On this day in 1773 in Boston Harbor, a group of Massachusetts
colonists disguised as Mohawk Indians board three British tea ships and dump
342 chests of tea into the harbor.
The midnight raid, known as the "Boston Tea
Party," was in protest of the British Parliament's Tea Act of 1773, a bill
designed to save the faltering East India Company by greatly lowering its tea
tax and granting it a virtual monopoly on the American tea trade. The low tax
allowed the East India Company to undercut even tea smuggled into America by
Dutch traders, and many colonists viewed the act as another example of taxation
tyranny.
When three tea ships, the Dartmouth, the Eleanor,
and the Beaver, arrived in Boston Harbor, the colonists demanded that the tea
be returned to England. After Massachusetts Governor Thomas Hutchinson refused,
Patriot leader Samuel Adams organized the "tea party" with about 60
members of the Sons of Liberty, his underground resistance group. The British
tea dumped in Boston Harbor on the night of December 16 was valued at some
$18,000.
Parliament, outraged by the blatant destruction of
British property, enacted the Coercive Acts, also known as the Intolerable
Acts, in 1774. The Coercive Acts closed Boston to merchant shipping,
established formal British military rule in Massachusetts, made British
officials immune to criminal prosecution in America, and required colonists to
quarter British troops. The colonists subsequently called the first Continental
Congress to consider a united American resistance to the British.
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