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In the early months of 1780, while the American Revolution still raged and the young nation struggled to define itself, a crime of unprecedented horror unfolded in the quiet hills of western Connecticut. On the night of February 3, a nineteen-year-old former Continental Army soldier named Barnett Davenport committed what historians now recognize as the first documented mass murder in United States history.
By Matt SchmidtIn the early months of 1780, while the American Revolution still raged and the young nation struggled to define itself, a crime of unprecedented horror unfolded in the quiet hills of western Connecticut. On the night of February 3, a nineteen-year-old former Continental Army soldier named Barnett Davenport committed what historians now recognize as the first documented mass murder in United States history.