When
Paul Revere first began selling his color prints of "The
Bloody Massacre perpetrated in King Street" in Boston, he
was doing what any like-minded patriot with his talents in 1770
would have done. Only, Paul Revere did it faster and more
expeditiously than anyone else, including two other
artist-engravers who also issued prints of the Massacre that
year.
Twenty-one
days before-- on the night of March 5, 1770-- five men had been
shot to death in Boston town by British soldiers. Precipitating
the event known as the Boston Massacre was a mob of men and boys
taunting a sentry standing guard at the city's customs house.
When other British soldiers came to the sentry's support, a
free-for-all ensued and shots were fired into the crowd.
Four
died on the spot and a fifth died after four days. Six others
were wounded.
The
presence of British troops in Boston had long been a sore point
among Boston's radical politicians. Paul Revere wasted no time
in capitalizing on the Massacre to highlight British tyranny and
stir up anti-British sentiment among his fellow colonists. As
you will see, Revere's historic engraving is long on political
propaganda and short on accuracy or aesthetics.
Notice
how the British Grenadiers are shown standing in a straight line
shooting their rifles in a regular volley, whereas when the
disturbance actually erupted both sides were belligerent and
riotous.
Notice
also that Revere's engraving shows a blue sky. Only a wisp of a
moon suggests that the riot occurred after nine o'clock on a
cold winter night.
Notice
too the absence of snow and ice on the street, while Crispus
Attucks-- a black man lying on the ground closest to the British
soldiers-- is shown to be white. As an aside, it should be noted
that as a result of his death in the Boston Massacre, Crispus
Attacks would emerge as the most famous of all the black men to
fight in the cause of the Revolution, and become its first
martyr.
Documentation
has come to light over the years indicating that Revere copied
engraver Henry Pelham's drawings of the Massacre, produced his
own engraving, and three weeks after the occurrence was
advertising his prints for sale in Boston's newspapers. By the
time Pelham's prints hit the street,
Revere's print had flooded the market. A third engraving was
executed by Jonathan Mulliken , who also issued prints depicting
the event. Except for a number of minor differences, all three
prints appear alike.
In
his rush to produce his engraving Revere employed the talents of
Christian Remick to colorize the print. Remick's choice of
colors is simple yet effective. Notice the use of red for the
British uniforms and the blood. The other colors-- blue, green,
brown and black-- all contribute to make this print what is
arguably the most famous in America.
Few
historians would deny that the "Boston Massacre"
proved to be a milestone in America's road to independence. By
popularizing the tragic event, Paul Revere's print became
"the first powerful influence in forming an outspoken
anti-British public opinion," one in which the
revolutionary leaders had almost lost hope of achieving.