they sold wigs, hats, bonnets, candy, games, pencils, utencils, tea cups, plates, bowls, and fans.
hope this helps! XP
This is right but there is a lot more than this. -CD67
Merchants sell things then and now.
It allowed the British East India Company to ship tea to the colonies without having to pay the taxes that colonial tea merchants had to pay. That allowed the Company to sell tea very cheaply, but it also threatened to drive the colonial merchants out of business.
The Tea Act of 1773 allowed the British East India Company to sell tea directly to the colonies, effectively undercutting colonial merchants by eliminating their role as middlemen. This led to widespread resentment among colonial merchants who felt threatened by the monopoly granted to the company. The act sparked protests, culminating in events like the Boston Tea Party, where colonists dumped British tea into Boston Harbor in defiance of the law. Ultimately, it intensified colonial opposition to British taxation and governance.
Smuggling
The colonial merchants benefited positively by the triangular trade. Several merchants, particularly those in Rhode Island, took the place of Europe in the triangle.
They sell things like other merchants.
Colonial tea merchants had more reason to resist the tea act. The new law allowed the East Indian company to sell tea directly to the colonial shopkeepers at lower prices than the merchants, without being taxed, and the merchants lost a lot of money.
Merchants sell things then and now.
eva main
Merchants sell their products in stores and online.The government often controls what products that merchants can sell.When merchants cannot sell an item, they put it on sale.
farts and apples
at the merchants and stores allover the land
It allowed the British East India Company to ship tea to the colonies without having to pay the taxes that colonial tea merchants had to pay. That allowed the Company to sell tea very cheaply, but it also threatened to drive the colonial merchants out of business.
tea merchants
Wealthy merchants
The Tea Act of 1773 allowed the British East India Company to sell tea directly to the colonies, effectively undercutting colonial merchants by eliminating their role as middlemen. This led to widespread resentment among colonial merchants who felt threatened by the monopoly granted to the company. The act sparked protests, culminating in events like the Boston Tea Party, where colonists dumped British tea into Boston Harbor in defiance of the law. Ultimately, it intensified colonial opposition to British taxation and governance.
A number of merchants sell Navy clothing. One can purchase such clothing from merchants including 'Old Navy', 'Glenndinings Menswear', 'Macy's' and 'Walmart'.