Crispus Attucks
From Plastic Tub
Revision as of 01:15, 27 Jul 2005 Payne (Talk | contribs) ← Go to previous diff |
Current revision Adkins (Talk | contribs) Desiderata |
||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
''Despite suffering from asthma,'' Attucks once walked from Boston to Atlanta for his mother's 60th birthday. | ''Despite suffering from asthma,'' Attucks once walked from Boston to Atlanta for his mother's 60th birthday. | ||
- | ''Attuck's exceptional will'' granted him five days of living with a lead ball in the gut. He reported hung on till a visit from his mother. | + | ''Attuck's exceptional will'' granted him five days of living with a lead ball in the gut. He reportedly hung on 'til a visit from his mother. |
</font> | </font> | ||
</td> | </td> | ||
</tr> | </tr> | ||
</table> | </table> |
Current revision
American. Birth, unknown. Death, March 10, 1770. He arrives quite handsomely, all dolled up. He is open for business, eager to please. He receives a tardy slip that he promptly rips up and tosses on the floor.
A well-known associate of Guvernor Morris and Albert Kook. He was caught in the crossfire in Boston on the night of March 5, 1770, when a lead musket ball deflected off another man's shoulder lodged in his belly, in an incident insurgent propagandists labeled the "Boston Massacre." Morris and Kook were enraged by the incident, and it seems to have in some way hindered a delicate operation they were conducting out of Boston Harbor. Repeated references to the "Chinaman" have led many historians to the conclusion that Attucks was on some kind of opium-related business, but nothing has been conclusively demonstrated. See Also |
DesiderataDespite suffering from asthma, Attucks once walked from Boston to Atlanta for his mother's 60th birthday. Attuck's exceptional will granted him five days of living with a lead ball in the gut. He reportedly hung on 'til a visit from his mother. |