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No discussion as to WHY England needed the taxes - to pay for the first global war against France … which some claim was started by George Washington in PA.

Happy Boston Tea Party Day

1 posted on 12/16/2023 3:28:02 AM PST by 11th_VA
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To: 11th_VA

TEA is so white!


2 posted on 12/16/2023 3:31:19 AM PST by Dr. Ursus
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To: 11th_VA

The destruction of the tea absolutely enflamed Britain. They were out for blood after that.

1774 was a momentous year. Britain tightened the screws with the coercive acts, but they had the reverse effect. In Massachusetts, by the end of the year the British only controlled Boston, a tiny little peninsula. The rest of the colony basically declared independence from British rule. And in September, the General Court (the legislature) was no more. A provincial Congress was established and was essentially the governing body.

The Tea Party was, as John Adams called it an epocha in history.


4 posted on 12/16/2023 3:42:54 AM PST by cotton1706
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To: 11th_VA

I think the Proclamation Line of 1763 might have po’d the colonists, too...

Wasn’t just the taxes.


6 posted on 12/16/2023 3:58:38 AM PST by mewzilla (Never give up; never surrender!)
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To: 11th_VA
Related..

250 Years After The Boston Tea Party, Americans Still Recognize Government Tyranny When They See It

7 posted on 12/16/2023 4:05:41 AM PST by mewzilla (Never give up; never surrender!)
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To: 11th_VA

Sad to see that the city that was the birthplace of freedom has become a linchpin in the iron curtain of Communism in 250 years.


11 posted on 12/16/2023 5:03:03 AM PST by Redleg Duke (“Who is John Galt?”)
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To: 11th_VA

Maybe America needs another “Green Dragon Inn”.


12 posted on 12/16/2023 5:04:15 AM PST by Highest Authority (DemonRats are pure EVIL)
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To: 11th_VA
When I was a kid, I first learned about the Boston Tea Party from a comic book featuring The Three Stooges. Somehow, they got transported back in time and actually participated in the event alongside the rebellious colonists.

Every mention of the Boston Tea Party conjures up memories of that comic book.
13 posted on 12/16/2023 5:26:39 AM PST by Dan in Wichita
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To: 11th_VA

And now the sons and daughters of the first patriots in Massachusetts are big government supporters. How far they have fallen.


14 posted on 12/16/2023 5:43:13 AM PST by FatherofFive (Islam only understands Death and Pain. Give it to them. )
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To: 11th_VA

If you did that today, you might need an Environmental Impact Study to see if any fishes would get harmed in the protest of dumping the tea. 🤓


17 posted on 12/16/2023 6:31:10 AM PST by Deplorable American1776 (Guns don't kill people, LIBERALS DO!! Support the Second Amendment...)
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To: 11th_VA

Bear in mind the Freemasons of Boston had special meetings every night for a week, except on Tea Party day.


19 posted on 12/16/2023 7:41:17 AM PST by RideForever (Damn, another dangling par .....)
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To: 11th_VA; ProgressingAmerica; Dr. Ursus; EvilCapitalist; cotton1706; mewzilla; Rlsau1; ...
I just finished dictating an audiobook for an organization called Librivox, which officially partners with Project Gutenberg. Project Gutenberg hosts free Ebooks on works whose US Copyright has expired, and Librivox is dedicated to producing audiobook versions of those books...all for free.

You don't need a membership at either of them to be able to download Ebooks or the Audiobooks based on them.

The Audiobook I created took me nearly a year to finish, and is 15 hours long called Life and Times of Joseph Warren. (LINK: Download Audiobook version of "Life and Times of Joseph Warren")

It was written by Richard Frothingham Jr. in 1865. It was my first attempt at a full length audiobook, and like most things, I learned a great deal while doing it that will make my next audiobook better, I don't have it in me to go back and re-do the Frothingham book, but I believe it is worthy of listening to.

I post this here, because what is absolutely fascinating to me is the level of detail Richard Frothingham puts into the book he wrote, often on a day-to-day basis of the activities of the Patriots in Massachusetts in their attempts to obtain what they viewed as fair treatment by their own government.

Very similar to what many of us feel today. I don't know about all of you, but I absolutely feel the anger of "Taxation Without Representation" today, among other things.

This book has one chapter on Joseph Warren's early life and family, but the next 14 chapters begin in 1763, spanning the Stamp Act in 1765 to his death as a Patriot General at the Battle of Bunker Hill. He was a 23 year old practicing physician when the Stamp Act was passed, and he was 33 years old when he died at the redoubt of Bunker Hill, in the thick of battle, when it was overrun because the Patriots had run out of ammunition.

During that time, he rose to be the prominent public voice against the British. While it is true Samuel Adams was the prominent behind the scenes voice in the Patriot Cause, he was seen and heard less often in the public eye than was Warren, and Warren was the one who generally interacted directly with the British Authorities. He was considered to be one of the greatest Patriot orators of his day, certainly one of the most learned. He was professional, diplomatic, literate, compassionate, and urbane, all those characteristics in such great measure that it is astonishing for his age of 33 when he died at the peak of his skills at Bunker Hill.

