The main piece of aggravation to the colonists was the Stamp Act. The Stamp Act was protested upon the principle “No taxation without representation”. This particular act affected virtually all the colonists and limiting economic success, and thus the colonists protested. An additional factor in the company was the Townshend Act. The British Parliament was illegally taxing. As a result, the colonists boycotted British goods (Document C). The Tea Act made the colonies economically inferior to that of England’s. The Tea Act was an act where the colonies merchants were being evaded and the British took over the trading. This hurt the economic success of the colonists, multitudes strengthened in resentment and soon after the Boston Tea Party followed (Document F). The British were furious at the colonial resistance to British law. In retaliation the Intolerable Act was passed. The Intolerable Act deactivated the Boston Port at Massachusetts Bay. Deactivating the port also deactivated the center of economic success for the colonies (Document H). England was also limiting the colonists to raw material production, which also hindered their economic success.…
These unbearable actions only left the colonists with a lot of anger and with the need to rebel against the Parliament. Some major acts that led the colonists to the American Revolution were, Sons of Liberty, the Boston Tea Party and Stamp Act Congress. The sons of liberty were an organization that fought for the Colonies. They believed in protecting the rights of the colonists and fight the over taxation brought by the British Parliament. This secret organization wouldn’t pay taxes and the women refused to wear clothes that didn’t come from America. The Sons of Liberty were first known because of the stamp act. They would take the tax collectors and threaten to tar and feather them. Next came the Stamp Act Congress, the first real congress in the Colonies. This Congress was one of the main rebellions that confronted the Parliament. In December all representatives of all the colonies gathered together to protest against the British, based on restriction of freedom and over taxation. This rebellious act made all the colonies unite for the first time. Finally came the Boston Tea Party. The Boston Tea party took place the December of 1773. There were 3 boats at the harbor filled of tea. The 3 boats were called The Beaver, Dartmouth and Eleanor. There was a decision made to return the ships to their origin, but the ship owners refuse to travel back.…
Daugh White Kara Conner History 108 11/24/15 Boston Tea Party Boston Tea Party occurred on a winter night of Thursday, December 16, 1773. It was a pre-revolutionary event of a direct protest that the colonialists used the tea tax that was levied by the British government. The Boston party resulted due to the resentment that the British colonialist had towards the Boston colonists. During the event, the Patriots were dressed as Mohawk Indians and attacked the British ships in the Boston harbor. After raiding the three ships, the Patriots dumped 342 containers of tea into the harbor. The group of Patriots, who were also called the Sons of Liberty, organized the incident and was led by Samuel Adams. It was composed of males from all the parts of the colonial society ('Boston Tea Party').…
Boston Tea Party The Boston Tea Party is typically viewed as one of the most popular, well-known events of the Revolutionary War. The Boston Tea Party occurred on the night of December 17, 1773. The colonists were fed up with Britain taxing them and trying to regain control. The Boston Tea Party was a direct response to the Tea Act, an act created to save the East India Tea company, left the colonists paying very high taxes on tea. Many people drank tea and enjoyed it very much so it left many of the colonists upset and angry.…
As a result of the Tea Party the British took action, the British shut down the Boston Harbor until all of that 342 chest of British East India company tea were paid for. This was under the Intolerable Acts of 1774. The Intolerable Acts, was passed by the British parliament in 1774 as a punishment of the destruction during the Boston Tea Party. American colonist responded with the “First Continental Congress” in september and october in 1774 to petition Britain repeal the Intolerable Acts.…
The act of american colonial defiance served as a protest against taxation. for more refuge seeking to boost the troubled East India Company, British Parliament adjusted import duties with the passage of the Tea Act in 1773. While consignees in Charleston, New York, and Philadelphia all very much rejected tea shipments,merchants in boston refused to concede to patriot pressure because they don’t want to sell the tea of traitors. On the night of December 16,1773, Samuel Adams and the Sons of Liberty…
The British brought the Tea Act to tax us on our tea.The British company had a difficult time selling and receiving money for there tea. At first, this was okay with us but after we found out that the East India Company were received a money from our taxes we were angry. We as the colonist did not appreciate this and were mad about it because we were paying a company that will not benefit…
