By 1774, the colonies were on the brink of war due to many contributing factors including trade, land disagreement, and political discourse. England and France had long been at conflict over dominion of the new lands. France and the Indians banded together, against England. The hostilities of England and France concluded on the vast expanse of the frontier in America (http://wps.prenhall.com/wps/media/objects/106/108622/ch_6.pdf). England attempted to expand into other territories, and with it came increased conflict.
In 1773, the Tea Act led to more conflict and rebellion with the Boston Tea Party. The government was resolute to make the colonists pay for their defiance of the law and destruction of property. As a result, the government
December 16, 1773 was a day of horror for the merchants. How did the Boston Tea Party affect the british government? The Boston Tea Party was a turning point in america leading to a revolutionary war. The Boston Tea Party was started because of the tea act of 1773. The merchants of Boston did not want to concede to the act being pressured by the patriots. The Boston Tea Party affected the british government by them losing revenue and 342 chests of tea, led the American Revolutionary war, and the dispute over taxation of tea in the 1770s.
Conflicts happened because of the competition for power and expansion between a nation, or an empire. An example of this is in the book when it was talking about the Boston Tea Party in December 16, 1773. The British Government wanted to keep its power over the colonies and that ultimately lead to conflicts, revolts and war. “The British government responded in March 1774 by declaring the port of Boston closed until the East India Company had been compensated for its losses. This was the first of the so-called Coercive Acts--a series of laws passed in 1774 in which the British attempted to assert their authority over the colonies but instead succeeded only in enraging the colonists further ultimately prompted the outbreak of the revolutionary
In 1773 parliament passed the tea act in which the British pay less for tax to ship places. This made the prices of tea lower from Britain. Since Boston's tea would be more expensive nobody would buy it from them. The tea act was just another problem adding up between the colonists and britain. This made the colonists want to be independent from Britain. The colonists decided to rebel and dumb three hundred and forty two chests of tea into the Boston Harbor. The act was given the name the Boston Tea Party. Most of the British thought of the Boston Tea Party as an act of terrorism. Really the Boston Tea Party was just another step to independence for the colonists.
Then the Boston Massacre came in and ignited a fuse in all of the colonists sprung them madness to all go against the British. Several young, nervous British soldiery shot on a group of angry colonists, clean up 5, and this showed just how tense everything was in the colonies now. In 1773 the colonists struck again and decided to dump a million dollars worth of tea into the ocean and this was later called the Boston Tea Party. Which then caused the British to impose the intolerable routine in 1774, which included the port number, justice deed, new quartering act, and the government act. The port act was the closing of the Boston Seaport until the tea was paid for and the new quartering act was when the colonists had to figure barrack for the British troops and they built them on their own property.
The Tea Act of 1773 was put in place to save the East India Company from going out of business because the British needed them for there economy to work. The American’s that were mostly affected by this act would be the American’s that had business’s because they could not feed their family and their business wasn’t running right at all no one was buying anything from them. The American’s decided that they had had enough and got on ships of the East India Company and thru over 300 chests of tea into the Boston harbor that night. The main point of the Tea act was to help the British and only the British not the colonies at
The English government reacted to the "Tea Party" with outrage and passed the Coercive Acts, which closed the port of Boston and put the entire colony under what amounted to martial law.
About a decade before the American Revolution happened in 1775, there were lots of tension building up between the colonists and the British. The colonists did not like being under British rule and control because they liked freedom and wanted independence. However, the British government attempted to raise tax revenues by imposing more taxes on the colonists to pay for the leftover debts from the Indian-French War. Some of the laws passed include the Stamp Act of 1765, the Townshend Tariffs of 1767, and the Tea Act of 1773. Some events that escalated the tension include the Boston Massacre, the Boston Tea Party, etc. The colonists were justified in rebelling against Britain.
After the Boston Tea Party, there was several more somewhat about 10 others in New York City and Philadelphia and Charleston. King George III was furious,he thought it was time to teach them a lesson. March 28 1774 parliament passed the Coercive Acts. The colonist knew this as the (Intolerable Act). Forced on the colonist of boston were a set five laws. This was a message or at least a wake up call for them to stop messing around. An aim of legislation was to restore an order in massachusetts and punish bostonians for their Tea Party. Some of the responses were the The Boston Port Act, Massachusetts government Act, and the Quartering Act.
