Yes, because that made the british relize how powerful the.colonist really arr
Yes, because it told the colonists that rebellion was okay
get offline dummie Your rude^
get offline dummie Your rude^
the british
Yes, the Boston Tea Party was a significant turning point in the relationship between the British and the colonists. It demonstrated the colonists' growing resistance to British taxation and governance, leading to heightened tensions. In response, the British enacted the Coercive Acts, which further alienated the colonies and united them against perceived tyranny. This event ultimately fueled the momentum toward the American Revolution.
The colonists dressed up as Indians and threw british tea into the Boston Harbor and that act is now known as the Boston Tea Party
Boston tea party
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To protest British taxation of tea.
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.
The British taxes on goods created hard feelings between the British and colonists. British soldiers panicked during a protest and caused the Boston Massacre. The British repealed all taxes except the one on tea in an effort to prove to the colonists that they had the power to tax the colonies. The colonists protested and caused the Boston Tea Party.
The British closed the Port of Boston for a period of time, and increased taxes.