In fact, the Tea Act infuriated the colonists, and with great reason. Eliminating tea merchants not only put the merchants out of work, but it also violated their right to conduct free enterprise. Free enterprise is an economic system where few restrictions are placed on business activities and ownership. In this system, governments generally have minimal ownership and intervention. The Parliament passing the Tea Act was completely unwarranted and uncalled for, so it was understandable for the colonists to be upset.…
In the period from 1756 to 1765 England was fighting the French in the Seven Years War in Europe. The English also fought the French in North America. The English won both at home and abroad, but at a high financial cost. The English government decided to make the American colonists pay for their protection against the French and help subsidise the costs of the Seven Years War. The American colonists, on the other hand, did not agree that they were vulnerable and believed they could protect themselves as they had done for the past one hundred years. So the British government passed acts such as the Townshend Revenue Act, which put a tax on tea, paper, paint, and lead. These acts forced the American colonists to pay off some of the great debt left by the Seven Years War. Some acts even allowed the British regular troops to stay in the colonists’ houses. The colonists were given no say in any one of these laws and acts. The colonists then began the outcry “No taxation without representation!” This eventually led to rebellion and the colonists went to war with Britain in 1775 in defence of their rights thus resulting in the American Revolution.…
Vicki Pappas 12/9/12 Boston Tea Party In 1773 parliament passed the tea act in which the British pay less for tax to ship places. This made the prices of tea lower from Britain. Since Boston's tea would be more expensive nobody would buy it from them. The tea act was just another problem adding up between the colonists and britain. This made the colonists want to be independent from Britain. The colonists decided to rebel and dumb three hundred and forty two chests of tea into the Boston Harbor. The act was given the name the Boston Tea Party. Most of the British thought of the Boston Tea Party as an act of terrorism. Really the Boston Tea Party was just another step to independence for the colonists.…
The colonists were angry because of the Intolerable Acts in addition to the other acts of the British Government where the taxed the colonists without any representation in Parliament. England was also forcing…
In the 242 years it’s been since December 16th, 1773, The Boston Tea Party still continues to influence American Society to this very day. A famous protest by colonists against British taxes, Massachusetts citizens, disguised as Mohawk Indians, climbed aboard the three ships docked at Griffin’s Wharf, The Dartmouth, The Eleanor, and The Beaver. Utilizing the hatchets they carried with then, they tore open 342 crates of tea and dumped it all into the Boston harbor. Leading up to the incident, the crippling debt from the lasting French and Indian War and the impending demise of Britain’s treasured East India Company became the most powerful catalysts to spur the rebellious action. More so, following the destruction of the tea, the King, and Parliament,…
Boston Tea Party 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.…
The truth of the accounts that took place December 16, 1773, a day remembered by Americans as The Boston Tea Party, is one that is disputed. It seems as though there is a basic story of American patriots dressed as Indians, carrying tomahawks and hatchets boarding three ships in the Boston Harbor and throwing overboard over 300 cargo containers full of British East-Indian Company tea that was sent by England to tax the colonies without agreement. These acts were carried out without damage to any other goods aboard or the vessels themselves, and without anyone being harshly injured.…
The incident that has been termed the Boston Tea Party occurred on December 16, 1773, when government officials in Boston refused to return three shiploads of taxed-imposed tea to Britain. A group of colonists boarded the ships in disguise and destroyed the tea by throwing it into Boston Harbor (BTPHS). The Tea Act of 1773 essentially allowed one of Britain’s greatest commercial interests of the day, The East India Company, a monopoly over tea imports to all British colonies. Due to increased competition from the Dutch and the already high tax the Crown placed on tea, the East India Company had a surplus of tea. The solution that King George III and Parliament came up with was to force this tea on the colony (Knollenberg 93). Basically, a captive market was created for British products by the British Government. There was fear amongst the colonists that this could extend to products other than tea. The colonists’ actions and the government reaction widened an already growing chasm between Crown and colonists (Larabee 106).…