The 236th Anniversary of the Boston Tea Party
[caption id="attachment_2719" align="alignright" width="300" caption="Engraving Depicting the Boston Tea Party"]
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The Boston Tea Party was one of the precipitating events of the American Revolution. It occurred on December 16, 1773 as a protest against the Tea Act, which the British Parliament passed that May. This past year, a series of tax protests, known as the Tax Day Tea Party, were meant to spark a conservative revolution in the United States. The protests lasted throughout the year, and a Tax Day Tea Party part two is planned for 2010. In fact, the issue is so popular, that a Google-search of the phrase "tea party" shows no reference to the original event on the first page. Hence, my interest in the Boston Tea Party; the original Tea Party. Here's a timeline of the events leading up to the Boston Tea Party, and a commentary on whether or not modern protestors deserve to use that term.
Timeline
- Pre-176os: The British began developing a taste for tea in the 17th century. As a result, the British government gave the British East India Company a monopoly on the tea trade and imposed a duty of 25% on all imports. Also, the British East India Company was only allowed to trade directly with Britain, and not with the colonies. This resulted in the popularity of smuggled Dutch tea in the colonies, which was not taxed, and therefore cheaper than British tea. Needless to say, the British East India Company began losing money.
- 1754-1763: The French and Indian War, the North American Theater of the broader Seven Years' War, took place. Although technically a victory for the British, the war was very expensive and left the British government in extreme debt. In an effort to raise revenue, the British government began floating the idea of taxing the American colonies for the first time.
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[caption id="attachment_2721" align="alignright" width="174" caption="Charles Townshend"]
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1767: Charles Townshend, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, proposes a series of acts, known as the Townshend Acts. There were five acts in all, but the following three were most important:
- Revenue Act of 1767: The most important of the Townshend Acts, the Revenue Act taxed imports of paper, paint, lead, glass, and tea in the colonies. These were products that couldn't be produced in the colonies and therefore had to imported from Britain. It also allowed for broader powers when searching homes and businesses for smuggled goods. Finally, in an effort to take away the power of the purse, the money raised from the Revenue Act was meant to pay the salaries of colonial officials. Prior to the Revenue Act, the colonies paid the salaries of judges and governors, thus they were able to choose their leadership.
- Indemnity Act: Removed the tax on tea imported into Britain in an effort to make it more competitive with Dutch tea.
- Commissioners of Customs Act of 1767: Meant to enforce trade regulation compliance by creating the American Board of Customs Commissions. This is considered by many to be the beginning of the separation between Britain and the colonies.
- 1768: Customs officials seized the ship, Liberty, on the grounds that it was involved in smuggling activities. John Hancock owned the ship, and was put on trial, but with John Adams as his lawyer, the charges were eventually dropped. Although Hancock was, in fact, a smuggler, Liberty was not involved in smuggling when it was seized and its seizure caused rioting and protest in Boston.
- [caption id="attachment_2723" align="alignright" width="180" caption="Paul Revere's depiction of the Boston Massacre"] [/caption] 1770: Britain sent troops to Boston, in response to growing unrest in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. The colonists protested against the occupation and the Boston Massacre occured on March 5, 1770. Ironically, on that same day, Lord North, Prime Minister of Britain, proposedthe Repeal Act, to repeal all of the taxes of the Revenue Act, with the exception of the tea tax.
- 1773: Parliament passed the Tea Act, which made it possible for the British East India Company to export directly to the colonies. This eliminated the duty that the British East India Company had to pay, but the colonists resented the fact that their tea was still taxed under the Revenue Act.