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Innocent blood crying to God from the streets of Boston. A sermon occasioned by the horrid murder of Messieurs Samuel Gray, Samuel Maverick, James Caldwell, and Crispus Attucks, with Patrick Carr, since dead, and Christopher Monk, judged irrecoverable, and several others badly wounded, by a party of troops under the command of Captain Preston: on the fifth of March, 1770. And preached the Lord's-Day following: / by John Lathrop, A.M. Pastor of the Second Church in Boston. ; [Three lines of Scripture texts] | Evans Early American Imprint Collection | University of Michigan Library Digital Collections
Innocent blood crying to God from the streets of Boston. A sermon occasioned by the horrid murder of Messieurs Samuel Gray, Samuel Maverick, James Caldwell, and Crispus Attucks, with Patrick Carr, since dead, and Christopher Monk, judged irrecoverable, and several others badly wounded, by a party of troops under the command of Captain Preston: on the fifth of March, 1770. And preached the Lord's-Day following: / by John Lathrop, A.M. Pastor of the Second Church in Boston. ; [Three lines of Scripture texts] | Evans Early American Imprint Collection | University of Michigan Library Digital Collections
And if innocent blood is not heard and avenged according to the strict requirements of the law of God and the laws of every good system of civil govern|ment, it will continue to cry, not only against the murderer, but the government and land, which suffers murderers to go unpunished.
to have troops quartered among us on pretence of supporting government, where government has ever been supported as
but in a time of profound peace, t
well as in any part of the known world—to be abused by common soldiers—to be assaulted by them in some or other part of the town al|most every evening—to be wounded with the instruments of death—yea, finally, to see our brethren killed in cold blood
It crieth to those that are witnesses, and requires them to give faithful testimony of what they know.
·quod.lib.umich.edu·
Innocent blood crying to God from the streets of Boston. A sermon occasioned by the horrid murder of Messieurs Samuel Gray, Samuel Maverick, James Caldwell, and Crispus Attucks, with Patrick Carr, since dead, and Christopher Monk, judged irrecoverable, and several others badly wounded, by a party of troops under the command of Captain Preston: on the fifth of March, 1770. And preached the Lord's-Day following: / by John Lathrop, A.M. Pastor of the Second Church in Boston. ; [Three lines of Scripture texts] | Evans Early American Imprint Collection | University of Michigan Library Digital Collections
Letter from John Adams to Abigail Adams, 26 April 1777
Letter from John Adams to Abigail Adams, 26 April 1777
This is just the sort of letter that students should read - the type of letter that never ever makes it into the taught American History canon.
Posterity! You will never know, how much it cost the present Generation, to preserve your Freedom! I hope you will make a good Use of it. If you do not, I shall repent in Heaven, that I ever took half the Pains to preserve it.
·masshist.org·
Letter from John Adams to Abigail Adams, 26 April 1777
What Ken Burns Won’t Say About the American Revolution - POLITICO
What Ken Burns Won’t Say About the American Revolution - POLITICO
This line went down well with the crowd but brought the project’s limitations into focus. This kind of “just the facts” claim, while posing as humility, in fact masked Burns’ grandiosity. There is no story of the past that is told without a concept of historiography. Whatever you write, you are taking a stance on your subject and on the practice of history itself. The suggestion that other historians are not also interested in “show[ing] what happened” is, at best, careless.
But the advantage of Burns’ crowd-pleasing approach was plain: unrivaled reach. Even in this era of nasty fights over school curricula, his films have remained above the fra
n his denouncement of Trump at Stanford, he said, “I have come to the realization that history is not a fixed thing, a collection of precise dates, facts and events that add up to a quantifiable, certain, confidently known truth. History is a mysterious and malleable thing, constantly changing, not just as new information emerges, but as our own interests, emotions and inclinations change. Each generation rediscovers and reexamines that part of its past that gives its present new meaning, new possibility and new power.”
But the nature of that responsibility was precisely the big idea that was lost in the movie — for facts don’t speak for themselves. If they did, the facts of the revolution would not have inspired people as disparate as Confederate rebels and Martin Luther King, Jr.
for facts don’t speak for themselves.
Great examples that show how the facts do not speak for themselves
Vignettes and battle dates won’t offer the American people what they need to think through the toughest questions raised by the country’s founders: What is true liberty and when is it time to give up on politics and take more drastic measures to secure it?
·politico.com·
What Ken Burns Won’t Say About the American Revolution - POLITICO
Samuel Sutphin - Honoring Our Patriots
Samuel Sutphin - Honoring Our Patriots
Notice how the Daughters of the American Revolution refer to an enslaver as a "master"
utphin, a Black man, was born into enslavement on January 1, 1747, in the New Jersey county of Hunterdon,1 according to his master Guisbert Bogart’s2 Bible.3
·honoringourpatriots.dar.org·
Samuel Sutphin - Honoring Our Patriots
Resolutions of the Continental Congress October 19, 1765
Resolutions of the Continental Congress October 19, 1765
Eleven years before the Declaration of Independence, a Continental Congress declared that "Trial by Jury is the inherent and invaluable right of every British subject in these colonies" Important words to consider in light of the light of denials of habeus corpus in the United States in 2025
That trial by jury is the inherent and invaluable right of every British subject in these colonies.
