The story behind the Boston Tea Party Ben Labaree

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

You’ve probably heard of the Boston Tea Party,

something about a bunch of angry colonists

dressed as Native Americans

throwing chests of tea into the water.

But the story is far more complicated,

filled with imperial intrigue,

corporate crisis,

smuggling,

and the grassroots origins of the American Revolution.

The first thing you need to know about tea in the 1700’s

is that it was really, really popular.

In England, each man, woman, and child

consumed almost 300 cups of this stuff every year.

And, since the English colonized America,

Americans were crazy about tea too.

By the 1760’s, they were drinking

over a million pounds of tea every year.

So, when Britain wanted to increase taxes

on tea in America,

people were not happy,

mostly because they had no say in tax decisions

made in London.

Remember that famous phrase,

“No taxation without representation”?

The American colonists had long believed

that they were not subject to taxes imposed by legislature

in which they lacked representation.

In fact, rather than paying the taxes,

they simply dodged the tax collectors.

Since the east coast of America is hundreds of miles long

and British enforcement was lax,

about 3/4 of the tea Americans were drinking

was smuggled in, usually from Holland.

But the British insisted that Parliament

did have the authority to tax the colonists,

especially after Britain went deeply into debt

fighting the French in the Seven Years' War.

To close the budget gap,

London looked to Americans,

and in 1767 imposed new taxes on a variety of imports,

including the American’s beloved tea.

America’s response: no thanks!

They boycotted the importation of tea from Britain,

and instead, brewed their own.

After a new bunch of British customs commissioners

cried to London for troops to help with tax enforcement,

things got so heated

that the Red Coats fired on a mob in Boston,

killing several people,

in what was soon called the Boston Massacre.

Out of the terms of the 1773 Tea Act,

Parliament cooked up a new strategy.

Now the East India Company would sell the surplus tea

directly through hand-picked consignees in America.

This would lower the price to consumers,

making British tea competitive with the smuggled variety

while retaining some of the taxes.

But the colonists saw through the British ploy

and cried, “Monopoly!”

Now it’s a cold and rainy December 16, 1773.

About 5,000 Bostonians are crowded

into the Old South Meeting House,

waiting to hear whether new shipments of tea

that have arrived down the harbor

will be unloaded for sale.

When the captain of one of those ships reported

that he could not leave with his cargo on board,

Sam Adams rose to shout,

“This meeting can do no more to save the country!”

Cries of “Boston Harbor a teapot tonight!”

rang out from the crowd,

and about 50 men,

some apparently dressed as Native Americans,

marched down to Griffin’s Wharf,

stormed aboard three ships,

and threw 340 tea chests overboard.

An infuriated British government responsded

with the so-called Coercive Acts of 1774,

which, among other things,

closed the port of Boston until the locals compensated

the East India Company for the tea.

That never happened.

Representatives of the colonies

gathered at Philadelphia to consider

how best to respond to continued British oppression.

This first Continental Congress supported destruction of the tea,

pledged to support a continued boycott,

and went home in late October 1774

even more united in their determination

to protect their rights and liberties.

The Boston Tea Party began a chain reaction

that led with little pause

to the Declaration of Independence

and a bloody rebellion,

after which the new nation was free to drink its tea,

more or less, in peace.

抄写员:Andrea McDonough
审稿人:Bedirhan Cinar

你可能听说过波士顿倾茶事件,

是一群愤怒的殖民者

打扮成美洲原住民的样子,把几

箱茶扔进水里。

但故事要复杂得多,

充满了帝国阴谋、

企业危机、

走私

和美国革命的草根起源。

关于 1700 年代的茶,您首先需要了解的

是,它非常非常受欢迎。

在英格兰,每个男人、女人和孩子

每年都要喝近 300 杯这种东西。

而且,自从英国殖民美洲以来,

美国人也对茶着迷。

到 1760 年代,他们

每年喝超过一百万磅的茶。

所以,当英国想

在美国增加茶叶税时,

人们并不高兴,

主要是因为他们对伦敦的税收决定没有发言权

还记得那句名言

“没有代表就没有税收”吗?

美国殖民者长期以来一直认为

,他们不受立法机关征收的税款的约束

,而他们在立法机关缺乏代表权。

事实上,他们没有缴纳税款,

而是简单地避开了收税员。

由于美国东海岸长达数百英里,

而英国执法不严,

大约 3/4 的美国人喝的茶

是走私进来的,通常来自荷兰。

但英国人坚持认为议会

确实有权对殖民者征税,

尤其是在英国

在七年战争中与法国人的债务缠身之后。

为了缩小预算差距,

伦敦将目光投向了美国人,

并于 1767 年对各种进口商品征收了新税,

其中包括美国人喜爱的茶叶。

美国的回应:不,谢谢!

他们抵制从英国进口茶叶

,而是自己酿造。

在一群新的英国海关

专员向伦敦呼吁军队协助税收执法之后,

事情变得如此激烈

,以至于红大衣向波士顿的一群暴徒开枪,

造成数人死亡

,这很快被称为波士顿大屠杀。

根据 1773 年茶叶法案的条款,

议会制定了一项新战略。

现在东印度公司将

通过在美国精心挑选的收货人直接出售剩余的茶叶。

这将降低消费者的价格,

使英国茶叶与走私品种竞争,

同时保留一些税收。

但殖民者看穿了英国的伎俩

,大喊:“垄断!”

现在是 1773 年 12 月 16 日的一个寒冷多雨的日子。

大约 5,000 名波士顿人

挤在旧南会议厅里,

等待听到新运抵港口的茶叶是否

会卸货出售。

当其中一艘船的船长报告

说他不能带着他的货物离开时,

山姆亚当斯站起来大喊:

“这次会议不能再拯救国家了!”

高呼“波士顿港今晚是茶壶!”

从人群中响起

,大约 50 名男子,

其中一些显然是美洲原住民,

向格里芬码头行进,

冲上三艘船

,将 340 个茶箱扔到海里。

愤怒的英国政府

以所谓的 1774 年强制法案作为回应

,其中包括

关闭波士顿港,直到当地人

补偿东印度公司的茶叶。

从未发生过。

殖民地的代表

聚集在费城,考虑

如何最好地应对英国的持续压迫。

第一次大陆会议支持销毁茶叶,

承诺支持继续抵制,

并于 1774 年 10 月下旬回家,

更加团结一致地

决心保护自己的权利和自由。

波士顿倾茶事件

引发了连锁反应,几乎没有

暂停独立宣言

和一场血腥的叛乱,

之后新国家

或多或少地可以自由地喝茶,和平。