucks in the introduction of Why We Can't Wait (1964) as an example of a man whose contribution to history provided a potent message of moral courage.
  • In the successful sitcom The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Will Smith names Crispus Attucks as one of many inspirational African-American figures in history when he tries to explain why he is failing history.
  • In February 2012, Wayne Brady, J. B. Smoove, and Michael Kenneth Williams, as well as Keith David, appeared in a satirical rap music video about Crispus Attucks.[47]
  • In the Netflix series Luke Cage, based on the Marvel Comics character of the same name, there is a housing development called the Crispus Attucks Complex, named in honor of Attucks. Cage also explains Attucks' role in the Boston Massacre at the end of the second episode of the series.[48]
  • Spike Lee's 2020 film Da 5 Bloods refers to Crispus Attucks.

References

  1. ^ "Africans in America – Part 2 – Crispus Attucks". PBS. Retrieved 1 November 2011.
  2. ^ "Africans in America: Crispus Attucks". PBS. Retrieved 18 May 2022. In 1770, Crispus Attucks, a black man, became the first casualty of the American Revolution when he was shot and killed in what became known as the Boston Massacre. Although Attucks was credited as the leader and instigator of the event, debate raged for over as century as to whether he was a hero and a patriot, or a rabble-rousing villain.
  3. ^ "Crispus Attucks". Biography.com. 26 March 2021. Retrieved 18 May 2022. Crispus Attucks was an African American man killed during the Boston Massacre and believed to be the first casualty of the American Revolution.
  4. ^ a b Dixon, Chris (2018). African Americans and the Pacific War, 1941–1945: Race, Nationality, and the Fight for Freedom. Cambridge University Press. p. 54. ISBN 978-1108577434. While Attucks is widely remembered as the first American casualty of the Revolutionary War, eleven-year-old Christopher Seider had been shot a few weeks earlier by the British.
  5. ^ "Christopher Seider: The First Casualty in the American Revolutionary Cause". New England Historical Society. 2015-07-31. Retrieved 2019-02-05.
  6. ^ Kachun, Mitchell (2017). First Martyr of Liberty: Crispus Attucks in American Memory. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0190092498.[page needed]
  7. ^ "Crispus Attucks Family". The Crispus Attucks Museum. Retrieved 4 January 2020.
  8. ^ a b "Boston, March 12". Pennsylvania Gazette. March 22, 1770. p. 2.
  9. ^ Kachun, Mitch (Summer 2009). "From Forgotten Founder to Indispensable Icon: Crispus Attucks, Black Citizenship, and Collective Memory". Journal of the Early Republic. 29 (2): 249–286. doi:10.1353/jer.0.0072. S2CID 144216986.
  10. ^ Kachun, Mitch (2017). First Martyr of Liberty: Crispus Attucks in American Memory. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199910861.[page needed]
  11. ^ Thatcher, Benjamin Bussey (1835). Traits of the Tea Party: Being a Memoir of George R.T. Hewes, One of the Last of Its Survivors : with a History of that Transaction, Reminiscences of the Massacre, and the Siege, and Other Stories of Old Times. Harper & Brothers. pp. 103–104.
  12. ^ Parr & Swope, p. 45.
  13. ^ Kachun, "From Forgotten Founder to Indispensable Icon."
  14. ^ Mulatto#cite note-6
  15. ^ "Potter's American Monthly: An Illustrated Magazine of History, Literature, Science and Art". 1872.
  16. ^ "Potter's American Monthly: An Illustrated Magazine of History, Literature, Science and Art". 1872.
  17. ^ Parr & Swope, p. 44.
  18. ^ Kachun, "From Forgotten Founder to Indispensable Icon"
  19. ^ Roger Williams, A key into the language of America p. 106 (London: Gregory Dexter, 1643)
  20. ^ Palliser, Jerome J. (March 5, 2014). "The hidden life of Crispus Attucks". Journal of the American Revolution.
  21. ^ Kachun, "From Forgotten Founder to Indispensable Icon" p. 26
  22. ^ Temple, Josiah Howard (1887). History of Framingham, Massachusetts: Early Known as Danforth's Farms, 1640–1880; with a Genealogical Register. town of Framingham. p. 668. peterattucks, jacob.
  23. ^ Perry, Arthur Latham (1894). Origins in Williamstown. Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 234. peter attucks.
