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Boston Tea Act Research Paper

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Rachel O’Brien
Perry
Enriched Language Arts/4
Research Paper

“The die is now cast. The colonies must either submit or triumph.” ~King George III The Tea Act, sometimes known as the Boston Tea Party, has a lot to say about tea. It is referred to by John Adams as "the Destruction of the Tea in Boston." The night, December thirteen seventeen seventy three. Colonists disguised themselves as Mohawk Indians. Seventeen Million Pounds of unsold tea was dumped mid day. With the colonists throwing over the tea off the ships, King George decided to punish the Bostonians.
The Colonists were sick of the high prices of the tea coming from Britain. Before the Tea Act, the colonist were paying high prices of two shillings and six pence. Colonists …show more content…

The next day some of the participants returned to Griffin's Wharf and, seeing some of the tea still floating on top of the water, they approached it in small boats and destroyed what remained by hitting it with their oars (History). The ninety two thousand pounds of tea dumped into the harbor caused it to smell. Because of the Boston Tea Party, the British shut down Boston Harbor until all of the three hundred forty chests of British East India Company tea were paid for. This was implemented under the seventeen seventy four, the Intolerable Acts and known as the Boston Port Act. The Boston Port Act, the Intolerable Acts also implemented the Massachusetts Government Act, the Administration of Justice Act, the Quartering Act, and the Quebec Act. Colonists responded with protests and coordinated resistance by convening the First Continental Congress in September and October of 1774 to petition Britain to repeal the Intolerable Acts. The Boston Tea Party was the first significant act of defiance by American colonists (After the Tea Act). The Boston Tea Party was enormous, ultimately leading to the American Revolution which began in Massachusetts on April nineteenth, seventeen seventy

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