The Tea Act (13 Geo. 3, c. 44) On May 10, 1773 the so-called Tea Act received royal assent and became law. The following is the full text of the act, with annotations to provide further understanding. You can find the full text here as well. I have maintained the original spelling and punctuation, but have modernized capitalization. I have changed the emphasis of the original, so that the text is entirely in regular upright text, with the following exceptions: I have italicized the titles of acts and I have added bold text to highlight the key point of each section. My commentary is in blue text. First, a little background. At this time all tea consumed in Great Britain was being produced in China and the East India Company was the only entity allowed to legally import it from there. When they did they had to go straight to London with it and pay a 25% import duty. They then had to offer the tea for sale at a public auction (usually in small lots of a few chests at a time), where othe...
The Second Boston Tea Party: Part I Detail of Philip Dawe's mezzotint "The Bostonians Paying the Excise-Man or Tarring and Feathering" (October 1774). This corner detail is the first known depiction of the destruction of tea in Boston Harbor. Who's to say if Dawe is depicting the first or the second, or both? On March 7, 1774 a cargo of tea was destroyed in Boston Harbor. The event—now known as the Second Boston Tea Party—is often relegated to no more than a footnote in American history (if even that). Even Joseph Cummins' book "Ten Tea Parties: Patriotic Protests that History Forgot" gives it no more than two paragraphs in the appendix. [1] While the Second Boston Tea Party certainly lacked the scale and notoriety of its namesake on December 16, 1773, it was nonetheless an important moment in the increasing tensions between Great Britain and the American Colonies. I'd like to offer here what I believe to be the most thorough telling of the story ...
Timeline of the Passage of the Tea Act Report in the April 27, 1773 Morning Chronicle (London). [1] Monday, April 26, 1773: the Tea Scheme is Introduced Amidst ongoing discussions regarding the affairs of the struggling East India Company, Prime Minister Lord North introduced to the House of Commons proposals allowing the EIC to ship some of their enormous surplus of tea duty free to America. He was then challenged by other members of Parliament who observed that the Townshend duty still remained on tea. They argued that that controversial duty posed a stronger obstacle to the legal import of tea to America than the current prices of tea. William Dowdeswell remarked, "I tell the Noble Lord now, if he don't take off the duty they won't take the tea." North refused to admit his political reasons for wishing to retain the Townshend duty, rather focusing on the need to collect a revenue in America for the administration of government. Other members of Parliament counte...
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