In 1773, on a December night in Boston there were three ships sitting in the Boston Harbor. The Dartmouth, the Eleanor, and the Beaver were the ships names. All three of those ships were carrying tea. The tea wasn’t unloaded because residents were angry because they were threatened not to buy the tea or use it. People of Boston were angry at the government of Boston that passed the “ Tea Act” since the Tea Act passed the law said the colonists had to get there tea from the East India Company. The Tea Act was putting tax on tea sold by other companies other than the East India Company. A group of colonists wanted to make things change was the Sons of Liberty. Led by Samuel Adams and John Hancock. They had secret meetings and then took action
on December 16, 1773, Samuel Adams organized a group of men called the Sons of Liberty. They dressed up as Mohawk Indians. They boarded three ships in the Boston Harbor and threw 342 chests of tea overboard. It took nearly three hours to accomplish this. The British Parliament passed the Tea Act on April 27, 1773 which was a import tax and it raised the price of tea to three cents per pound on all tea sent to America.
The Tea Act was passed on May 10, 1773, and really didn’t implement any new tax. The tax on tea had existed since the 1767 Townshend Revenue Act, in which glass, lead, paint, paper, and oil were also taxed. Because of the numerous protests and boycotts, all the taxes were repealed, except for the one on tea. That tax was kept to prove a point that Parliament still held the right to tax the American colonies. The passing of the Tea Act angered the colonists; the act granted the British East India Company a monopoly on tea sales.
colonists that were led by the Sons of LIberty, wanted the ships to return to England while the Governor Thoman Hutchinson refused to let ships go back to England the other leader known as Samuel Adams organized what is known as the “tea party” with a rough estimate of about sixty members of the Sons of Liberty. That night the members of the Sons of LIberty disguised as Indians with Mohawks boarded the three ships and dumped the three hundred and forty-two barrells of tea into the harbor which was worth roughly $18,000-$19,000. After the Boston Tea Party parliament, was angry with the destruction of British property and enacted the Coercive Acts, also known as the Intolerable Acts, in 1774. The Coercive Acts shut down the Boston Harbor until all of the tea that was dumped into the Harbor was paid for.
Till this day, the Boston Tea Party is considered to be one of the most powerful movements that helped lead up to a revolutionary war against Great Britain. Some people may view it as a time when colonist dumped tea into the Boston harbor. For others, it was a time that made America stronger than ever. So why was dumping tea into the Boston harbor such a big deal for America?
Colonists believed that Britain was implementing taxes upon them unfairly. Colonist reacted by throwing tea of the Boston Harbor. An event that would later be called the Boston Tea Party. Colonists did not react well to the many taxes.
During this time, the American colonists were still under Great Britain’s rule. The colonists thought it was unfair that they were being taxed with no say and were being ignored by the Parliament and the King. The British government gave the British East India Company a monopoly on the tea trade. Not only did this give a price increase in the tea, but it also gave the British Parliament and king a tremendous amount of power over the colonists. Also, according to document E, a poem written by “A Zealous Daughter of Liberty” as a warning to countrymen about the tea act, it expresses not only the
The Tea Act was enacted as a way for Britain to salvage the bankrupt-bound East India Company that needed to sell about 17 million pounds of tea that was sitting untouched in London. The act allowed the company to sell directly to the colonies without paying those burdensome duties, it would undercut the smuggling of Dutch tea, and it had nothing to do with taxes. Lord North was in charge of the colonies obedience, in other words he was the warden, specifically having to deal with the problem-child a lot, New England. Committees of Correspondence told colonists that the British's cheap tea was a clever conspiracy, so the colonists would tolerate taxation without consent. This angered the colonists, so a large shipment of tea left for the colonies, and the colonists' passion for justice and liberty would outweigh their love for tea in mid December of 1773.
On December 16, 1773, a large group of men disguised as Native Americans bordered the tea ship and they threw 342 cases of tea into the harbor that lasted for 3 hours. Parliament passed 4 laws because the British government were outraged with what they did with the tea. These laws were so harsh that the colonists called them the Intolerable Acts. One law was that they closed the port to Boston. Two others increased the powers of the royal governor, abolished the upper house of the Massachusetts legislature, and cut the powers of town meetings.
First, I will be addressing the Tea Act of 1773 which was implemented by Great Britain and proved unfair against the colonists, then Britain's response to the rebellion of the colonies, and lastly why the
The British increased import duties on the tea to support the troubled East India Company, which resulted in Charleston, New York and Philadelphia rejecting the shipment of tea. However, Samuel Adams and other colonists boarded the ships in Boston harbor and threw away the trunks of tea into the sea (Hagist, 2013). In retaliation, the British passed various punitive coercive acts. In this way, a series of events and wars followed between British and the colonists, which ensued the Congress to adopt the Declaration of
The Tea act received a boycott and also a great deal of violence well. On December 16, 1773, colonial rage resulted in the “Boston Tea Party”. The Sons of Liberty dressed as Native Americans dumped 100 crates of tea into the ocean. Many will say the colonists did the action on their own; though, they needed to carry out an action that would gain the attention of the British. Though, the attention that was gained, was not what the colonists had in
There were two different acts called the Tea Act and the Stamp Act. The Tea Act put heavy taxes on the tea sent to America. However, this tax did not include the tea brought by the British East India company. Every other tea company’s tea would be more expensive due to the added tax. The colonists felt that they were being forced to buy from the British East India company.
The Boston Tea Party was a violent, courageous, and an eventful act that took place in 1997 because of constant disputes. It started to become a large issue when the British and English colonist constantly disagreed about the unfair taxes that were charged from the British. The colonists didn’t agree to the taxes at all the the government officials formed a plan. The British put such a hefty tax on the tea because they realized the demand was so outrageously high, and they could make a much larger profit off of it. Colonists did not want to pay the huge taxes, so they started buying/smuggling tea from East India, but the British wanted to have the colonists to buy tea from them because of the taxes.
and they too were attacked so they had to fire into the mob. Parliament passed the Tea Act, which gave the British East Indians company a complete monopoly of the American tea business meaning the colonists could only buy tea from this company. The colonists opposed this law even though it lowered the price of tea. They viewed the tea Act as merely another example
Tensions were high in Boston between the British and the Colonists. Between the Boston Massacre in 1770 and the Boston Tea Party in 1773, Britain was very upset with Boston. King George III, the Lord North- led British government and many of the British citizens were very upset and irritated when they found out that the Boston colonists had made “Tea with salt water”. Once the parliament heard of their escapade, they began thinking of a way to insure that there would be no more uprisings in the Massachusetts colony.