On May 10, 1773, the British parliament passed the Tea Act and unlike the previous acts it didn’t impose new taxes and its main purpose was not to make more money from the colonies but to help out the East India Company which was struggling financially. The company was struggling because many colonists were boycotting tea to protest the tax on tea and as a result, the company had millions of pounds of unsold tea in its warehouses. The company was important to the British because it played a large role in their economy and the Tea Act gave the company a monopoly on the sales and importation of tea in the colonies. The Tea Act affected the colonists by causing merchants who were part of the illegal Dutch tea trade to lose business, forcing shop
Even though it was repealed, the British government still needed revenue to pay the debt of the war and would soon tax the colonists again. The Tea Act In 1773, the British government passed another tax. This time tea was taxed. The tax actually made the tea cheaper in the colonies.
Why the Patriots Had the Boston Tea Party- The Boston Tea Party was event during the American Revolutionary War. John Adams called it, “The Destruction Of Tea In Boston”. The tea that the colonists poured in the harbor was shipped in by the Dutch East India Company, one of the only companies who could sell to the colonies. The Patriots did this because they wanted their own government, to be free from Britain.
The British act finally pushed the colonists from protests was the Tea Act of 1773 proposed by Lord North was placed. It began when the East India company almost was in bankruptcy since their tea was barely bought; much of Britain's money was used for the French and Indian War and was not able to help the company get out of their crisis. The Tea Act of 1773 lowered the prices of tea and also added tax to it to the point it created monopoly and it caused colonial merchants to lose money since they were no longer able to sell tea within the colonies anymore. It also allowed the East India Company to be the only one to ship to the colonies which meant that the company was the only way for colonists to get tea from.
The tea act made it so that the colonists could only buy tea from the East India tea company; the East India tea company was given Monopoly over the sales of tea to the colonists. In theory, the British expected no backlash from the colonists because from the British viewpoint was that the colonists got cheap tea and did not have to pay for a British minister, in exchange for this, the British would take care of hiring governors to represent the colonists. However this “win-win situation” displeased the colonists. Another example of their discontent can be found in a statement made By George Washington “ The stamp act imposed on the colonies by, the parliament, of Great Britain is an ill-judged measure, Parliament has no right to put its hands in our pockets without our consent.” ( George Washington 1765).
The actual tea tax actually meant only political control of the Americans by the British, simply because the price of the tea would not change drastically. The tea was one of the most important commodities during the colonial times and the British believed that the Americans would live with the new tax and accept the British
The colonists had decided that they had enough of Britain and the King being unfair. All of the colonies were unhappy with the fact that they were being taxed without representation in parliament. “Disregarding American protests that the colonies could not be taxed because they were not represented in Parliament, in March 1765 the British government enacted a stamp tax to take effect in the American colonies on November 1, 1765”(Alexander 174). Many of the colonists were not happy with the Tea Act that was passed to help the East India Company that was struggling. The Boston Tea Party created tension due to the fact that colonists disrespected British cargo.
Once again, angry Patriots revolted and so the Townshend Duties were repealed, which led to a short period of peace between the colonies and Britain. However, the peace was shattered in 1773, when Lord North imposed a new Act, the Tea Act. The British East India Tea Company was close to going broke because of the boycott against British tea that many colonists participated in. The Tea Act gave Britain complete control over the tea trade and lowered the cost of the tea so it was dirt cheap. Lord North hoped to trick the colonists into buying the tea since it was extremely inexpensive, but the colonists knew that Parliament was still trying to tax them even though they weren’t represented in the government.
The problems they caused included the Sugar Act where everyone that imported molasses or sugar from foreign countries had to be taxed. Another very big problem for the colonists was the Tea Act, where the government taxed everyone for the tea they used because of the great amount of debt Great Britain was in. As a way to fight back, the colonists decided to dump tea worth more than one million dollars in the water. This event came to be known as the Boston Tea Party. After the Boston Tea Party, the British Parliaments came up with a set of laws called the Coercive Act that was known as the Intolerable Act to some people.
The Tea Act, although it greatly lowered the cost of tea, came with great resistance because if the colonists purchased the tea, they were acknowledging the ability for parliament to tax the colonies. The ability to tax the colonies was what the British needed to reduce their debt, but this is exactly what the colonists did not want because they felt that they could only be taxed by their own government in which they had representation. The Sons of Liberty reacted to the Tea Act by organizing a protest in which Sam Adams and John Hancock led a group of colonists dressed as Mohawk Indians for disguise to ships that carried tea that were stuck in the harbor without a place to unload their tea because of the boycott on tea. The Sons of Liberty went on to the boat and dumped three hundred forty two chests of tea overboard into the Boston Harbor. The British parliament responded to this by passing the Coercive Acts, known as the “Intolerable Acts” which shut down the Boston Harbor, gave control of the Massachusetts Government over to British control, allowed any british official accused of a crime be tried in Britain and for British soldiers to quarter in the private property of colonists.
The Tea Act allowed a company to send its demand of tea to America without paying any taxes. Colonists did this demonstration because they were angry at the British Government for taxing them without representation. The American Revolution was unavoidable. America was under the power of tyranny, which is why the colonists broke away for the British monarchy.
The Boston Tea Party was a pivotal event in American history that occurred on December 1773. It was a political protest against the British government's decision to impose taxes on tea imported into the American colonies. This event became a symbolic act of resistance against British tyranny and played a significant role in the American Revolution. the American colonists saw the Tea Act as yet another attempt by the British government to assert its authority over them.
The Tea Act was when the british put tax on their tea and it was the only tea that was affordable so the colonist went on a boycott to the british tea. Which lead to The Boston Tea
However, in 1773, the East India Company noticed that there was an overproduction of tea and its prices surely would decline (“The Third Imperial Crisis”). Tea was one of the, if not the, most valuable asset to many members in Parliament. Britain was forced to impose a new Tea tax on the colonists, which was aimed to keep the price of tea high. Even this act was reasonable in the eyes of the British, but to the colonists, this was just a British way of assuring dominance considering it was now for profit rather than to pay off debts. The response to the Tea Acts was the Boston Tea Party of 1773 (“The Third Imperial Crisis”).
King George III proposed and enacted the Tea Act on to the colonies. This single tax turned the tables on American life. The Tea Act led to the Boston Tea Party, which led to the American Revolution. The citizens of the colonies were angered by the constant control by the British, and eventually flipped, causing the entire colonies to up rise, and revolt.
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