J. L. BELL is a Massachusetts writer who specializes in (among other things) the start of the American Revolution in and around Boston. He is particularly interested in the experiences of children in 1765-75. He has published scholarly papers and popular articles for both children and adults. He was consultant for an episode of History Detectives, and contributed to a display at Minute Man National Historic Park.

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Wednesday, November 19, 2025

The Jury for the James Caldwell Inquest

As I wrote yesterday, I now lean toward housewright Thomas Crafts, Sr., being one of the Suffolk County coroners who responded to the Boston Massacre rather than his namesake son.

In fact, Thomas Crafts was apparently the first coroner to act. His date on the inquest into the death of James Caldwell is “the Fifth Day of March” in 1770. In other words, his jury convened, examined the evidence, and issued their determination in the immediate hours after the shooting.

Decades later, Benjamin Bussey Thacher interviewed the shoemaker George Robert Twelves Hewes about how the crowd on King Street had carried away Caldwell’s body:
Caldwell, who was shot in the back, was standing by the side of Hewes at that moment, and the latter caught him in his arms as he fell, and was one of those who bore him up to Mr. [Alexander] Young’s, the Jail-House in Prison Lane. He…was at this time second mate of a vessel commanded by Capt. Morton. This man lived in Cold Lane, and Hewes ran down directly to his house, from Young’s, and told him what had happened. The corpse soon followed him. . . . Morton…looked upon the dreadful object, and shouted like a madman for a gun, to run out “and kill a regular”…
The 12 March Boston Gazette reported that Caldwell was buried out of Faneuil Hall alongside Crispus Attucks as a “stranger,” a detail later histories repeat. But the 19 March issue said: “In the account of the funeral procession in our last, it should have been said, James Caldwell was borne from the House of Capt. Morton in Cold-Lane, instead of Faneuil Hall.”

Way back in 2006, the first year of this blog, I identified that sea captain as Thomas Morton. (Over a decade later came the Boston Massacre Sestercentennial commemoration in the Old South Meeting House. That was a weird event, on the lip of the pandemic shutdown when we were all wondering whether we should gather at all. But the weirdest moment for me was hearing a speaker identify Caldwell as Capt. Thomas Morton’s mate and flashing back to when I’d drilled down to find that name.)

I was therefore struck by seeing Thomas Morton’s signature among the members of the coroner’s jury examining James Caldwell’s body. Clearly he was emotionally involved in that death. Nonetheless, coroner Crafts made him part of the inquest. Maybe that was a way to calm Morton down, letting him respond to the young man’s killing in a productive way.

Other members of this jury were prominent Bostonians. The foreman was town treasurer David Jeffries. His son, Dr. John Jeffries, was a juror, months before he testified as a defense witness for the soldiers. William Dorrington, keeper of the smallpox hospital, was another.

Other members of this coroner’s jury included:
  • Samuel Gridley. In his testimony for the Short Narrative report, the apothecary Richard Palmes said he “followed Mr. Gridley with several other persons with the body of Capt. Morton's apprentice, up to the prison house.” Did that “Mr. Gridley” stay around to serve on the inquest jury?
  • Nathan Spear, whose younger brother Pool Spear was in the crowd on King Street and offered testimony against the soldiers.
  • Samuel Franklin (1721–1775), cutler. On 8 June, his first cousin once removed Benjamin Franklin wrote from London: “I received your kind letter of the 23d of March. I was happy to find that neither you, nor any of your family, were in the way of those murderers.” 
The verdict those fourteen men delivered to coroner Crafts: Caldwell was “murdered by a Musquet Ball shot thro’ his Body, & another Ball lodged in his Shoulder.” At first the men said the culprit was unknown, but then they revised the form to read “the Murderer a Soldier to us unknown.”

2 comments:

Trish Seaward said...

RE: Richard Palmes - His "short temper" appears to have come from Claire Bellerjeau who describes him as short-tempered because he struck the rifle out of Montgomery's hand after he shot into the crowd and struck the captain in order to prevent further assaults on the colonials. I believe this is libel. I have studied him for years and have found no other instances of "violence" and this strongly appears to have been self-defense and protection of the crowd into which the soldiers were shooting.

J. L. Bell said...

There’s nothing in this blog post about Richard Palmes’s temper. In another post, I called him “hot-tempered.” As the tags show, I’ve written about Palmes on this site since 2006, well before Claire Bellerjeau’s book. Several of those postings pointed out that Palmes swung his stick at the Massacre after the soldiers fired and not, as some portrayals have depicted, before.

Palmes was apparently trying to defuse the conflict just before the shots, but the speed with which he moved from that effort to striking back fits the definition of “hot-tempered.” Given the situation, I never blame him for swinging his cane, but I recognize his anger.

The argument that Palmes was only protecting fellow Bostonians raises some questions, however. The soldiers were armed with muskets (not rifles) that fired only one shot, so Pvt. Montgomery couldn’t fire again. Furthermore, Palmes by his own account flailed around, hitting other men, before fleeing with the crowd.

I started to characterize Palmes as hot-tempered after finding out more about him, particularly his disputes with other U.S. Navy officers during the Revolutionary War. I also thought Palmes made a big deal out of minor disagreements with John Hodgson’s transcript of his Massacre trial testimony. The later parts of his life, which Bellerjeau focuses on, weren’t part of my thinking.