Charles E. Logue at Fenway Park Charles E. Logue (1858-1919), an Irish-born contractor from County Derry who build Fenway Park and dozens of churches, government building and schools throughout greater Boston, died suddenly on December 5, 1919 while working on the roof of St Mary's Catholic Church in Dedham, Massachusetts. According to news reports, Logue was about 100 feet above ground on staging, when he "seemed to stagger" and was helped by workmen before he fell to the ground. "Heart failure, caused by the exertion of climbing the ladder, was given as the cause of death," according to The Boston Globe. Logue had climbed the ladder with his son John, to inspect repair work being done on the church cupola. Logue and his wife Josephine were the parents of thirteen children, and lived at 24 Baker Place and later at Barry Street in Dorchester. In addition to his contracting career, Logue was appointed Schoolhouse Commissioner and a member of the Tenement House C...
Nine Months after the Boston Massacre, Two British Soldiers Found Guilty of Manslaughter on December 5, 1770
On December 5, 1770, nine months to the day after the Boston Massacre , two of the nine soldiers in the British regiment, Matthew Kilroy and Hugh Montgomery, were found guilty of manslaughter for the killing of five local Boston men; the other seven soldiers were exonerated. The verdict was a culmination of a long and contentious trial fueled by the now famous episode that took place on a wintry Monday night on March 5, 1770, when a deadly confrontation between occupying British soldiers and local Bostonians resulted in five townspeople being shot and killed. Between March and December, Bostonians experienced a range of emotions: rage at the British Crown for putting armed forces in Boston, anti-Catholic sentiments directed at the soldiers, and finally, recognition that the trail had to appear fair-minded and just to the eyes of the world if the colonists were ever to make a case for independence. On the night in question, five men - Samuel Gray Samuel Mav...