The Boston Tea party was a political protest that took place on December 16, 1773 after the colonists got fed up with paying taxes on British tea. The British parliament put taxes on their imports to America. After colonists thought this was illegal and unfair, the British parliament stopped taxing all goods except tea. Few years later they passed out the Tea Act, which brought out the East India Company to relieve their debt. This company actually earned a lot of money by trading with America but the colonists thought this would put local British tea sellers out of business due to no customers. This led the Sons of Liberty to overthrow 342 crates of tea from the East India Company into the Boston Harbor.…
The Tea Party was the culmination of a resistance movement throughout British America against the Tea Act, which had been passed by the British Parliament in 1773. Colonists objected to the Tea Act because they believed that it violated their rights as Englishmen to "No taxation without representation," that is, be taxed only by their own elected representatives and not by a British parliament in which they were not represented. Protesters had successfully prevented the unloading of taxed tea in three other colonies, but in Boston, embattled Royal Governor Thomas Hutchinson refused to allow the tea to be returned to Britain.…
Boston Tea Party – The Boston Tea Party was initiated as a result of the defiance of the taxation acts that were passed by the British Parliament. While some colonies such as New York conceded to the passes of acts such as the Tea Act, Boston did not partake in the same. On December 16th 1773, Sons of Liberty under Samuel Adams attacked a ship ferrying tea and threw the merchandise overboard which led to the British enacting the Coercive Act in 1774. This push and pull stunts led the colonists closer to the revolution.…
British merchants were greatly affected by the colonists determined boycott protests, that they begged parliament to stop the Stamp Act. February 1766, the Act was canceled. But the British didn’t stop, they were resilient and came up with newer Acts and ways of taxing the American colonies. The British parliament passed Acts such as the Declaratory Act, the Townshend Act, the Tea Act and the Coercive Act that further angered the colonists by making them feel restricted, ignored and unfairly treated. 4 1676, Charles Townshend, new finance minister, came up with the Townshend Act.…
The Tea Act was a significant occurrence that affected many colonists which passed by Parliament in May 10, 1773. The tea act affected the people during that time, because the British wanted the colonists to only buy one brand of tea called the East Indian tea brand.…
The goal of this was to help keep the company alive as it was on the brink of Bankruptcy. The Tea Act enabled the single company to price its tea competitively by avoiding Middle Agents (Norton, 2015). A few leaders in the colonies saw this move from Parliament as a move to grant monopoly to one company and the right for England to impose Taxation on the American Colonies. This resulted in the famous Boston Tea Party event. Thanks to Tea Acts interpretation by the Colonies and the Boston Tea Party, Parliament passed even greater legislations that quickly spun American Colonist to the brink of…
In Boston, Massachusetts, the Sons of Liberty protested Parliament's passage of the Tea Act in 1773 by throwing tons of taxed tea into Boston Harbor, an act that came to be known as the Boston Tea Party. News of the event reached England in January 1774. Parliament responded with a series of acts that were intended to punish Boston for this illegal destruction of private property, restore British authority in Massachusetts, and otherwise reform colonial government in America.…
The purpose of the Tea Act was to sell with more simplicities and to lower costs for the immense quantities of tea preserved in the stores in London and to fight the problem of smuggling tea in the colonies. All of this was seen by the colonists as an attempt to damage their commerce, often driven by the smuggling of tea. The solution was the action of protest remembered as the Boston Tea Party. In order to understand the cause for the protest of the Boston Tea Party, it’s important to investigate the continuous increase of the taxes on sugar, on coffee, on wine and on paper imposed from Great Britain.…
The reason this Act was established to help the British East India Company with their financial trouble. This Act granted the company the right to directly ship its tea to North America. The colonies objected to paying the taxes as they had before by boycotting imported tea; they also shut down the Boston Harbor and refused to unload a shipment of tea from an awaiting ship. A group of men called the Sons of Liberty revolted, disguised as Native American Indians and under the guise of night, boarded the ship and dumped the tea into the harbor. This event led to the American Revolution (BRITISH TEA ACT OF…
The British were in a lot of debt from the Seven Years War. Their solution was to tax the colonies and restrict their trade with things like the Sugar Act and Stamp act. This displeased the Americans because it was very costly for them and they had no representation in parliament. The colonist wanted to have real representation and not virtual. The British ended up changing repealing the acts but only to replace it with the Declatory Act which gave them the right to enforce any legislation. This outraged the colonists but the British moved troops in the colonies. Then the British took over the whole industry which meant the colonists had to pay Britain to get tea which made them very mad. So they began…
The Sugar Act taxed all common goods such as sugar, lumber, animal skins, and whale bone. The colonists responded in a mild protest, but it was not a huge issue for most. The next act past was the Stamp Act. The stamp act highly taxed stamps and made it so every paper had to have a stamp. The colonist were very angry about this act so they rioted until the act was repealed. The next revolutionary act was the Townshend Acts. This taxed common goods such as paper, tea, paint, and glass. The colonists responded to this act by boycotting British goods. Eventually British government repealed all the taxes except for the one on tea. This was not good enough for the colonist, they wanted all the taxes destroyed. They acted on this by going out in the middle of the night and throwing in 342 crates of tea into the Boston Harbor. As a punishment British government passed the Intolerable acts. There was four laws included in this act, the Boston Port Act, Massachusetts Government Act, Administration of Justice Act, and the Quartering Act. In the Boston Port Act the Boston Port was closed until the people of Boston had payed for it all. This was very significant because that port was used to import food, the citizens would starve without it. The Massachusetts Government Act stated that all town meetings or…
Both the Stamp Act and the Tea Act were laws that the colonists highly detested. The Stamp Act required that all legal documents contained a stamp that could only be purchased from an official tax collector. This angered the colonists because Britain was using it as a direct way to make money for themselves and the colonists didn’t get to decide how the tax should have been executed. This one act was seen as something that could open the doors to many more just like it. The classically heard phrase, “No taxation without representation”, was the biggest issue here. Even though the British did believe the colonists were being represented because the members of Parliament did think about all of their subjects when making laws, they were not. Parliament could not have been thinking about what was best for the colonists as they did not know. The Tea Act required that all tea be bought from the British East India Company in order to stop the company from going bankrupt. This meant that the colonists had no say in what they were drinking because they were forced to only buy from one company. It gave the British East India Company a monopoly on tea sales in the colonies. Once more this angered the colonists as they again had no say in this decision. A tiny island all the way across the ocean should not have been able to regulate the prices in the colonies. All of these requirements placed on the colonists made it impossible for them to look anything but weak to the rest of the world. The British gave them no leverage with any other global powers. These people in the colonies had been living on their own, far away for Britain for years and they deserved to be able to shape their own country and their own identities in any way they wanted because they were different than the British people.…
Problems started to escalate between the colonists and Britain in 1763, the seemingly peaceful time escalated into a full fledged battle. The problems were based on trade, taxes, and lack of representation in the British Parliament. The final example of how Britain pushed the colonists too far was with the Tea Act, which gave one tea company a monopoly over all others. This caused the colonists to retaliate by dumping all of the tea into Boston Harbor, creating the Boston Tea Party. Britain continued to try and keep America under their control, but on July 4, 1776, America wrote the…
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.…
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).…