
While people—even tourists—can stand up to rain, and wool clothing will eventually dry, muskets don’t fire well in the wet. What’s more, damp black powder can become stuck in the gun barrels and turn into a safety hazard. That was the big reason why rain brought an end to battles in Revolutionary times. Heavy rain also seems to have played a part in the quick and peaceful end of the Powder Alarm of September 1774. And the “Hurrycane” on the sixth anniversary of the Massacre kept the British army from attacking Dorchester heights.
I’ll be one of those volunteers staying dry inside the Old State House, so please come and say hello!
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