
5. The Boston Tea Party
Presentation
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History
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8th Grade
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Practice Problem
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Medium
Darleen Perez
Used 41+ times
FREE Resource
13 Slides • 14 Questions
1
5. The Boston Tea Party
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Multiple Choice
first to die in the Boston masscare
Crispus Attucks
John Adams
Alexander Hamilton
3
Multiple Choice
Taxed all paper
Quartering Act
Townshend Acts
Proclamation of 1763
The Stamp act
4
Multiple Choice
Taxed tea, paper, paint...
Quartering Act
Townshend Acts
Proclamation of 1763
The Stamp act
5
Multiple Choice
An Imaginary line to keep the colonist from crossing the Appalachian mountains
Quartering Act
Townshend Acts
Proclamation of 1763
The Stamp act
6
Multiple Choice
Taxed all paper
Quartering Act
Townshend Acts
Proclamation of 1763
The Stamp act
7
Multiple Choice
Taxed all paper
Quartering Act
Townshend Acts
Proclamation of 1763
The Stamp act
8
Multiple Choice
Housing of soldiers
Quartering Act
Townshend Acts
Proclamation of 1763
The Stamp act
9
Multiple Choice
created famous engraving of the Boston massacre
Paul Rever
Thomas Jefferson
10
Multiple Choice
duty is another word for
taxes
stars
11
Despite the hopes of Patriots like Sam Adams, the Boston Massacre did not spark larger protests against British rule. Instead, the repeal of the Townshend duties led to a period of calm. While there was still a small duty on tea, the tax didn't seem to bother Loyalists very much, and the Patriots knew they could always drink Dutch tea that had been smuggled into the colonies without paying duties.
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However, things did not stay peaceful because in 1773, a new law called the Tea Act prompted more protests. One of these protests became known as the Boston Tea Party.
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The Tea Act
The Tea Act was Lord North's attempt to rescue the British East India Company. This large trading company controlled all the trade between Great Britain and Asia. Although it had been a moneymaker for Great Britain for years, the American boycott of British tea hurt the company badly. By 1773, the tea company was in danger of going broke unless it could sell off the 17 million pounds of tea that were sitting in its London warehouses.
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The Tea Act lowered the cost of tea that was sold by the British East India Company in the colonies. As a result, even taxed British tea became cheaper than smuggled Dutch tea. The Tea Act also gave the British East India Company a monopoly, or complete control, over tea sales in the colonies. From now on, the only merchants who could sell the bargain-priced tea were those chosen by the company.
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Lord North may have thought he could persuade Americans to buy taxed tea by making it so cheap, but colonists weren't fooled. They saw the Tea Act as still another attempt to tax them without their consent.
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In addition, many merchants were alarmed by the East India Company's monopoly over the tea trade. They wondered what the British government might try to control next. Would their next monopoly be on cloth or on sugar? Nervous merchants wondered what would happen to their businesses if other goods were also restricted.
17
Multiple Choice
how did the colonist feel about the tea act
They loved the Tea act
They saw the Tea Act as still another attempt to tax them without their consent.
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Tea Ships Arrive
When the British East India Company's tea ships sailed into American ports, angry protesters kept them from unloading their cargoes, causing more than one ship to turn back for England still filled with tea. In Boston, however, the royal governor ordered the British navy to block the exit from Boston Harbor, insisting that the three tea ships would not leave until all their tea was unloaded.
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On December 16, 1773, the Sons of Liberty decided to unload the tea, but not in the way the governor had in mind. That night, about 60 men dressed as Mohawk Indians boarded the three ships. One of them, George Hewes, described what happened:
We then were ordered by our commander to open the hatches and take out all the chests of tea and throw them overboard . . . and we immediately proceeded to execute his orders, first cutting and splitting the chests with our tomahawks . . . In about three hours from the time we went on board, we had thus broken and thrown overboard every tea chest to be found on the ship . . . We were surrounded by British armed ships, but no attempt was made to resist us.
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The Sons of Liberty dumped about 90,000 pounds of tea into the sea that night, leaving everything else aboard the ship untouched. News of the Boston Tea Party excited Patriots throughout the colonies. “This is the most magnificent moment of all,” wrote John Adams in his journal the next day. “This destruction of the tea is so bold, so daring, so firm . . . it must have . . . important consequences.” He was right.
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To protest the tax on tea, Patriots disguised as American Indians threw 342 chests of tea overboard from three British ships. Colonists later called this the Boston Tea Party.
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Multiple Choice
How many barrels of tea did the colonist dump
182
342
777
23
Multiple Choice
What did the colonist dress as?
Indians
Lobsterbacks
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25
Multiple Choice
According to the video how many people came to the docks that day
5000
10,000
26
Multiple Choice
Why did the Tea Act worry merchants in the colonies?
They saw how easily the British could monopolize a good if they chose to do so.
Lower-priced tea meant less money in sales for merchants.
The East India Company selected the merchants that could sell their tea.
all of the answers
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5. The Boston Tea Party
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