Welcome to Assassin's Creed Wiki! Log in and join the community.
Database: Old Meeting House: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>MB543 Adding categories |
imported>Evandrus Primæ mNo edit summary |
||
| (6 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[File:DB Old Meeting House.png|right|180px]] | [[File:DB Old Meeting House.png|right|180px]] | ||
The bells in this church rang out in the hours leading up to the Boston Massacre, as crowds were gathering to taunt the soldiers in front of the State House. In Boston at the time, church bells were rung when there was a fire, so people ran into the streets to see what was happening. That swelled the crowd, making tensions between the people and the British soldiers that much worse. It ended, of course, with the soldiers firing into the crowd, killing 5 people. | The bells in [[Old Meeting House|this church]] rang out in the hours leading up to the [[Boston Massacre]], as crowds were gathering to taunt the [[British Army|soldiers]] in front of the State House. In [[Boston]] at the time, church bells were rung when there was a fire, so people ran into the streets to see what was happening. That swelled the crowd, making tensions between the people and the [[United Kingdom|British]] soldiers that much worse. It ended, of course, with the soldiers firing into the crowd, killing 5 people. | ||
And this concludes our lesson on how church bells could be used to incite riots in Colonial America. | And this concludes our lesson on how church bells could be used to incite riots in [[United States|Colonial America]]. | ||
[[Category:Database | {{DEFAULTSORT:Old Meeting House}} | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Database: Locations]] | ||
[[Category:Animus 3.0 database entries]] | |||
Latest revision as of 06:07, 23 August 2016

The bells in this church rang out in the hours leading up to the Boston Massacre, as crowds were gathering to taunt the soldiers in front of the State House. In Boston at the time, church bells were rung when there was a fire, so people ran into the streets to see what was happening. That swelled the crowd, making tensions between the people and the British soldiers that much worse. It ended, of course, with the soldiers firing into the crowd, killing 5 people.
And this concludes our lesson on how church bells could be used to incite riots in Colonial America.