In the Aftermath, the British made another set of taxes to pay called the Coercive Acts (Boundless). These acts were taxes like the Boston Port Act, Massachusetts Government Act, the Administration of Justice Act, and the Quartering Act (Boundless). Another result of the Boston Tea Party was how the British closed the Boston Harbor until the taxes were paid (Reference.com). Afterwards, tensions only got worse between the colonists and the British which eventually led to the Battle of Lexington and Concord or in other words started the Revolutionary War
The main event was the Tea Act in 1773. It was a time when Lord North tried fooling the colonist by selling them taxed tea that was very cheap. Indeed the colonists were very disturbed from this terrible and unfair act and decided to take revenge by doing the Boston Tea Party. They planned it so that they would unload the tea that came from British East India Company’s but it would not go to the colonists. Instead the tea would go straight into the sea. The colonists wasted 90,000 pounds of tea that day, and were proud of what they did. But the King was obviously enraged by this act done by the colonist, colonists had squandered both money and tea in this act. He thought he was losing control over the colonists, so he declared the Intolerable
In 1773 the United States as we know it was not yet born, however it was starting to take on a life in the minds of many Colonist. In that year the British Parliament enacted the Tea Act, which many of us know was the cause of the Boston tea party. What many Americans may not know is as a result of that the British Parliament enacted may more laws. Like the 1774 Coercive Acts which I found information about it on (historyplace.com) “the English Parliament passed the first of a series of Coercive Acts (called the Intolerable Acts by Americans) in response to the rebellion in Massachusetts.” This was done in hopes of keeping us in line with the British Crown. This also is what lead us Americans to start the Revolutionary war. The British King also tried in 1774 tried to take our guns right away by confiscating all the firearms and gun powder from individuals and from local governments. During the early years of your country while still under British law, we resisted the idea of someone taking away our rights to own a gun. Once word got out that the British forces were to confiscate the powder and firearms the people rose up and fought back. This would driver the people to create a new country The United States of America. On July 4th, 1776 we signed a Declaration of Independence this gave us the Constitution of the United States, which gave us new laws that were of the people by the people for the people. One of those laws was the Second Amendment the right to keep and bear
The early 1700’s were more calm after the Townshend Revenue Act. In 1773, the British set off another revelation with a new law. The new act passed in 1773 was called the Tea Act. The Tea Act made Britain’s East Indian company the only company to sell imported tea to the colonies. The company was booming before the new act, it had lost tons of money because of the boycotting of tea. While parliament was trying to keep the company from going bankrupt, the tax the company had to pay was removed so the company could lower the price of tea. The company was hoping the lowered price on tea would encourage the colonist to buy the tea; the taxes on tea still had to be paid while it came into the colonies, yet the colonist saw this act as a trick to
Parliament passed the Townshend Acts, which placed taxes on paper, lead, paint, and tea that was imported to New England. The colonist began to boycott these goods which angered English authorities. They placed military officials so that they could force the colonists to pay the much needed taxes. Tensions between British soldiers and colonists escalated. This lead to the Boston Massacre; it was propagandized and impassioned many settlers to rebel. In response for the unfair taxes on tea, the colonists dumped the imported tea into the harbor. People became much more ardent to their side after the incident. You were either for the revolution; a patriot, or you sided with England; a loyalist.
When the Boston Tea Party occurred on the evening of December 16,1773, it was the culmination of many years of bad feeling between the British government and her American colonies. The controversy between the two always seemed to hinge on the taxes, which Great Britain required for the upkeep of the American colonies. Starting in 1765, the Stamp Act was intended by Parliament to provide the funds necessary to keep peace between the American settlers and the Native American population. The Stamp Act was loathed by the American colonists and later repealed by parliament.
The introduction of the Tea Act in 1773 was a leading cause of the American Revolution — but it wasn’t the only cause. Growing American opposition to the British, and fundamental differences in ideology between the British and Americans also contributed to causing the American Revolution.