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The Aftermath And Acts That Followed The Boston Tea Party

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The Aftermath and Acts That Followed the Boston Tea Party

Karla Valeria Gonzalez
Formatted Rough Draft

Mr. Isaac G. Pietrzak
U.S. History 1301
November 4, 2016
On the Thursday of December 16th of the year 1773, several men began to dump what is now worth over a million dollars of British tea into the Boston Harbor. This later became known as the famous Boston Tea Party. The Boston Tea Party was the initial cause of the American Revolution and the freedom America has gained. The Boston Tea Party was also the beginning of all of the aftermath that followed it. The Intolerable Acts, the Continental Congresses, and battles following the Boston Tea Party were the beginning to America’s freedom.
To start off, the Intolerable Acts were a part of the effects of the Boston Tea Party. They were basically a punishment from Britain to the colonists of Boston, Massachusetts for dumping their tea into the harbor. Some of the most known Intolerable Acts are the Boston Port Act, Quartering Act, Massachusetts Government Act, and the Administration Justice Act. Not only were the Intolerable Acts put into place after the colonists dumped tea into the harbor, but there were some agreements that the colonists made with Britain. For instance one of the many agreements made together was the, “Boston Non-Importation Agreement.” It was made in August 1, 1768. This agreement was from the colonists to Britain, although most of the Intolerable Acts actually derived from

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