A thank you is owed to the Sons of Liberty for the sacrifices they gave for the sake of the American citizens and their daily freedoms. They gave up their liberty to walk down the street without having to constantly look over their shoulder to make sure there were no British soldiers in sight. Rather than just staying in the shadows, they all showed their faces. To prove that they would not buckle under pressure, they wrote a list of every member’s name. Like most everyday hero, these members never backed away from a battle. They stepped into the ring and fought their way to the independence Americans have today. The Sons of Liberty stood up against the high taxes given to them by the British Empire to protect the human rights for the Thirteen …show more content…
The British soldiers were annoyed with the harassment thrown towards them from the colonies, so they came to put them in their place October 1, 1768 (See picture 2) (Andrlik). The Sons of Liberty did not just strike all at once to send the british troops back, but let the soldiers feeling of being furious and outraged boil inside of them. When they had finally had enough, the tragedy on King Street occurred. Nine angry Boston soldiers were confronted with a mob between the hours of nine and ten on March 5, 1770 (York). What was supposed to just be a boycott quickly changed into a massacre when one of the citizens in this group struck the head of a soldier causing him to call fire. This massacre is now a days known as the Boston Massacre. The eight other soldiers shot after a slight delay, killing five people and injuring half a dozen (Andrlik). It may sound a little crazy that these soldiers could be in that few of numbers and still win, but there is a crime scene sketch made by Paul Revere in the span of two days after the fact (See picture 3) and a report from a witness named Robert Gaddard that proves so. This witness report was written one day after the incident and states,“I (Robert Gaddard) immediately heard and saw One Musquet discharg’d which was directly follow’d by several others and saw four men laying on the ground:” (Gaddard 2). Robert …show more content…
The attempt that followed in their path to control over the colonists was the Tea Act. The Tea Act of 1773 stated that all tea products had lowered prices to try to convince the colonists to approve of their tax, but that only led to angry colonists and the Boston Tea Party (Andrilk). The idea to try taxing the colonists was an irrational move made by the Bostonian Empire. The Sons of Liberty had already made their plans fail two major times, so trying for a third time was just a poor move. The Sons of Liberty boycotted and chased ships away from the harbor before threatening the ship captains that they would cover them in tar and feathers (Brooks). Before the whole story of the actual Boston Tea Party gets started, it should be informed that the Sons of Liberty technically warned the British before doing anything insane. The British just kept sending ships of tea anyways. After the story of the Sons of Liberty started to spread through the colonies, a group of revolutionaries acquired inspiration in another state convinced a ship owner to burn his own ship down (Morton). That genius group genuinely did not do anything wrong at all. They just said several obstructions to convince that captain to burn his ship down with his own, personal free will. When a few other ships from London
Before America could have any Founding Fathers, the country needed Sons of Liberty to stand up to the British government. These men harnessed the outrage that spread following Parliament's Stamp Act of 1765, which charged an inner tax on the colonies. Though the Stamp Act was canceled, the disagreement over "taxation without representation" wouldn't drive away, consequential in events like the Boston Massacre and the Boston Tea Party. The Sons of Liberty, a well-organized Patriot paramilitary political organization covered in secrecy, was established to weaken British rule in colonial America and
There goal was to protest British Parliament’s tax on tea (“No taxation without representation.”) On December 16, 1773, the Sons of Liberty disguised themselves as Mohawk Indians and went on three ships and threw over 92,000 pounds of tea overboard in the Boston Harbor. This was called the Boston Tea Party. This wasn’t unjust to us in anyway but we might have not done this if the Tea Act hadn’t been placed on us. We have opposed the law but because the Mother Country continues to tax us without a representation. We have been able to make our own taxes for about 150 years. A solution to the problem is that my King, you may repeal the Tea
They first attempt to tax the colonists was when Parliament passed the Stamp Act, a tax on all printed goods that were sold in the colonies. Protest groups started to arise all over the colonies to resist the new tax. These groups were called the Sons of Liberty. They stated that they
Before their arrival, most of the colonies had become aware of the act that had been imposed and resolved to reject any tea shipments from the East India Company, refusing all ships to come inland — all except for Boston. In late November, three shiploads of tea arrived at Griffin’s Wharf in Boston harbour. The Dartmouth arriving first was prevented from being unloaded by a man by the name of Samuel Adams. Adams was the leader of the Sons of Liberty, a group of men united to resist new taxation. It was only a few days later when two more ships arrived: Eleanor and Beaver. Upon their arrival, the colonists held a meeting at the Old South Meetinghouse determining that the ships should be released without any payment of duty. Thomas Hutchinson, the Royal Governor, heard about the colonists meeting and immediately refused the ships to leave, insisting that the taxes must be paid. This greatly infuriated the colonists and that evening, they planned to retaliate. On the night of December 16, 1773, Samuel Adams led a group of colonists who disguised themselves as Mohawk Indians. This group of men, the Sons of Liberty, consisted of artisans, craftsmen and many others who were determined to defend their rights against the British. The masked-men “boarded the three British ships and dumped over three-hundred and forty-two chests of tea into the Boston
courageous men in the colonies came together to secede from Britain. The colonists were fed
The Boston Tea Party happened on December 16, 1773. The sons of liberty boarded 3 ships and dumped tea into the Boston harbor. They did this because of the British oppression. The British said they would have to pay all the tea off or the harbor will be closed.
