The Coercive Acts known to the colonist as the Intolerable Acts were the British response to the Boston Tea Party. In December 1773, colonist boarded a British cargo ship and dumped 90,000 lbs. of tea into the Boston Harbor in protest of the Tea Act. The Prime Minister of England, Lord North, responded by passing four laws that would punish the colonist for the destruction of the tea. The first law was that Boston Harbor would be closed until the colonist paid for the destroyed tea. This law was meant to cripple commercial life at one of the biggest hubs of commerce in the colonies. The second law, gave the governor the power to appoint all the judges, sheriffs, and officers of the court. This law also made it illegal for town meetings, except for the election of the…
Intolerable Acts – After the Boston Tea Party, the British passed laws in the mid-1770s that were geared towards making a punitive example to other colonies. However, this did not work in favor of the British, but rather pushed the colonists closer to the…
The constitution guarantees to appoint at least one representative for every thirty thousand residents of a state to be present to determine the amount of taxes per state. Before America's independence England taxed the colonies without any representation. This lead to the Boston tea party where the colonists rebelled against England by the throw barrels of tea in the ocean which were highly taxed. Because of the colonists’ experiences with the unjust power of England they made sure that no one was unfairly taxed. The colonists additionally experienced the absolute power of kings and avoided the possibility of nobility by outlawing titles. Through the Constitution, the colonists sought to create a nation the avoided the faults of England…
On the night of December 16, 1773, a band of Bostonians dressed as Native Americans boarded the British merchant ship Dartmouth and two other companion vessels anchored at “Griffin's Wharf” in Boston harbor. The Americans who had around 70 men, all hated the tea tax.There mission to destroy all the cargo of British East India Company tea. Many years later George Hewes shoemaker and participant in the Boston tea party. He remembered "We then were ordered by our commander to open the hatches and take out all the chests of tea and throw them overboard. And we immediately proceeded to execute his orders, first cutting and splitting the chests with our tomahawks, so as thoroughly to expose them to the effects of the water." Urged on by a crowd of cheering townspeople. The Bostonians destroyed 342 chests of tea estimated to be worth between 10,000 and 18,000 in their currency. This event became known as the Boston Tea Party that pushed us towards the American Revolution.…
Sons of Liberty dressed as Mohawk Natives and boarded British ships filled with tea. They broke open the cases of tea and spilled out the tea into the Boston Harbor. I heard that they destroyed 342 cases of tea. The Sons of Liberty tried to show their anger towards the Tea Act. Due to their immature actions, the Boston Harbor was closed and more soldiers were sent over to monitor the colonists. They have wasted a humongous amount of money, so now they have to face the consequences. Britain had the right to punish the colonists from Boston. They could have done another boycott or protest, but not a foolish action like this.…
The American Revolution has its roots in 1585 when an expedition, guided by Sir. Walter Raleigh, founded the English colony of Virginia, and in 1620 when 105 Pilgrim Father landed in Massachusetts, from the Mayflower. They signing a pact which commitmented them to a creation of a civil political society. With time, there was the creation of 13 colonies. Despite the presence of a governor appointed by the King of England, the king gave substantial political freedom of self-government but certain restrictions contrasted with the home country are economics.…
In 1774, the Tea Act was enforced on American colonists and the start of an uproar began to break out on American topsoil. Furthermore, the Tea Act was generally created to gain financial revenue off the American colonists in hopes of the global British Empire expanding, after the British parliament gained control over the East Indies Company (Foner 148). Additionally, when large shipments of tea started to arrive at Griffin’s wharf, American colonists immediately began pondering ways to eliminate this exploit from happening. Many pioneers gathered at Governor Hutchison’s to withhold a meeting regarding the actions Hutchison planned on taking to prevent the landing of tea shipment. After Governor Hutchison did not give them a definite answer,…
The nickname “The Boston Tea Party” that refers to the rebellious actions of dumping tea into Boston harbor was actually given in a later time period. The original name that colonist described it as was “The Destruction of the Tea”.1An important man named George Robert Twelves Hewes gives a personal recollection of his participation during the prerevolutionary war. Hewes was renounced a hero in his later years towards his hundredth birthday. He was the last know survivor of the massacre, a leader during the tea party, and a privateer. Hewes’ story helps identify how ordinary men were treated in the American and their opinions of equality in the late eighteenth century. A revolution was necessary to impede…
On December 16, 1773 a group of men from the Massachusetts colony had boarded three British tea ship as Mohawk Indians. They were protesting the taxes that the British had put in place on tea and had dumped 342 chests of tea in the harbor. The Boston Tea Party lead to the Revolutionary War by upsetting the Colonists due to the unfair taxation, overbearing British rule and the overgrowing differences between American and British beliefs.…
On December 16, 1773, a monumental event took place that was crucial to the growth of the American Revolution. This event was known as The Boston Tea Party, taking place in Boston, a city in the British colony of Massachusetts. Massachusetts Patriots were in immense disapproval on how parliament was trying to monopolize the market on American tea importation granted to the East India Company (Boston Tea Party).…
The Boston Tea Party is a popular trademark in our world’s history because of the crimes that took place. The Boston Tea Party is known all around the world. Colonists came up with the idea to hijack boats to get into all of the tea and dump it into the waters because, they were upset about tea being taxed. Those actions caused chaos with many people. The Boston Tea Party was an act of terrorism because 16 colonists created violence by committing crimes, damaging property, and starting violence toward people.…
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 American colonists experienced much turbulence in their journey to fight for the ultimate cause that shaped our country. In 1774, the Intolerable Acts were passed which would act as a prelude to the American Revolution. The Coercive Acts also known as Intolerable Acts were an unfair set of different acts placed upon the colonists resulting in popularization of the idea concerning self-government and unalienable rights held by each human. The Intolerable Acts, were several different acts that punished the colonists after The Boston Tea Party incident. After the acts were passed the colonists responded by uniting, “raising money, sending supplies, and [continuing to boycott], as well as burning British tea,” (Shi & Tindall 132).…
Historical narratives are protean; as these stories are told and re-told throughout the ages, they morph with each passing from one mouth to another. "Historical narratives are ... also metaphorical statements which suggest a relation of similitude between such events and processes and the story types that we conventionally use to endow the events of our lives with culturally sanctioned meanings." The myth we know as the Boston Tea Party was not always the coherent narrative we recognize today. With each passing generation, different groups have appropriated the public memory of the Destruction of the Tea in Boston Harbor to forward their own agendas. Specifically, women’s suffragists throughout…
The Boston Tea Party was a significant event in the years leading up to the American Revolution. By 1773 tensions were mounting as British America’s relationship with Mother England became increasing strained. The British Empire has secured victory in the French and Indian Wars but had run up an incredible war debt. King George III and the British Government looked to taxing goods in the American colonies as a means to replenish its treasury. It was in this the passing of the Tea Act 1773 that ignited a standoff and brought the issue of taxation without representation in Parliament to head. As a result, the colonists took action and began overt revolt to British rule in the Americas (Boston Tea Party Historical Society). This paper will explore the incidents that led up to the Boston Tea Party and its impact on subsequent events leading up to the American Revolution.…