Boston Tea Party

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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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    The Boston Tea Party was an event in America earliest rebellion telling Britain that their control over the Colonists was over. The Sons of Liberty were tired of Great Britain controlled over the port and trades on tea that they wanted to send Great Britain a message as well as King George III. The events that took place was a message to Great Britain that we are through listing to you. The Tea Act which was passed by the British Parliament had a purpose behind it. The purpose behind the Tea Act

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    did the Boston Tea Party happen in the first place? On December 16, 1773, an incident took place in which 342 chests of tea belonging to the British East India Company were thrown from the British ships into the Boston Harbor by American patriots disguised as Mohawk Indians. The American colonies were protesting both a tax on the tea and a perceived monopoly. So in 1773 Parliament passed a tea act designed to aid the financially troubled East India Company by granting a monopoly on all tea exported

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    Boston Tea Party Essay

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    The Boston Tea Party      Most people have heard about the Boston Tea Party. When American’s dumped British Tea in Boston Harbor. But not everyone understands the importance of it, and why the Tea Party is still remembered today. It was on December 16, 1773, when American patriots disguised as Mohawk Indians threw 342 chests of tea belonging to the British East India Company from ships into Boston Harbor. “The Americans were protesting both a tax on tea (the Townshend

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    Dbq Boston Tea Party

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    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 of acts consisted of the Boston Port Act, Massachusetts Government

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    Boston Tea Party Dbq

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    The Boston Tea Party was a political protest by the Sons of Liberty in Boston, Massachusetts on December 16, 1773. The citizens of the colonies felt cheated due to the lack of representation in Parliament which caused unfair taxes colonists could not do anything about. In their opinion, they were British citizens as well and deserved the same rights given to those back in the mother country and to not have “virtual representation” where members of Parliament were chosen to speak for those across

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    Due to disagreements with the taxes on tea from the Townsend Acts, Sam Adams lead a group of protestors to dump tea from a ship in the Boston harbor. As Jack Rakove says in his book, Revolutionaries, “Had the value of the tea not been so dear, the Boston Tea Party might be remembered, if at all, as a minor piece of political theater” (Rakove 30). The British were dealing with debt from the seven years’ war and saw this attack on their property a direct insult to their sovereignty. Unlike many Loyalist

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    Essay Boston Tea Party

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    upon three British ships carrying tea, and threw over 90,000 pounds of tea into the harbor. However this was not the cause of the revolutionary war, it was multiple things that the British government did to the Americans to provoke them to fight back. Many think it was right what they did to the American colonist, but many know it was wrong and some even consider it to be illegal. The British Government put a tax on stuff for everyday use, like paper, stamps, tea, etc. The American colonist knew

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    The Boston Tea Party had aroused fury in Britain. One British official said that the people of Boston “ought to be knocked about their ears.” King George III declared, “We must master them or totally leave them to them- selves and treat them as aliens.” Britain chose to “master” the colonies. In 1774, Parliament passed a series of laws to punish the Massachusetts colony and to serve as a warning to other colonies. The British called these laws the Coercive Acts, but they were so harsh that the

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    The Boston Tea Party of 1773 was a statement made by angry colonists to the British Parliament that enough was enough. The colonists were enraged over Parliaments constant abuse of power. They wanted their independence and Parliament wanted no part of that, which fueled their cause and the incidents thereafter will go down in history as the most important endeavors in history. Leading up to the revolt were events that further agitated the colonists and began to strain the relationship between

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