Old State House: Difference between revisions
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imported>Grand Master Kenway Historical Correction - see this for details. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_State_House_(Boston) |
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In 1767 a gallery was installed above the meeting floor here so the general public could watch their legislature at work. | In 1767 a gallery was installed above the meeting floor here so the general public could watch their legislature at work. | ||
The government moved out of the building in 1798 and the old building was turned over to merchants, including a wine seller and a wig maker.<ref>[[Database entries|Animus database]]</ref> | The government moved out of the building in 1798 and the old building was turned over to merchants, including a wine seller and a wig maker. On March 5, 1770 crowds swelled in front of the Old State House. With tensions mounting between Boston citizens and [[British Army|British soldiers]], the soldiers fired into the crowd, killing five people in the [[Boston Massacre]].<ref>[[Database entries|Animus database]]</ref> | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
Revision as of 22:53, 17 April 2013

The Old State House was the seat of Massachusetts' colonial (and later state) legislature from 1713 to 1798.
History
This building housed the Massachusetts government from 1713 to 1798. Before the Revolution, that would have meant the governor, his advisors, and the elected assembly.
The assembly had rather limited power – the governor had veto power over anything they decided, and on occasion dissolved the assembly when the governor didn't vote his way.
In 1767 a gallery was installed above the meeting floor here so the general public could watch their legislature at work.
The government moved out of the building in 1798 and the old building was turned over to merchants, including a wine seller and a wig maker. On March 5, 1770 crowds swelled in front of the Old State House. With tensions mounting between Boston citizens and British soldiers, the soldiers fired into the crowd, killing five people in the Boston Massacre.[1]
References