It showed that the colonists strongly protested the tea tax.
In 1773, Britain's East India Company was sitting on large stocks of tea that it could not sell in England. It was on the verge of bankruptcy. In an effort to save it, the government passed the Tea Act of 1773, which gave the company the right to export its merchandise directly to the colonies without paying any of the regular taxes that were imposed on the colonial merchants, who had traditionally served as the middlemen in such transactions. With these privileges, the company could undersell American merchants and monopolize the colonial tea trade. The act proved inflammatory for several reasons. First, it angered influential colonial merchants, who feared being replaced and bankrupted by a powerful monopoly. The East India Company's decision to grant franchises to certain American merchants for the sale of their tea created further resentments among those excluded from this lucrative trade. More important, however, the Tea Act revived American passions about the issue of taxation without representation. The law provided no new tax on tea. Lord North assumed that most colonists would welcome the new law because it would reduce the price of tea to consumers by removing the middlemen. But the colonists responded by boycotting tea. Unlike earlier protests, this boycott mobilized large segments of the population. It also helped link the colonies together in a common experience of mass popular protest. Particularly important to the movement were the activities of colonial women, who were one of the principal consumers of tea and now became the leaders of the effort to the boycott.
Various colonies made plans to prevent the East India Company from landing its cargoes in colonial ports. In ports other than Boston, agents of the company were "persuaded" to resign, and new shipments of tea were either returned to England or warehoused. In Boston, the agents refused to resign and, with the support of the royal governor, preparations were made to land incoming cargoes regardless of opposition. After failing to turn back the three ships in the harbor, local patriots led by Samuel Adams staged a spectacular drama. On the evening of December 16, 1773, three companies of fifty men each, masquerading as Mohawk Indians, passed through a tremendous crowd of spectators, went aboard the three ships, broke open the tea chests, and heaved them into the harbor.As the electrifying news of the Boston "tea party" spread, other seaports followed the example and staged similar acts of resistance of their own.'
When the Bostonians refused to pay for the property they had destroyed, George III and Lord North decided on a policy of coercion, to be applied only against Massachusetts, the socalled Coercive Acts. In these four acts of 1774, Parliament closed the port of Boston, drastically reduced the powers of selfgovernment in the colony, permitted royal officers to be tried in other colonies or in England when accused of crimes, and provided for the quartering of troops in the colonists' barns and empty houses. The acts sparked new resistance up and down the coast.
It showed that the colonists strongly protested the tea tax.
sorry i dont no
9 colonist and 5 were left
Colonists justified their actions during the Boston Tea Party as a form of protest against the British government's imposition of taxes without representation. The Tea Act of 1773 granted the British East India Company a monopoly on tea sales, which many colonists viewed as an infringement on their economic rights and liberties. By dumping the tea into Boston Harbor, colonists aimed to express their anger and resistance to what they considered oppressive taxation and the erosion of their rights as Englishmen. This act of defiance was seen as a necessary step in the struggle for independence and self-governance.
The Tea Act, which would allow the East India Company to sell tea directly to the colonists with no tax. England thought the colonists would just buy the cheaper tea, but they rebelled with the Boston Tea Party because it put many merchants out of business.
None. Because they were dressed as Indians so they Eurpeans could arrest any of the culprits.
Due to the excessive fees many merchants--including a group of Boston restaurants whose collective decision was tagged as the "Boston Fee Party" by local papers--eventually refused to accept the American Express card.
they tried to repeal the acts because they thought that was Boston tea party was good payback for all the taxes put on them for no reason.
they tried to repeal the acts because they thought that was Boston tea party was good payback for all the taxes put on them for no reason.
The Boston Tea Party occurred in Boston. Many crates of tea were dumped into the Boston Harbor during the Boston Tea Party. that's all i can think of
there were about 45 tons thrown out of the three boats in Boston Harbor at the Boston Tea Party
The Boston tea party served notice on the British that the American colonists were fed up with the continually increasing number of commodities that the British were levying taxes on. The British required the colonists to buy many things from them, the British. The Americans had been happy to bypass buying tea from the British, and instead bought tea from various American smugglers at a very lower cost. The British finally caught on to this and blocked the smugglers' ships, forcing the colonists to again purchase from the British. It didn't take long for the Sons of Liberty to set up a protest, posing as Huron Indians . . . this was the Boston tea party, which involved dumping bales of British tea into Boston Harbor.