1. Using the critical thinking skills you have gained so far and referring to the materials provided for this assignment, identify two possible strategies that Thomas Hutchinson or Samuel Adams likely used to develop and improve their thinking as those historical events unfolded prior to taking a stand and acting according to their beliefs.…
Throughout the beginning of the country's political growth, the United States was divided into two basic political parties known as the Federalists and the Jeffersonian Republicans. While Jefferson and Madison's presidencies were opposed by the Federalists, some of their contributions supported the Federalist Party's beliefs.. While Jefferson and Madison's decisions in office were mainly based of off a strict construction of the constitution, some decisions came from a loose construction. These loose construction decisions can be seen in the Louisiana Purchase and Jefferson and Madison's support of the national bank.…
When the news of the “Tea Party” impacted Great Britain, King George lll and the Parliament were irritated.The Boston Tea was not the only one.There was approximately ten other tea party a example is Philadelphia, NYC, and Charleston.The King was frenzied with Boston behaver , The king decided to teach the colonists of Boston a lesson , with coerce! On March 28,1774, the parliament departed the Coercive Acts . they were set up by five laws that was mandatory onto the colonists of Boston.…
on the night of Decemeber 16, 1773 samuel adams and the group called the Sons of Liberty boarded thre ships in Boston Harbor and threw over 300 chests full of tea overboard into the Boston Harbor. THis pushed the two sided the British and the Patriots of Liberty closer to war. After several acts passed by British Parliment to detour the rebellion of the 13 Colonies to curb the rebelious acts of the Patriots of Liberty, the first Continental Congress petitioned the British monarch for repeal of the Acts and coordinated a Colonial resistance to the British.…
Samuel Adams was one of the delegates to the First Continental Congress representing Massachusetts. He was a great political figure during the American Revolution because of his strong commitment for colonial independence of Great Britain. Born in 1722, Adams went on to become a Harvard graduate and had previous studies of law. Although he was an unsuccessful tax collector and businessman he made an exemplary politician. He became a key player to the revolution and what later became known as the United States.…
In the story "John Adams and the Coming of the Revolution”, author David McCullough discusses how John Adams was asked to defend the British soldiers in court of the soldier’s accusation of man slaughter, following the Boston Massacre. Being such a problematic case that could ruin his reputation, John Adams accepted to defend the soldiers because of his experience in difficult cases, and his strong principles and beliefs. John Adam’s reputation did not even tarnish because of how skillfully he handled the case gaining the respect of the people of Boston.…
John Adams was the oldest son of Susanna and John Adams, born on October 30, 1735 in Massachusetts. Adams was always a bright student and received good grades throughout his school years. He went to Harvard College and later studied law with an attorney, only to become one of the best attorneys of Boston. Several years later, John Adams met an extremely intelligent woman named Abigail, whom he later married and had six children with. Abigail played a huge role in John’s life, supporting him greatly and helping his career a lot.…
December 6 ,1773 A group of colonist from Massachusetts dressed up as Indians dumped over 342 chests of tea into the Boston Harbor. It was a protest for the Tea Act of 1773 a act that placed a monopoly on Tea. The protest was organized by Samuel Adams with about 60 members of the Sons of Liberty the group that he also organized. The Coercive Acts closed Boston Harbor and established formal British military rule in Massachusetts.…
Starting in 1764, Great Britain enacted a series of measures aimed at raising revenue from its 13 American colonies. Many of those measures, including the Sugar Act, Stamp Act and Townshend Acts, generated fierce resentment among the colonists, who protested against “taxation without representation.” Boston, the site of the 1770 Boston Massacre and the 1773 Boston Tea Party, was one of the main points of resistance. King George III of Britain ramped up the military presence there, and in June 1774 he shut down the city’s harbor until colonists paid for tea dumped overboard the previous year. Soon after, the British Parliament declared that Massachusetts was in open rebellion.…
The Revolutionary War erupted many conflicts that the nation had to solve throughout its existence. The struggle for independence primarily revolved around the consequences before and after the wars collided. This Era caused Britain’s American colonies to separate from the empire (GML, Foner 175). Along with this came the 7 Year War that began when the French and Indian fought against Great Britain. After the war, the England government started taxing their own colonist for the damage. “No taxation without representation” became the colonists’ cry (Foner GML 180). The Boston Tea party was a rebellious act among the citizens due to over taxation on their tea, they spilled million dollars worth of tea into the ocean. President George Washington…
