British troops marched into a town, to I think make sure there was still order among the townspeople. The townspeople got angry for some reason and one threw a stone or something and that started it I’m pretty sure about six to seven people died(I don’t know how many were injured) and the “massacre” was the wrong word, the press used it to promote patriotism against the British.
No, it is false that in <span>the 1962 case of Engel v. Vitale the U.S. Supreme Court approved a state sponsored non-denomination prayer, created by the New York Board of Regents, since this was under different jurisdiction. </span>