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Paul Revere the Shephard Fairey of his day?

J.L. Bell lays out the evidence that Revere's famous engraving of the Boston Massacre was actually based on the work of another artist.

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as I remember the both of them lifted it from a London magazine or newspaper. That's where Revere got all his cartoons, anyway, and he freely admitted he couldn't draw his way out of a barrel unless he had something to copy.

Maybe the squirrel kid saw the same newspaper.

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Revere copied a lot of his other political cartoons from British models, which was the only way to reproduce them in the colonies, but the Massacre print was a Henry Pelham original.

Pelham's drawing shows the Town House (now called the Old State House) in the background, plus the spire of the First Meeting-House. Those and the surrounding streetscape had to look accurate for Bostonians. Pelham couldn't just pull out a random scene from London. There was no useful scene of Boston from London because print customers there didn't care what a distant colonial outpost looked like.

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You're absolutely right, and my bad.

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