He was there at the beginning, and although considered an intellectual (he WAS) he was as passionate and inflamed on the subject of Liberty as any man, as evidenced by this account by Frothingham in his book:

"...Though of marked amiability of character, he was naturally high-tempered, impulsive,and quick to resent an insult: at times he was passionate. One evening,when the British troops were quartered in the town, he was challenged in a burly way by a sentinel, when Warren knocked him down. He could be vehement in the expressions of feeling. On an occasion when his spirit was stirred by the taunts that British officers were uttering on the Americans, he said to William Eustis, subsequently the Governor of Massachusetts, "These fellows say we won't fight: by heavens, I hope I shall die up to my knees in blood!"..."

And he meant it. At the Boston Massacre, he tended, as a physician, to the wounded, even as their blood still flowed fresh into the cobblestoned street. When war broke out on April 19, 1775, as related by a fellow physician, "...His soul beat to arms," Dr. Eliot says, "as soon as he learned the intention of the British troops..."

He tasked one of his medical students to take care of his patients, jumped on his horse, and left Boston heading for Lexington. An account by Dr. Welch, who rode with him part of the way described it as follows:

"...Two soldiers," Dr. Welch says,"going to Lexington, tried to steal Watson's horse,at Watson's Corner; the old man,with his cat and hat, pulling one way, and the soldiers the other. Dr. Warren rode up, and helped drive them off. Tried to pass Percy's column; stopped by bayonets. Two British officers rode up to Dr. Warren, in the rear of the British, inquiring 'Where are the troops?' The doctor did not know. They were greatly alarmed. Went home..."

On the day he died two months later at Bunker Hill, he had been appointed a General, and was expected to serve a medical role out of the line of fighting, but would have none of it. He did not have the military knowledge to be useful as a General, deferred to the officer in charge, and instructed him to send him where he could be of the most use.

The point of these passages above is to show Warren was a man of action as well as words. This is the man who was instrumental in the events of the Boston Tea Party several years before. He was the official voice in the direct negotiations with the British regarding the vessels and their tea. He was the voice that reached out, via the Committee of Correspondence (which was tasked with communicating not only with all the communities in Massachusetts to align their behavior and actions, but also with all the colonies throughout Colonial America. He was the official head of the Committee of Correspondence.

It was a delicate time. Boston was only the first place tea was going to arrive. No doubt, based on what happened in Boston as a test case for the British, would be done to the rest of the Colonies with ships of tea. Boston was in a precarious situation, because if they buckled, all the rest of the Colonies would fall in, and it was Warren who corresponded with all of them to assure them Boston would hold fast in the face of it, and he admonished them to follow his example in their Colonies.

When the time came, it was never officially disclosed that Warren was one of the "Mohawks", though in a list given in a memoir, there is one Charlestown man who was unidentified, and that is thought by many to be Dr. Warren.

It is my opinion that, if Warren had not died at Bunker Hill, he would have, in post-colonial America, inhabited the same space as Washington, Adams, Jefferson, and Franklin.

The book itself, unread by many (including me, until I dictated this) has an astonishing amount of day-to-day detail in the efforts the Patriots made to find a diplomatic resolution to the tea issue, before they resorted to the Tea Party, in which nobody was harmed except the merchants, who were caught between a rock and a hard place.

Frothingham devotes nearly 74 pages in this book to the Boston Tea Party alone, all the correspondences, the interactions with the Massachusetts Governor, the British Military, and the citizens of Colonial America, all of it intended to avoid bloodshed, and nearly all of it orchestrated and communicated by the 33 year old Dr. Joseph Warren.

20 posted on 12/16/2023 7:53:11 AM PST by rlmorel ("The stigma for being wrong is gone, as long as you're wrong for the right side." (Clarice Feldman))
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To: 11th_VA

bump


25 posted on 12/16/2023 10:03:46 AM PST by Albion Wilde (Either ‘the Deep State destroys America, or we destroy the Deep State.’ --Donald Trump)
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To: 11th_VA

Not only did the British over-reaction to the Boston Tea Party lead to the American Revolution, but the effects of the tea party influenced the 1988 election. The Bush campaign made an issue of the fact that Boston harbor was still polluted so many years later (Dukakis was governor of Massachusetts and the Democrat nominee that year).


26 posted on 12/16/2023 11:12:01 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: 11th_VA

No discussion as to WHY England needed the taxes .....


To send to Ukraine.

🙃

Thx for posting this history lesson/reminder :)


32 posted on 12/16/2023 5:33:24 PM PST by Jane Long (What we were told was a conspiracy theory in ‘20 is now fact. Land of the sheep, home of the knaves)
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