Tea Party Essay

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    Tea is for those against Liberty The Boston Tea Party was ultimately an American act defying taxation. The British Parliament’s Tea Act of 1773 inhibited the colonists from paying normal prices for not only tea, but also stamps and sugar. Both sides, the British and the colonists, were affected in paramount effect. The colonists didn’t feel that they deserved the unjust taxes placed upon them while the British had a major debt after the war that they attempted to diminish. The combination of these

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    The American revolution had many twists and turns for the people that lived through it and some people had more of an impacted on its outcome than others. The story of “The Shoemaker and the Tea Party” traces the life a Bostonian by the name of George Robert Twelves Hewes that played a key role in supporting the revolution. The author of this story, Alfred F. Young, recounts Hewes experiences in the form of a biography explaining multiple account that Hewes was involved in. Young travels through

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    Boston Tea Party The Boston tea party was assembled by the Sons of Liberty on Thursday December 16th 1773 around 7:00 to 10:00 PM put on in front of a crowd of over 5,000 people this was an act of defiance of the Americas to Britain to the Tea Act of 1773, as well as taxation without representation or more well known as the Townshend Act of 1767. However it was just not these two factors which lead them to do this it was also the thought of Britain charging the colonists more for tea, ink, and many

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    The Boston Tea Party occurred on December 16, 1773, and is marked as one of the greatest catalysts of the American Revolution. Colonists were enraged by British taxation without proper representation after the French and Indian war. The war had cost the crown dearly and in response, parliament passed the Stamp Act in 1765 and the Townsend Revenue Acts in 1767 as an effort to replenish their depleted treasury. Parliament retraced the Stamp Act and the taxes put in place by the Townsend Acts, except

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    The Boston Tea Party Asceneth Flores Monday-Wednesday 9:00-10:50 November 15, 2017 In 1771, group of colonist protested many years of increasing British oppression, by making an attack on merchant ships that were being brought in at Boston Harbor. Due to this, the British then close down the ports, bringing even harsher penalties on the colonies. This famous act of American colonial resistance was to protest taxation without representation that the British were enforcing. British Parliament

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    What happened after the Boston Tea Party The article “The Spirt of ‘74” written by Ray Raphael discusses the problem that arose after the Boston Tea Party. The Boston Tea Party was a major event in history that showed that the colonists were happy with the high taxes on tea. They formed a group called the Sons of Liberty and dressed like Native Americans and threw crates of tea into the Boston Harbor. This was a major because it showed that the colonists weren’t going to let Parliament put taxes

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    American history is full of battles and freedom fighters. From the Boston tea party to voting rights. America fought against a king who was unfair and unjust. They may have had a civil war but it was also for the idea that rights were being taken away. The country has many amazing historical characters that made it the country it is today. This paper will discuss the Boston Tea Party, George Washington’s inaugural address, his warnings upon leaving office as well as the Boston Massacre, the Battles

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    oppressed, and overlooked colonists dumped 342 boxes of tea from Britain into the cold, dark depths of the Boston Harbor. The British Parliament had been gradually raising the colonists’ taxes, taxing anything that could possibly be taxed, continually pushing the colonists to the edge of rebellion. The Tea Act was passed on May 10, 1773, granting the British East India Trading Company a government sanctioned monopoly on tea, forcing the colonists to buy tea from Britain alone. Although it didn’t create any

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    Taking a Stand Against Britain and the Tea Tax: The Boston Tea Party On the cold night of December 16, 1773, the Sons of Liberty dumped about forty-six tons of British tea into the Boston Harbor, destroying the boxes and turning the water brown; however, this was not a violent protest. Many of them did not want any damage to be done to the three ships carrying the tea, the last of which had just arrived that morning. During the entire event, only a few people got injured. Most of the protesters

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    Dbq Boston Tea Party

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    On December 16, 1773, American colonists disguised themselves as Mohawk Indians, and threw chests of tea into the Boston Harbor. The Boston Tea Party was an act of protest against Parliament’s Tea Act of 1773, that was passed in order to save the British East India Company from bankruptcy. After the Boston Tea Party, Britain passed a series of laws that became known as the Intolerable or Coercive Acts, so that they could punish the Massachusetts colonists for their rebellious behavior. These series

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