The great leaders of yesterday and today have proved to be very influential throughout history. A leader can be defined simply as someone who rises up and creates a path for those who cannot do it themselves. Samuel Adams led the United States through the process of gaining the new country an identity. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. guided the black community through southern racism, and is responsible for the advancement of civil rights in the twentieth century. Susan B. Anthony was the head of the women’s rights movement to gain female suffrage. All of these leaders share something in common; for without the support of the every day people of the world, none of the three would have been successful in their goals as leaders.…
As one of the founding fathers, Samuel Adams believed that Christianity and the Bible were important in the government. In his beliefs were the importance of freedom to the right of life, liberty and property. Adams wrote many quotes about God and the bible. His beliefs were that it was important to have a religion that gave constitutional right. Having a strong faith in God and scriptures, Adams worked toward protecting people’s constitutional liberties and American Independence. To Adam this was the way to constructing an upright…
The British East India Company, which held an official monopoly on tea import, had been hit hard by the colonial boycott." ( Houghton 99-101) The Boston Tea Party was organized and carried out by a group of patriots led by Samuel Adams known as the Sons of Liberty. Encouraged by the affects the Sons of Liberty had, over 5,000 people gathered at the Old South meeting house on December 16,1773 to decide what was to be done about the tea and to plan the Boston Tea Party. The Boston tea party lasted 3 hours on December 16, 1773 from 7:00 to 10:00 pm. The sons of liberty disguised themselves as American Indians. There were 3 ships involved and they were the Dartmouth, Eleanor, and lastly the Beaver. The ships were not British but they were American ships. Hundreds of people came and were involved in the Boston Tea party. Although nobody died during the Boston Tea Party and no violence between people had occurred there was one that was captured and took to prison he was from the Sons of Liberty and his name was Francis Akeley, he was the only person to be…
I am Samuel Adams, born on September 27, 1722 in Boston Massachusetts, and I was 59 when signed the Article of Confederation. I also signed the Declaration of Independence because I believed that the 13 colonies should have independence and freedom. When the Articles of Confederation was signed and published we realized that even though we could pass laws we had no power to enforce them. We depended on the states to do it, but they rarely did. This was ethics because they weren't following what the rules of the Articles of Confederation were saying. They weren't doing what was right for the people. I represented Massachusetts, but before I did I was a merchant. I also tried to become a brewer and a newspaper publisher that didn’t work out. I am a Congregationalist, which means I was basically Christian. I believe this was structure because we had to work as a team and build on an idea we thought the world should see and respect. This relates because we were trying to make a organized and structured government.…
Now Americans only paid a tax on tea to the East India Company, and after this tax was increased in 1773, the radical colonists reacted in the extreme with the hopes of drawing the British into a conflict. In December, 1773, a group of radicals dressed in Native American garb stormed a British tea ship and threw its cargo, worth an estimated three hundred million dollars in modern currency, overboard into the harbor in an act now known as the Boston Tea Party. As always, the radical colonists were attempting to provoke the British into open conflict. Their plan succeeded in 1774 with the publishing of the Coercive Acts, which closed the port in Boston, shut down the Massachusetts Assembly permanently, protected the right of British soldiers to be tried in Britain, forced the colonists to support the British military, and expanded the province of Quebec to oppose American westward expansion. The Coercive Acts, or Intolerable Acts as they were known in the colonies, mark the point where the British overreact to colonial rebelliousness, causing an irreparable rift. John Adams then wrote a document addressing Parliament that addressed eighteen grievances of the colonies. Colonists, both radical and elite together responded by forming Constitutional Associations, as a replacement for Nonimportation Associations, that emphasized public virtue in the form of patriotism to ensure unity…