Imagining the Massacre
Artists draw on the memory of Attucks’s role in the Massacre to help navigate moments of national crisis.
Imagining the Massacre Read More »
Artists draw on the memory of Attucks’s role in the Massacre to help navigate moments of national crisis.
Imagining the Massacre Read More »
With no confirmed portrait of Attucks, artists draw on their imaginations to bring him to life.
Artists portrayed Attucks to remind the nation that people of African and Native descent are central to the American story.
In Boston, Attucks’s legacy became a powerful tool for Black leaders facing white backlash against desegregation.
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A new generation of activists invokes Attucks’s story to challenge white supremacists at the turn of the 20th century.
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As Black communities faced new threats and challenges following the Civil War, Black Bostonians took up the cause of creating a monument to secure Attucks’s legacy.
Fighting for A Place in the City Read More »
Presented as the first martyr of the Revolution, Attucks’s legacy is revived to serve the cause of abolition.
Fighting for Freedom Read More »
Attucks’s death at the Boston Massacre became a rallying point on the road to Revolution.
Fighting for Independence Read More »
Generations of Americans called on the memory of Attucks in their own struggles for freedom and equality.
Fighting for Change Read More »
On the docks, Attucks encountered many discontented sailors and colonists who opposed British authority.