Boston Massacre Research Paper

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The American Times of 1754-1775
The French and Indian war in 1754 was a struggle between France and England for North America, in 1754 the French began building a chain of forts from the St. Lawrence River to the Mississippi. This land was claimed by Virginia under its “sea-to-sea” grant from England. Virginia sent a small force under young George Washington to capture Fort Duquesne, a French post located on the present site of Pittsburgh, Pa., but he was defeated. The next year in 1755 was more of a disaster for the British, advancing towards on fort Duquesne, gen. Edward Braddock was defeated and his army nearly destroyed, ignored warnings of Washington, who knew how the French and Indians fought. Braddock marched with drums beating and banners flying and was unfortunately killed, without Washington’s tactics the army would have been wiped out.

The Boston Massacre of 1770
The Boston Massacre was one the events that led to the American Revolution. In 1770 in Boston, Massachusetts, a group of British soldiers, shot at colonists and five were killed, including a former slave named Crispus Attucks, several other wounded. Despite his opposition to British authority in the colonies, John Adams, one of Boston’s leading attorneys at the time, defended the British soldiers involved in the
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Americans were protesting both a tax on tea (taxation without representation) and the perceived monopoly of the East India Company. The Townshend Acts passed by Parliament in 1767 and imposing duties on various products imported into the British colonies had raised such a storm of colonial protest and noncompliance that they were repealed in 1770. Saving duty on tea which was retained by the Parliament to demonstrate its presumed right to raise such colonial revenue without colonial