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Eric Hinderaker Interviewed on WBUR Radio about Boston's Massacre

 

Professor Eric Hinderaker was recently interviewed on Boston's WBUR Radio about his most recent book, Boston's Massacre, available now through Harvard University Press. Dr. Hinderaker discusses the competing narratives that erupted after the violence of 1770. 

"Tuesday morning presented a most shocking scene — the Blood of our Fellow Citizens running like Water through King-Street."

Dateline: 1770. Publication: The Boston Gazette. Story: The Boston Massacre.

That sympathetic version of the story that most of us are familiar with — British soldiers opening fire on an innocent crowd of colonists — was put out with great haste.

But so was a competing account by British officers in a pamphlet titled: "A Fair Account of the Late Unhappy Disturbance at Boston in New England." According to that view, British soldiers were attacked "by at least a hundred people, armed with bludgeons, sticks, and cutlasses," in a city where it was "unsafe for an officer or soldier to walk the streets."

Competing narratives put out in the immediate aftermath of an historic event. Various sides trying to be the first to win hearts and minds. That battle, of course, continues on today.

Listen to the full audio of the interview online at WBUR's website. (Original Airdate: March 21, 2017)

 


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