·avalon.law.yale.edu·
Resolutions of the Continental Congress October 19, 1765
Summary View of the Rights of British America - Thomas Jefferson August 1774
Summary View of the Rights of British America - Thomas Jefferson August 1774
Less than a year before he write the first draft of Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson wrote this list document. Note this phrase " But his majesty has no right to land a single armed man on our shores, and those whom he sends here are liable to our laws made for the suppression and punishment of riots, routs, and unlawful assemblies; or are hostile bodies, invading us in defiance of law. "
But his majesty has no right to land a single armed man on our shores, and those whom he sends here are liable to our laws made for the suppression and punishment of riots, routs, and unlawful assemblies; or are hostile bodies, invading us in defiance of law.
·avalon.law.yale.edu·
Summary View of the Rights of British America - Thomas Jefferson August 1774
Joseph Warren and Samuel Adams wrote the Solemn League and Covenant
Joseph Warren and Samuel Adams wrote the Solemn League and Covenant
Two years before the Declaration of Independence, the people of Westford, Mass agreed to boycott all commerce with Great Britain in response to the Coercive Acts. Whenever there is talk of a boycott to make change, students should know that boycotts were at the very foundation of the resistance movement of the Revolution
·drjosephwarren.com·
Joseph Warren and Samuel Adams wrote the Solemn League and Covenant
Time To Take Back the Tea Party - Philadelphia
Time To Take Back the Tea Party - Philadelphia
Three weeks before Boston's first meeting responding to the Tea Act, a meeting in Philadelphia resolved "That the duty imposed by Parliament upon tea landed in America is a tax on the Americans, or levying contributions on them without their consent."
·hiddencityphila.org·
Time To Take Back the Tea Party - Philadelphia
The American Revolution Institute
The American Revolution Institute
The American Revolution Institute of the Society of the Cincinnati is a history organization dedicated to promoting understanding and appreciation of the American Revolution and its legacy by supporting advanced study, presenting exhibitions and other public programs, advocating preservation, and providing resources to teachers and students.
·americanrevolutioninstitute.org·
The American Revolution Institute
Declaration of Independence: A Transcription
Declaration of Independence: A Transcription
He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.
This refers generally to any time colonial legislatures passed internal laws that the British Parliament refused to ratify.
But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.--Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government.
For depriving us in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by Jury:
For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences:
He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the Consent of our legislatures
For Quartering large bodies of armed troops among us
sent hither swarms of Officers to harrass our people,
He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us
·archives.gov·
Declaration of Independence: A Transcription
No ‘King of Kings’ | Society for US Intellectual History
No ‘King of Kings’ | Society for US Intellectual History
Essay traces the way patriots re-wrote the Book of Common prayer during the Revolution, replacing the King with Congress in intercessions and prayer
The next day, Washington’s general orders spoke of the urgent need for “Subordination & Discipline (the Life and Soul of an Army) which next under providence, is to make us formidable to our enemies, honorable in ourselves, and respected in the world.
How would Washington's words be heard today?
—the humble prayer book still serves as a key intellectual artifact of revolution.
The laity’s handwritten edits in prayer book margins—scraping off “King of Kings” and pasting over rote prayers for the royal family—operated as cultural cues for political change. At critical moments in the war, as colonists endured sieges and made sacrifices, they edited their prayer books to endorse turns in popular thought at the local level
·s-usih.org·
No ‘King of Kings’ | Society for US Intellectual History
Remember, Remember … | Beehive
Remember, Remember … | Beehive
The 5 of November was one of the most festive days of the year in colonial Boston and was usually a raucous occasion with rowdy crowds in the street - the same crowds that were easy to mobilize during the Revolutionary movement
“It was formerly a custom on these anniversaries for ye lower class of people to celebrate the evening in a manner peculiar to themselves,
·masshist.org·
Remember, Remember … | Beehive
Founders Online: From Benjamin Franklin to Samuel Johnson, 23 August 1750
Founders Online: From Benjamin Franklin to Samuel Johnson, 23 August 1750
Teachers of the 21st century could use this as inspiration
I think with you, that nothing is of more importance for the public weal, than to form and train up youth in wisdom and virtue. Wise and good men are, in my opinion, the strength of a state: much more so than riches or arms, which, under the management of Ignorance and Wickedness, often draw on destruction, instead of providing for the safety of a people. And though the culture bestowed on many should be successful only with a few, yet the influence of those few and the service in their power, may be very great.
Your objection about the politeness of Philadelphia, and your imagined rusticity, is mere compliment; and your diffidence of yourself absolutely groundless.
·founders.archives.gov·
Founders Online: From Benjamin Franklin to Samuel Johnson, 23 August 1750
The Great Fear of 1776
The Great Fear of 1776
Since the publication of Bernard Bailyn’s introduction to Pamphlets of the American Revolution in 1965, we have known that colonists expressed fears of a British conspiracy to enslave them.[4] Yet we have paid little attention to Native American fears that colonists intended to annihilate them. How widespread were these fears?
