Boston Tea Party/Intolerable Acts The Bostonians dressed as Indians boarded a British tea vessel and dumped their tea into the Boston Harbor in protest of the Tea tax. This is the reason for the Intolerable Acts. First Continental Congress-Second Continental Congress The Continental Congress was formed for the purposes of drawing an agreement within the colonies for action against the increasing threat of British occupation with war approaching.
The Tea Act was an excellent example of how the British treatment was extremely aggressive. For instance, Britain banned all sale on non-britain tea, which then lead to the colonists getting extremely aggravated. By doing this, the colonists of Boston, Massachusetts rebled by dressings as mohawks, and dumping all tea into the Boston Harbor, which soon would be called, “The Boston Tea Party”.
There were a lot of events leading up to the American Revolution. But there are three events that are important. These three events were the Stamp Act, the Boston Tea Party, and the Quartering Acts.
The purpose of the Intolerable Acts was to punish Massachusetts for the Boston Tea Party. Therefore, the British closed the port of Boston till all the tea had been paid for. Additionally,
Have you ever heard of taxation without representation? It means to be taxed without any say in the manner. This act caused us peaceful colonists to become fight back in self defense. I am a vandal and I know that us destroying over $1,000,000 worth of tea was an act of patriotism.
The Intolerable Acts were British laws passed by the parliament in Great Britain during the year of 1774. The Boston Massacre, which occurred on March 5th, 1770, and the Boston Tea Party, which happened on December 16th 1773, were both major events that led to the Intolerable Acts.
The Boston Tea party was a turning point in our history. It’s affected peoples lives, maybe
Rights movements are a big part of your history. Without them, our society would be totally different. Without Cesar Chavez, there would still be farm workers working unfairly in the fields. Without Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, the NCAA and many more, we would still be segregating busses, schools and public restaurants. Rights Movements are life changing events that happen like protests, boycotting and riots. The most famous riot is the Boston Tea Party. This was when patriots from Boston dumped tea into the Boston harbor to protest the tax on tea.
The law give the British East India Company control over the American yes trade. Tea would arrive in the colonies only in the trading company’s ships and could only be sold by merchant. A famous event, known as the Boston Tea Party, a group of men boarded on a ship and destroyed 342 chest of tea and throwing them in the Boston
Which was lead by Patrick Henry, George Washington, John and Samuel Adams, John Jay, and John Dickinson. The tribulations of the colonies first started with the proclamation in 1763 when they were forbidden to cross the Appalachian mountains and then continued through the Acts of Sugar and Currency by George Grenville which caused boycotts and made colonists incapable of barddening because they didn't have the British currency, however Britain was only concerned about paying their debt and improving the poor economy of Britain at the moment. A year later in 1765 Grenville issued the Stamp act; a direct tax that resulted in colonists protesting. Even Though there were certain groups formed who were against the British government this was the first time all the leaders officially met to form a strategy and a plan to protect the rights of the colonies. The rationale for the formation of the first continental congress was in response to the ‘Intolerable’ acts set by George III, who closed the Boston port, which was the largest trade port; affecting commerce greatly, putting merchants in financial crisis, and destroying the economy of America. This act also included, the Massachusetts Government Act, placing Massachusetts entirely under British control. The administration of Justice Act, allowing royal officials to be tried in Britain if the King felt it was necessary. The Quartering act which obligated colonists to take in the soldiers in their home to control the colonists and save money on food and shelter for the military. This resulted in protests in assemblies, because their homes have been invaded and no longer have privacy. The leaders thought the king was now crossing boundaries and the addition of Coercive ‘intolerable’ act on top of everything was preposterous and strengthened resentment. The congress was held in Philadelphia were all colonies except Georgia was
One of the most important events in America's history is the Boston Tea Party. The East India Company had lost a lot of tea that the company couldn’t sell into England, so the British decided to pass the Tea Act of 1773. The act allowed the East India company to sell their tea to the American colonists without any taxes. The American colonists were angry because the act would give the East India Company a monopoly on tea sales in the colonies, so the American colonists retaliated by dumping tea into the Boston Harbor. The group of American colonists who dumped the tea were the Sons of Liberty. In 2001, after September 11th, the US Congress passed the Patriot Act to fight off the threat of terrorist attacks in America. According to the
Andrews, a selectman of Boston, described the event in Boston on December 16, 1773. Days prior to the sixteenth, citizens from the county and neighboring towns, held mass meetings for the purpose of discussing what measures needed to be taken regarding the landing of the tea. Stubborn consignees in New York and Philadelphia refused to approve the reshipment of tea, but Thomas Hutchinson Governor of Boston refused to concede. On December 16, a Thursday morning a mass meeting was held in the Old South Meeting House, where Hutchinson would give a final answer. The committee informed the meeting, Hutchinson’s answer “consistent with the rules of government and his duty to the King he could not grant one without they produced a previous clearance from the office” and immediately the meeting was dissolved. That same evening Samuel Adams and friends, dressed as Indians from Narragansett, gathered upon Fort Hill and proceeded to Griffin’s Wharf, have they boarded ships Hall, Bruce, and Coffin. By nine o’clock that evening, they had destroyed ten thousand pounds of East India Company’s tea.
Can you imagine in today’s society, being told who you had to buy a product or service from regardless of what you thought? We remember learning about the story of The Boston Tea Party in grade school. The Boston Tea Party, was this the act of an angry mob, or was it the action of people defending their rights against Britain’s unfair tea tax? The colonists were told (by the Great Britain Government) they could only buy tea from a particular company that had high taxes. The tea that was loaded on three British ships (Beaver, Eleanor, and Dartmouth) were attacked and emptied of it’s tea cargo into the ocean. The reason for the high tax was to cut the amount of tea surplus the East India Trading Company had (Anderson, Dale., 2006).
September 2, 2015: Today is the day in which I begin my journey of digging deeper into the Boston Tea Party. Surely it wasn’t them just pushing tea off of boats. What drove them to that point, why dress up as Indians, was this truly the first major step in Americans gaining their freedom? While I am researching the Boston Tea Party I hope to answer these questions at the least but the more the better, for a title I’m thinking about making it Defiance of the Patriots. Sounds heroic.
When the Boston Tea Party occurred on the evening of December 16,1773, it was the culmination of many years of bad feeling between the British government and her American colonies. The controversy between the two always seemed to hinge on the taxes, which Great Britain required for the upkeep of the American colonies. Starting in 1765, the Stamp Act was intended by Parliament to provide the funds necessary to keep peace between the American settlers and the Native American population. The Stamp Act was loathed by the American colonists and later repealed by parliament.
own. Freedom of speech was important and America was based on protests. The most famous