"Boston Tea Party" Essays and Research Papers

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    the Tea Party Movement When most people think about the Tea Party Protest‚ they think about the Boston Tea Party. On December 16‚ 1773‚ a group of colonists boarded ships loaded with tea and destroyed it by throwing it into the Boston Harbor. The basis of the protest comes from the famous saying “no taxation without representation.” After the Tea Act was passed‚ tea became one of the next items in the new world to bear a tax. Although the basis for the movement is similar‚ the Tea Party Protests

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    George Robert Twelves Hewes. Hewes was a Boston shoemaker‚ who at the age of twenty-eight witnessed four of his closest friends shot to death by The British red coats; he also participated in many of the key events of the Revolutionary crisis.1 Hewes recollections of the events that took place were passed along in the monograph The Shoemaker and the Tea Party: Memory and the American Revolution by Alfred F. Young. His recollections of the dumping of the tea into the harbor lead the reemergence of

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    3 September 2014 The Shoemaker and the Tea Party In the colonies during the Revolutionary Era‚ “where one ended up in life depended very much on where one started out”(Young 15). George Robert Twelves Hewes proved this wrong. His experiences growing up and being involved in this era changed the way he felt about himself and the humble social class he was a part of. These experiences led him to not defer his social betters. “We have evidence to take stock of Hewe’s role in three major events of

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    Massachusetts‚ whose artisans in 1767 produced 40‚000 pairs of shoes. Hewes therefore occasionally worked on fishing boats off Newfoundland‚ and in 1770 was jailed for a £7 debt. Hewes started to turn against the royal government after it sent troops into Boston in 1768. He learned to carry rum to placate sentries. Once‚ he complained to a captain about a sergeant ’s not paying for shoes‚ then was horrified by how harshly the army punished the man: 300 lashes. Later‚ he saw a grenadier steal a bundle of clothing;

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    An early example of a protest at sea was the Boston Tea Party by the Sons of Liberty in Boston in 1773. An entire shipment of tea sent by the East India Company was destroyed by these American colonists in defiance of the Tea Act of 1773. The main goal of the Tea Act was to aid the financially struggling British East India Company by reducing the excess of tea held by the company. Colonists protested to the Tea Act as they believed that it violated their rights as Englishmen to “No taxation without

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    he Boston Tea Party (referred to in its time simply as "the destruction of the tea" or by other informal names and so named until half a century later‚[2]) was a political protest by the Sons of Liberty in Boston‚ a city in the British colony of Massachusetts‚ against the tax policy of the British government and the East India Company that controlled all the tea imported into the colonies. On December 16‚ 1773‚ after officials in Boston refused to return three shiploads of taxed tea to Britain‚ a

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    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 Boston Port Act

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    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

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    The Tea Party Then and Now

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    The Tea Party Then and Now Gerald Beaudet – PLS 220 Capstone In Boston the Tea Party of 1773 forever changed the face of America. In Chicago on February 23rd of 2009 Rick Santelli proclaimed it was time for a “Chicago style Tea Party in July.” (Santelli‚ 2009)Those words spoken by Rick Santelli started a grass roots movement that has changed politics and has influenced elections ever since. During the founding of our nation one important event stands true as one of the most important events

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    Williamson. 2012. The Tea Party and the Remaking of Republican Conservatism. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Goneya‚ Don. 2013. “Amid Declining Popularity‚ The Tea Party Prepares to Fight”. Retrieved December 24‚ 2013. (http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2013/12/24/256859872/amid-declining-popularity-the-tea-party-prepares-to-fight) In The Tea Party and the Remaking of Republican Conservatism‚ Vanessa Williamson and Theda Skocpol take an in-depth look high contentious Tea Party groups Williamson

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