·ageofrevolutions.com·
The Great Fear of 1776
John Adams to Abigail Adams, 9 October 1774
John Adams to Abigail Adams, 9 October 1774
In addition to his complaints about Congress, John wrote Abigail about his visit to a Catholic Church
The poor Wretches, fingering their Beads, chanting Latin, not a Word of which they understood, their Pater Nosters and Ave Maria’s. Their holy Water—their Crossing themselves perpetually—their Bowing to the Name of Jesus, wherever they hear it—their Bowings, and Kneelings, and Genuflections before the Altar. The Dress of the Priest was rich with Lace—his Pulpit was Velvet and Gold. The Altar Piece was very rich—little Images and Crucifixes about—Wax Candles lighted up. But how shall I describe the Picture of our Saviour in a Frame of Marble over the Altar at full Length upon the Cross, in the Agonies, and the Blood dropping and streaming from his Wounds.
The poor Wretches, fingering their Beads, chanting Latin, not a Word of which they understood, their Pater Nosters and Ave Maria’s. Their holy Water—their Crossing themselves perpetually—their Bowing to the Name of Jesus, wherever they hear it—their Bowings, and Kneelings, and Genuflections before the Altar. The Dress of the Priest was rich with Lace—his Pulpit was Velvet and Gold. The Altar Piece was very rich—little Images and Crucifixes about—Wax Candles lighted up. But how shall I describe the Picture of our Saviour in a Frame of Marble over the Altar at full Length upon the Cross, in the Agonies, and the Blood dropping and streaming from his Wounds.
I am wearied to Death with the Life I lead. The Business of the Congress is tedious, beyond Expression. This Assembly is like no other that ever existed. Every Man in it is a great Man—an orator, a Critick, a statesman, and therefore every Man upon every Question must shew his oratory, his Criticism and his Political Abilities.
·founders.archives.gov·
John Adams to Abigail Adams, 9 October 1774
Uncovering Raritan Landing | a podcast by Arts Institute of Middlesex County
Uncovering Raritan Landing | a podcast by Arts Institute of Middlesex County
Raritan Landing was a small village that thrived from the early 1700s up to the American Revolution. It was inhabited by the enslaved, tradespeople, and prominent English and Dutch merchants. These audio recordings explain how historians, anthropologists and archaeologists recovered artifacts and evidence or Raritan Landing after it was discovered by the EPA building a sewer line across New Jersey
·uncoveringraritanlanding.podbean.com·
Uncovering Raritan Landing | a podcast by Arts Institute of Middlesex County
Joseph Hutchings and the Battle of Kemp's Landing
Joseph Hutchings and the Battle of Kemp's Landing
Notice how this article casually infers the enslavement of human beings as perfectly normal? Students should be given this very short article to be read closely - would they notice this? Would they realize the way in which this shapes our understanding of the past?
Among the slaves who fled to Dunmore’s side were several who belonged to Joseph Hutchings.
·founderoftheday.com·
Joseph Hutchings and the Battle of Kemp's Landing
From George Washington to George Mason, 5 April 1769
From George Washington to George Mason, 5 April 1769
Washington is explains the advantages of non-importation to George Mason, which include not only the chance to prove to Great Britain how important the colonies are, but to give him and other gentlemen the chance to save money and save face at the same time. He needed an acceptable reason to stop spending money, otherwise he would lose his status
I think not insurmountably increased, if the Gentlemen in their several counties wou’d be at some pains to explain matters to the people, & stimulate them to a cordial agreement to purchase none but certain innumerated articles out of any of the Stores after such a period, nor import nor purchase any themselves. This, if it did not effectually withdraw the Factors from their Importations, wou’d at least make them extremely cautious in doing it, as the prohibited Goods could be vended to none but the non-associater, or those who wou’d pay no regard to their association; both of whom ought to be stigmatized, and made the objects of publick reproach.
Washington is explaining to Mason how non-importation, a boycott could work
such an alteration in the System of my living, will create suspicions of a decay in my fortune, & such a thought the world must not harbour;
Washington is afraid that if he stops spending he will lost his station in life
·founders.archives.gov·
From George Washington to George Mason, 5 April 1769
To John Adams from John Thaxter, 12 August 1783
To John Adams from John Thaxter, 12 August 1783
James Otis, whose argument against the Writ of Attainment in court inspired a young John Adams in the audience, died when stuck by lightening. There are many accounts that say he told other people, including his sister, that he hoped he would die by lightening. Evidence of this story is lacking - but death by lightening is documented
The celebrated M<span style="font-size: 80%; line-height: 0.8; vertical-align: super">r.</span> Otis [is dead.] He was killed at his Door in Andover by a [stroke of?] lightening in an instant. For 2. years past he had been very rational &amp; began to do business— He had been rather irregular a few Months before his Death, but had become <a id="ADMS-06-15-02-pb-0220"></a>very steady again just before this fatal Accident—
James Otis, who long struggled with mental illness, died on 23 May 1783 at the Andover home of Isaac Osgood, where he resided as a convalescent for most of the last two years of his life
·founders.archives.gov·
To John Adams from John Thaxter, 12 August 1783