British soldiers patrolled the area. People say the soldiers pounced first, but others beg to differ. This story told as from Revere reveals the dark side of the soldiers. It was MArch, 1770 and another protest had formed this time harassing the soldiers. Then a fire was shot and as from an engraving this was now the “Bloody Massacre.”
When the Sons of Liberty raided the three boats The Eleanor, The Beaver, and The Dartmouth, they dressed as American Indians they had met. This disguise could have been simply a ruse as to avoid detection and remain anonymous or it could be deeper, it could have been the colonists freeing themselves of the title dictating them as British citizens and taking on the title of “Americans”. When the time came to fight the battles in the American revolution, being post- Boston Tea Party, the colonists’ knowledge of the land came as a huge advantage seeing as how the British soldiers had to navigate unfamiliar terrain and were at a loss in that aspect, and though they did have a better arsonal, the colonists prevailed in the end. After the entire American Revolution, colonists kept their understanding of Being from Britain and being loyal to a monarchy their whole lives, colonists were more or less at a loss when it came to the idea of breaking away from the crown and forming a government with no single leader, which did not work out very well but they did later create a democratic form of government, all because they encountered new
“Property must be secured, or liberty cannot exist” -John Adams. The sons of liberty were a organized political group created in the Thirteen American Colonies. They were Fanatics. This is because they enticed violence, vandalized houses and did many more wrong things.
After months of protests Parliament realized their mistake and repealed the tax, but the damage had already been done and the Colonists would start a revolution to separate themselves from the British. On December 16, 1773 the Sons of Liberty, a group of Patriots led by Samuel Adams cut open 340 chests of British East India Company tea, weighing over 92,000 pounds (roughly 46 tons), onboard the Beaver, Dartmouth, and Eleanor and then dumped it into Boston Harbor; a total loss of $1,700,000 dollars in today’s money. Weeks after the ordeal the harbor still had the smell of tea. Until the 340 chest of British Eat India Company tea were paid for the British completely closed off Boston Harbor. The Intolerable act which was meant to punish the actions of the Sons of Liberty. This did not help Colonists’ approval of the British government. The harsh punishments unified the American colonists even more against British rule. The effect the Boston Tea Party had was noteworthy and ultimately sparked the American Revolution which started only two years later in Massachusetts on April 19,
After nearly a year of protests, the Sons of Liberty were finally victorious in March of 1766 when Parliament decided to repeal the Stamp Act,but later the British put a tax on tea.The controversy over the tea tax was made worse by the passing of the Tea Act of 1773, which allowed for tea sold by British companies to be shipped directly to the colonies and sold at a discount. As the tax on tea was still in place, this act was a subtle way to persuade colonists to comply with the tax.The colonists were not pleased.
The Boston Tea Party was a political protest that took place on December 16, 1773 in Boston Harbor in Boston, Massachusetts. The Sons of Liberty led by Samuel Adams, dressed as Mohawk Indians destroyed an entire shipment of tea sent from the East India Company by throwing chests full of tea into the Boston Harbor. George Hewe’s, an eyewitness of the event writes in his journal, “In about three hours from the time we went on board, we had thus broken and thrown overboard every tea chest to be found in the ship, while those in the other ships were disposing of the tea in the same way, at the same time.” (Hewes). The Sons of Liberty, a secret group formed by the 13 colonies to protect the rights of the colonists, protested in opposition of the Tea Act implemented on May 10, 1773. The Tea Act was an act placed by the British Parliament in order to raise revenue for Great Britain that required tax on
The Sons of Liberty was the name given to a group of patriots who worked underground to defend the rights of the colonists against the British government in the years before the American Revolution. They represented the ideals of liberty and justice, approving all the grievances and complaints of the colonists. Although the name was first used during the repeal of the Stamp Act in 1765, it continued to be stated to whenever colonists came together to fight new British laws, and especially taxes. The Sons of Liberty became an organization capable of getting people together to protest British impositions in a very effective manner. The slogan “No taxation without representation” was their official motto and the “tar and feathering” was
The 1773 Tea Act did cause the American Revolution in that it sparked huge opposition amongst the colonists. It was the third time that the British had tried to tax the Americans — both the 1765 Stamp Act and the 1767 Townshend Duties had been repealed due to such opposition. The Tea Act was the final straw for many colonists — the Sons of Liberty organised a huge protest in which they boarded the ships carrying the East India Company’s tea, and threw £10,000 worth of tea into the sea in defiance. This was known as the Boston Tea Party and demonstrated to the British that the Americans were not willing to accept British taxation. The slogan ‘no taxation without representation’ was frequently used, showing how the Americans felt the British, in trying to tax them, were attempting to impose a tyrannical rule. The Boston Tea Party provoked outrage in Britain, with many of the politically conscious calling for the Americans to be punished. This then led to the Coercive Acts in 1774, which aimed at isolating Boston — although it only resulted in increasing the tension between the
The Tea Act of 1773 was a tax on tea but, the British lowered the cost of tea significantly enough that even with the tax, British tea was cheaper than Dutch tea. Also to keep the price down, the British East India Co. got rid of the middleman in the colonies and opened up their own shops. If the colonists bought this tea, they would be accepting the fact that the British could tax without representation. On Dec. 16th 1773 the ships docked at the Boston ports. The Sons of Liberty dressed up as Indians and threw 324 chests of tea into the water. England responded to the Boston Tea Party by the Coercive Act of 1774.