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A second Boston Tea Party took place in March 1774, when around 60 Bostonians boarded the ship Fortune and dumped nearly 30 chests of tea into the harbor. The event didn’t earn nearly as much notoriety as the first Boston Tea Party, but it did encourage other tea-dumping demonstrations in Maryland, New York and South Carolina.
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Reinforcements arrived and opened fire on the mob, killing five colonists and wounding six. Britain eventually repealed the taxes it had imposed on the colonists except the tea tax.
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Though led by Samuel Adams and his Sons of Liberty and organized by John Hancock, the names of many of those involved in the Boston Tea Party remain unknown. Native American costumes, only one of the tea party culprits
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The Boston Tea Party was a political protest that occurred on December 16, 1773, at Griffin’s Wharf in Boston and Massachusetts.
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The Sons of Liberty were a group of colonial merchants and tradesmen founded to protest the Stamp Act and other forms of taxation.
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It showed Great Britain that Americans wouldn’t take taxation and tyranny sitting down, and rallied American patriots across the 13 colonies to fight for independence.
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Many colonists felt Britain’s Coercive Acts went too far.
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Britain hoped the Coercive Acts would squelch rebellion in New England and keep the remaining colonies from uniting, but the opposite happened.
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In June of 1774, George Washington wrote: “the cause of Boston…ever will be considered as the cause of America. While some important colonist leaders such as John Adams were thrilled to learn Boston Harbor was covered in tea leaves, others were not.
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The delegates were divided on how to move forward but the Boston Tea Party had united them in their fervor to gain independence.
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But despite the lack of violence, the Boston Tea Party didn’t go unanswered by King George III and British Parliament. In retribution, they passed the Coercive Acts (later known as the Intolerable Acts.
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That night, a large group of men many reportedly members of the Sons of Liberty disguised themselves in Native American garb, boarded the docked ships and threw 342 chests of tea into the water.
they did not stop fighting for while -
In the 1760s, Britain was deep in debt, so British Parliament imposed a series of taxes on American colonists to help pay those debts.to help pay those debts
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The event was the first major act of defiance to British rule over the colonists. They were furious at being taxed without having any representation in Parliament.