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  • 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 nature was free to drink its tea,

  • more or less, in peace.

You've probably heard of the Boston Tea Party,

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TED-ED】ボストン茶会の裏話-ベン・ラバリー (【TED-Ed】The story behind the Boston Tea Party - Ben Labaree)

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    lsy に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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