Student Worksheet Packet
Westminster Massacre: The Revolution's Forgotten First Bloodshed
Brattleboro, VT
This lesson uses the Westminster Massacre of March 13, 1775 to challenge students's assumptions about where and how the American Revolution began. By examining an event that preceded Lexington and Concord by five weeks — caused not by British regulars but by a colonial sheriff's posse — students explore the Revolution as a conflict about local authority, land rights, and self-governance, not only as a war against Britain.
This Packet Includes
- Learning Objectives & Essential Questions
- 5 Primary Source Analysis Worksheets
- 3 Reading & Activity Handouts
- Assessment Quiz (5 questions)
Learning Objectives
By the end of this unit, you will be able to:
- Students will describe the land grant dispute that brought New Hampshire Grants settlers into conflict with New York authorities
- Students will analyze the Westminster Massacre as a political and legal conflict as well as a violent incident
- Students will compare the Westminster Massacre to Lexington and Concord and explain what each reveals about the Revolution's causes
- Students will evaluate the language of William French's gravestone inscription as a primary source
Essential Questions
Keep these questions in mind as you work through this packet:
- Was the American Revolution primarily a conflict with Britain, or was it also a conflict among Americans about who had legitimate authority?
- Why do some events become famous symbols of a cause while others — equally important — are forgotten?
- What does a gravestone inscription tell us about how a community understood its own history?
Declaration of Independence of Vermont, January 15, 1777
Analysis Questions
Read the document carefully, then answer each question in complete sentences.
Who created this source and why?
When was this source created?
What perspective does this source represent?
What was happening when this was written?
How might the author's position affect their account?
Reflection
How does this source connect to what happened in Brattleboro, VT? What does it tell you about the people involved?
Analysis Questions
Read the document carefully, then answer each question in complete sentences.
Who created this source and why?
When was this source created?
What perspective does this source represent?
What was happening when this was written?
How might the author's position affect their account?
Reflection
How does this source connect to what happened in Brattleboro, VT? What does it tell you about the people involved?
Journals of the Continental Congress: Vermont Statehood Debates, 1777-1791
Analysis Questions
Read the document carefully, then answer each question in complete sentences.
Who created this source and why?
When was this source created?
What perspective does this source represent?
What was happening when this was written?
How might the author's position affect their account?
Reflection
How does this source connect to what happened in Brattleboro, VT? What does it tell you about the people involved?
Analysis Questions
Read the document carefully, then answer each question in complete sentences.
Who created this source and why?
When was this source created?
What perspective does this source represent?
What was happening when this was written?
How might the author's position affect their account?
Reflection
How does this source connect to what happened in Brattleboro, VT? What does it tell you about the people involved?
Analysis Questions
Read the document carefully, then answer each question in complete sentences.
Who created this source and why?
When was this source created?
What perspective does this source represent?
What primary sources does this draw from?
What interpretation does the author offer?
Reflection
How does this source connect to what happened in Brattleboro, VT? What does it tell you about the people involved?
Brattleboro Event Timeline
timeline
Students place key events in chronological order and add details
# Brattleboro Revolutionary Timeline
Instructions: Place the following events in order and add one detail about each.
- [ ] Westminster Massacre
- [ ] Vermont Declares Independence and Adopts Constitution
- [ ] Vermont Admitted to the Union as the 14th State
- [ ] Yorktown Surrender News Arrives in Vermont
- [ ] Haldimand Affair: Vermont's Secret Negotiations with Britain
---
| Event | Date | Significance |
|-------|------|-------------|
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
Primary Source Analysis
graphic organizer
Structured analysis of Revolutionary-era documents
# Primary Source Analysis Worksheet
## Source Information
- Title: _________________
- Author: _________________
- Date: _________________
- Type: _________________
## Observation
What do you notice? (List 3 things)
1.
2.
3.
## Reflection
What do you wonder? (List 2 questions)
1.
2.
## Analysis
What does this source tell us about Brattleboro during the Revolution?
_______________________________________________
## Perspective
Whose voice is represented? Whose might be missing?
_______________________________________________
Key Figures Profile
worksheet
Research template for Revolutionary figures
# Revolutionary Figure Profile
## Basic Information
- Name: _________________
- Birth/Death Years: _________________
- Occupation(s): _________________
## Role in the Revolution
### William French
Young settler killed during the Westminster Massacre on March 13, 1775, when the Cumberland County sheriff's posse fired into a crowd occupying the courthouse. French became a martyr figure for the Vermont independence movement; his gravestone, inscribed "murdered by the tools of tyranny," was one of the first explicit political statements of the revolutionary era in Vermont.
My questions about this person:
1.
2.
### Ira Allen
Younger brother of Ethan Allen and one of the principal architects of Vermont statehood. Ira Allen negotiated the Haldimand Affair — secret negotiations with British General Haldimand that were probably a deliberate stratagem to buy Vermont time while the war concluded. His land speculation shaped the political economy of early Vermont.
My questions about this person:
1.
2.
## Reflection
Which figure interests you most and why?
_______________________________________________
Brattleboro in the American Revolution
Answer the following questions based on our study of Revolutionary history.
1. What makes Brattleboro significant in Revolutionary history?
2. Primary sources are documents or objects created during the time period being studied.
3. Name one event that occurred in Brattleboro during the Revolutionary period and explain its significance.
Answer:
4. Why is it important to consider multiple perspectives when studying history?
5. Describe one connection between this town and another Revolutionary-era town we discussed.
Answer: