[On March
5th, 1770, the events that came to be known as the Boston Massacre took place on
King Street. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of contexts for that
pivotal pre-Revolutionary moment, leading up to a special Guest Post from my
sons based on their elementary school studies of the massacre.]
On the
Massacre’s sixth casualty and the vagaries of historical memory.
Nearly all accounts of the Boston
Massacre list five colonists killed: three during the March 5th
conflict itself (Crispus Attucks, Samuel Gray, and James Caldwell); and two who
died of wounds in the immediate aftermath (Samuel Maverick the next day,
Patrick Carr two weeks later). Yet a sixth participant in the King Street
protests, 17 year-old shipwright’s
apprentice Christopher Monk, was gravely injured by the soldiers as well
(he was shot in the side and the bullet passed through his body and exited
above the other hip), and indeed could likewise be said to have been mortally
wounded: Monk remained disabled for the next decade before succumbing to his
wounds just over ten years later,
on April 20th, 1780. Whether we include Monk among those killed
at the Massacre or not (a possible equivalent would be soldiers wounded in
battle who die years later and who in that case would not be described as being
killed in action), clearly his life was permanently altered and eventually
ended by the March 5th violence, making his name and story an
important part of remembering the Boston Massacre’s individual and communal
effects.
For many years,
Monk occupied precisely such a prominent position in the city’s collective memories
of the Boston Massacre. Bostonians collected annual
donations to support his medical needs and care, a level of public civic
attention granted very few colonists (and very few Americans in the centuries
since independence). He also became a fixture
at the city’s annual commemorations of the Massacre, serving as both a
visceral reminder of its violence and an inspiration for further
proto-Revolutionary protest and resistance. While of course he had competition
from Samuel Adams and the other Sons of Liberty, and eventually from Paul
Revere and his nightriding cohort, I think it’s fair to say that in the years
leading up to Lexington and Concord Christopher Monk was the most famous living
Bostonian, and certainly the city’s most well-known individual icon of
Revolutionary sentiments. Which, given the role that Boston played for all of
the colonies in that period, would likewise put Monk on the short list of the
most famous and noteworthy pre-Revolutionary Americans. I know of few other 1770s
Bostonians whose deaths would receive extended notice in a
publication like the Pennsylvania
Journal & Weekly Advertiser, after all.
Yet if Monk was
one of Boston’s and America’s most famous individuals as of his 1780 death,
over the subsequent couple centuries he has largely disappeared from our
collective memories. Of course there are still accounts such as those to which
I’ve hyperlinked throughout this post, but even many of those exist to make the
case for Monk as a 6th casualty of the Massacre, since at this point
he is not generally included in that conversation. Perhaps as a result of that specific
exclusion, Monk’s name is not often associated with the Boston Massacre at all,
and so the subsequent decade of disability, public care, and commemorative
presence has seemingly vanished from our public historical conversations as
well. That striking shift is an important reminder of the haphazard nature of
what we do and don’t remember, and of how those often random trends can become
self-fulfilling prophecies across centuries of education and commemoration. But
as a proponent of an additive approach to collective memory, I think the most
important takeaway is the need to continue learning about the past, so we can
make sure that the Christopher Monks are added back into our future memories
and narratives of historical moments such as the Boston Massacre.
Last massacre
studying tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
Hi my name Ben, I would like to think for the shoutout at the end. Truely made my day.
ReplyDeletePS. I think its great, helped me alot on my paper about Christopher.