  24. ^ Niles, Grace Greylock (1912). The Hoosac Valley: Its Legends and Its History. G.P. Putnam's Sons. p. 533. peter attucks.
  25. ^ Barry, William (2010). A History of Framingham, Massachusetts. Applewood Books. ISBN 978-1429022736.
  26. ^ Nell, William Cooper (2002). William Cooper Nell, Nineteenth-century African American Abolitionist, Historian, Integrationist: Selected Writings from 1832–1874. Black Classic Press. ISBN 978-1574780192.
  27. ^ "16 Mar 1860, Page 2 – The Liberator at". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2022-06-05.
  28. ^ Barry, William (2010). A History of Framingham, Massachusetts. Applewood Books. ISBN 978-1429022736.
  29. ^ Thomas H. O'Connor, The Hub: Boston Past and Present (Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2001), p. 56.
  30. ^ The Trial of William Wemms, James Hartegan, William M'Cauley, Hugh White, Matthew Killroy, William Warren, John Carrol, and Hugh Montgomery, soldiers in His Majesty's 29th Regiment of Foot, for the murder of Crispus Attucks, Samuel Gray, Samuel Maverick, James Caldwell, and Patrick Carr, on Monday-evening, the 5th of March,1867 at the Superior Court of Judicature, Court of Assize, and General Goal Delivery, held at Boston, the 27th day of November, 1770, by adjournment, before the Hon. Benjamin Lynde, John Cushing, Peter Oliver, and Chris Metzler, Esquires, justices of said court (Boston: J. Fleeming, 1770); and A Short Narrative of the Horrid Massacre in Boston (New York: John Doggett, Jr., 1849).
  31. ^ The Trial of William Wemms; and A Short Narrative of the Horrid Massacre in Boston.
  32. ^ Hiller B. Zobel, The Boston Massacre. (W. W. Norton and Company, 1970).[ISBN missing][page needed]
  33. ^ Hoock, Holger (2017). Scars of Independence: America's Violent Birth (1st ed.). New York: Crown. p. 7. ISBN 978-0804137287. OCLC 953617831.
  34. ^ "The Murder of Crispus Attucks". Library of Congress.
  35. ^ One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainWilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Attucks, Crispus" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  36. ^ Fradin, Dennis B. Samuel Adams: The Father of American Independence. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1998. pp. 63–66 [ISBN missing]
  37. ^ "Paul Revere’s engraving of the Boston Massacre, 1770", description of item in collection of The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, accessed August 22, 2016 at http://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-by-era/road-revolution/resources/paul-revere%E2%80%99s-engraving-boston-massacre-1770
  38. ^ "Granary – City of Boston". Boston, Massachusetts: City of Boston. Retrieved 4 August 2011. The gravestones' original haphazard configuration was rearranged into straighter rows over to [sic] the years to accommodate both nineteenth-century aesthetics and the modern lawnmower.
  39. ^ Knoblock, Glenn (2016). African American Historic Burial Grounds and Gravesites of New England. McFarland. p. 91. ISBN 978-1476620428.
  40. ^ "Copp's Hill | Historic Burying Grounds | City of Boston". cityofboston.gov. 14 July 2016. Retrieved 2017-06-08.
  41. ^ "American Negro Exposition 1863–1940, July 4 to Sept. 2, 1940, Chicago, IL" (PDF). Living History of Illinois. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2017-03-03.
  42. ^ USmint.gov Archived 2015-12-25 at the Wayback Machine, United States Mint: "Plinky's Coin of the Month February 2000"
  43. ^ Molefi Kete Asante, 100 Greatest African Americans: A Biographical Encyclopedia (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2002).
  44. ^ "A notebook allegedly covered in human skin".
  45. ^ Schuessler, Jennifer; Jacobs, Julia (19 April 2024). "Books Bound in Human Skin: An Ethical Quandary at the Library". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  46. ^ Wilson, Ivy G. (2011). Specters of Democracy: Blackness and the Aesthetics of Politics in the Antebellum U.S. Oxford University Press. p. 169. ISBN 978-0199714049.
  47. ^ Brady, Wayne (16 February 2012). "Crispus Attucks 'Today Was a Good Day' with Wayne Brady, JB Smoove & Michael Kenneth Williams". Retrieved 17 February 2012.
  48. ^ Schremph, Kelly (30 September 2016). "Is The Crispus Attucks Complex A Real Place? 'Luke Cage' Is Putting An Important Figure In The Spotlight". Retrieved 30 September 2016.