48 pages 1 hour read

Ann Rinaldi

The Fifth Of March: A Story of the Boston Massacre

Fiction | Novel | YA | Published in 1993

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Background

Geohistorical Context: Colonial Boston

Content Warning: The source text and guide include discussions of racism, enslavement, and graphic violence.

The Fifth of March takes place in Colonial Boston between 1768 and 1770, just a few years before the American Revolution. Unlike Virginia and others, Massachusetts was not a royal colony, and Boston was founded by the Puritans in the 1630s, meaning the city had a greater loyalty to the religion than to the Crown. As a result, anti-British sentiment grew faster in Boston than in other places. Rinaldi uses this home loyalty as an atmospheric backdrop for The Fifth of March, portraying Boston as a city always on the verge of action and its people as hungry for freedom and change. In the novel as in the historical record, Bostonians gather for town meetings at large buildings like Faneuil Hall (dedicated to the town in 1742 by merchant Peter Faneuil) to discuss issues of the day and, in the case of groups like the Sons of Liberty, to rile the crowd against the British monarchy. As a port city on the Atlantic Ocean, Boston was uniquely positioned to become both a trade leader and an easy target for the British, which Rinaldi shows through Boston’s thriving merchant population and the presence of British ships in the harbor.

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