The Boston Tea Party was an act of direct action protest by the
American colonists against British Government in which they
destroyed many crates of tea bricks belonging to the British East
India Company on ships in Boston Harbor. The incident, which took
place on Thursday, December 16, 1773, has been seen as helping to
spark the
American Revolution and remains to this day one of the most
iconic events of the era.
Background of the Boston Tea Party
The Stamp Act of 1765 and the Townshend Acts of 1767 angered
colonists regarding British decisions on taxing the colonies despite
a lack of representation in the Westminster Parliament. One of the
protesters was John Hancock, a wealthy Bostonian. In 1768, Hancock's
ship Liberty was seized by customs officials, and he was charged
with smuggling. He was defended by John Adams, and the charges were
eventually dropped. However, Hancock later faced several hundred
more indictments.
Hancock organized a boycott of tea from China sold by the British
East India Company, whose sales in the colonies then fell from
320,000 pounds (145,000 kg) to 520 pounds (240 kg). By 1773, the
company had large debts, huge stocks of tea in its warehouses and no
prospect of selling it because smugglers, such as Hancock, were
importing tea from the Netherlands without paying import taxes. In
response to this the British government passed the Tea Act, which
allowed the East India Company to sell tea to the colonies directly
and without "payment of any customs or duties whatsoever" in
Britain, instead paying the much lower American duty. This tax break
allowed the East India Company to sell tea for half the old price
and cheaper than the price of tea in England, enabling them to
undercut the prices offered by the colonial merchants and
smugglers.
Many American colonists, particularly the wealthy smugglers,
resented this favored treatment[citation needed] of a major company,
which employed lobbyists and wielded great influence in Parliament.
Protests resulted in both Philadelphia and New York, but it was
those in Boston that made their mark in history. Still reeling from
the Hutchinson letters, Bostonians suspected the removal of the Tea
Tax was simply another attempt by the British parliament to squash
American freedom. Samuel Adams, wealthy smugglers, and others who
had profited from the smuggled tea called for agents and consignees
of the East India Company tea to abandon their positions; consignees
who hesitated were terrorized through attacks on their warehouses
and even their homes.
The first of many ships which arrived at the Boston harbor carrying
the East India Company tea was Dartmouth arriving in late November
1773. A standoff ensued between the port authorities and the Sons of
Liberty. Samuel Adams whipped up the growing crowd by demanding a
series of protest meetings. Coming from both the city and outlying
areas, thousands attended these meetings; every meeting larger than
the one before. The crowds shouted defiance not only at the British
Parliament, the East India Company, and Dartmouth but at Governor
Thomas Hutchinson as well, who was still struggling to have the tea
landed. On the night of December 16, the protest meeting, held at
Boston's Old South Meeting House, was the largest yet seen. An
estimated 8,000 people were said to have attended.
The owner of the Dartmouth and its captain agreed that the tea would
be returned to England and similar promises were obtained from the
owners of two more vessels en route, the Eleanor and the Beaver.
However, Governor Hutchinson ordered the harbor to be blocked and he
would not allow any tea-bearing vessels to leave until they had been
unloaded.
The
Event
On Thursday, December 16, 1773, the evening before the tea was due
to be landed, Captain Roach appealed to Governor Hutchinson to allow
his ship to leave without unloading its tea. When Roach returned and
reported Hutchinson's refusal to a massive protest meeting, Samuel
Adams said to the assembly "This meeting can do nothing more to save
the country". As though on cue, the Sons of Liberty thinly disguised
as Narragansett Indians and armed with small hatchets and
clubs, headed toward Griffin's Wharf (in Boston Harbor), where lay
Dartmouth and the newly-arrived Beaver and Eleanour. Swiftly and
efficiently, casks of tea were brought up from the hold to the deck,
reasonable proof that some of the "Indians" were, in fact,
longshoremen. The casks were opened and the tea dumped overboard;
the work, lasting well into the night, was quick, thorough, and
efficient. By dawn, over 342 casks or 90,000 lbs (45 tons) of tea
worth an estimated £10,000 (£953,000, or $1.87 million USD in 2007
currency) had been consigned to waters of Boston harbor.
Nothing else had been damaged or stolen, except a single padlock
accidentally broken and anonymously replaced not long thereafter.
Tea washed up on the shores around Boston for weeks. Attempts were
made by the citizens of Boston to carry off some of the tea. A small
number of small boats were rowed where the tea was visible, then
beating it with oars to render it unusable.
The fourth East India Company ship carrying tea did not arrive with
the other three because it had run aground in Provincetown. All
fifty-eight tea chests were salvaged and put onto a fishing
schooner, which arrived safely in Boston and into Bostonian's
teapots.
Reaction
The tea party caused a crisis. Hutchinson had been urging London to
take a hard line with the Sons of Liberty. If he had done what the
other royal governors had done and let the ship owners and captains
resolve the issue with the colonists, the Dartmouth, Eleanor, and
the Beaver would have left without unloading any tea. Lord North
said that if the colonists had stuck with no importation for another
six months the tea tax would have been repealed. In February,
1775, Britain passed the Conciliatory Resolution which ended
taxation for any colony which satisfactorily provided for the
imperial defense and the upkeep of imperial officers. The Tea Act
was repealed with the Taxation of Colonies Act 1778.
In Britain, even those politicians considered friends of the
colonies were appalled and this act united all parties there against
the colonies. The Prime Minister Lord North said, "Whatever may be
the consequence, we must risk something; if we do not, all is over".
The British government felt this was an action which could not be
unpunished and responded by closing the port of Boston and put in
place other laws that were known as the "Intolerable Acts", also
called the Coercive Acts, or Punitive Acts. In addition, John
Hancock, Samuel Adams, Joseph Warren, and Benjamin Church were
charged with the "Crime of High Treason".
In the colonies, Benjamin Franklin stated that the destroyed tea
must be repaid. Robert Murray, a New York merchant went to Lord
North with three other merchants and offered to pay for the losses,
but the offer was turned down.[11] A number of colonists were
inspired to carry out similar acts, such as the burning of the Peggy
Stewart. The Boston Tea Party eventually proved to be one of the
many catalysts which led to the American Revolutionary War. At the
very least, the Boston Tea Party and the reaction that followed
served to rally support for revolutionaries in the thirteen colonies
who were eventually successful in their fight for independence.
Many colonists, in Boston and elsewhere in the country, pledged to
abstain from tea drinking as a protest, turning instead to "Balsamic
hyperion" (made from raspberry leaves), other herbal infusions, and
coffee. This social protest movement away from tea drinking,
however, was not long-lived.
Influence of the Boston Tea Party
The Boston Tea Party is known around the world and has been
inspirational to other noted activists and reform leaders. For
example, Erik H. Erikson records in his book "Gandhi's Truths" that
when Mahatma Gandhi met with the British viceroy in 1930 after the
Indian salt protest campaign, Gandhi took some duty-free salt from
his shawl and said, with a smile, that the salt was "to remind us of
the famous Boston Tea Party."
American political activists have invoked the Tea Party as a symbol
of rebellion against the establishment.
A Boston-based team in the defunct North American Soccer League
called themselves the New England Tea Men. They were owned by the
British company Lipton Tea, so the name was intended slightly
ironically.