Penelope Barker
Penelope Barker was a prominent figure in the American Revolution who organized and led the Edenton Tea Party. In 1774, she rallied 51 women from Edenton, North Carolina to sign a protest known as the "Edenton Tea Party Resolves," which expressed their support for the American boycott of British goods. This act of defiance by women was seen as a significant statement of political unity and resistance against British rule.
The Edenton tea party acually occured in the home of Mrs.Elezabeth King on the village green in Edenton.
the event that led up to the intolerable acts was the Boston tea party.
No, the Intolerable Acts was a result of the Boston Tea Party. The Tea Act led to the Boston Tea Party
The colonists held the Boston and Edenton tea parties because they wanted to tell the British, and make sure they understood it too, "No taxation without representation!"
51 women were involved
It happened because the Boston tea party triggered the women to react to it.
Penelope Barker was a prominent figure in the American Revolution who organized and led the Edenton Tea Party. In 1774, she rallied 51 women from Edenton, North Carolina to sign a protest known as the "Edenton Tea Party Resolves," which expressed their support for the American boycott of British goods. This act of defiance by women was seen as a significant statement of political unity and resistance against British rule.
The Edenton tea party acually occured in the home of Mrs.Elezabeth King on the village green in Edenton.
In 1774
Led by Penelope Barker, the all-woman Edenton Tea Party (October 25, 1774) illustrated the influence of women in the colonies, and their support against exploitation of the American colonies by England. It followed the better known Boston Tea Party of December 16, 1773. Realistically, what is now called the Edenton Tea Party did not get that name until decades after the event. What happened in 1774 was far more significant in the colonies, as well as in Europe. Until Penelope Barker and her friends took their action. women simply did not engage in political discourse here or abroad. Penelope Barker was one of the richest women in the colony now known as North Carolina. Where the men at Boston wore costumes and face paint to hid their identity, the women at Edenton met for the purpose of sending the King a clear and strong message and had the courage to actually sign their names to the petition they produced. It is not known it they actually had tea, but it is believed that they did not throw any into the Albemarle Sound. When their petition arrived in England, it created such a stir that London's cartoonists used it as fodder for ridicule. A copy of one such cartoon now hangs in the Barker House in Edenton. Barker was not alone as a significant player in the colonies demanding independence from England. The Edenton Historical Commission maintains a web site that quotes from their petition and lists the names of signers. (see related link) So the Edenton Tea Party was not really a tea party, it was the launching of woman's political liberation.
the event that led up to the intolerable acts was the Boston tea party.
the boston tea party
Samuel Adams was the official leader of the Boston tea party.
The person who led the Boston Tea Party was Samuel Adams
No, the Intolerable Acts was a result of the Boston Tea Party. The Tea Act led to the Boston Tea Party
The colonists held the Boston and Edenton tea parties because they wanted to tell the British, and make sure they understood it too, "No taxation without representation!"