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  2. Edenton Tea Party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edenton_Tea_Party

    Plaque commemorating the Edenton Tea Party, October 25, 1774. Located inside the North Carolina State Capitol in Raleigh, North Carolina. In October 1774, 51 ladies from Edenton and the surrounding area signed a statement, dated October 25, 1774, supporting the resolutions passed by the first North Carolina Provincial Congress in the previous August. [14]

  3. Committees of correspondence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Committees_of_correspondence

    With Pennsylvania's action in May 1774, all of the colonies that eventually rebelled had established such committees. [25] The colonial committees successfully organized common resistance to the Tea Act and even recruited physicians who would write that drinking tea would make Americans "weak, effeminate, and valetudinarian for life."

  4. Talbot Resolves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talbot_Resolves

    The Talbot Resolves was a proclamation made by Talbot County citizens of the British Province of Maryland, on May 24, 1774. The British Parliament had decided to blockade Boston Harbor as punishment for a protest against taxes on tea. The protest became known as the Boston Tea Party.

  5. First North Carolina Provincial Congress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_North_Carolina...

    The delegates to the First North Carolina Provincial Congress deliberated in 1774 in response to the Boston Tea Party and Intolerable Acts (Boston Port Act) by British rulers. The following resolutions were passed by this congress on August 27, 1774 and are listed below as they appear in the minutes of the sessions. [11] [5]

  6. Edenton, North Carolina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edenton,_North_Carolina

    The town was the site of the Edenton Tea Party, a protest organized by several Edenton women in 1774 in solidarity with the organizers of the Boston Tea Party. It was the birthplace of Harriet Jacobs, an enslaved African American whose 1861 autobiography, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, is now considered an American classic.

  7. Peggy Stewart (ship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peggy_Stewart_(ship)

    Painting by Francis Blackwell Mayer, 1896, depicting the burning of Peggy Stewart. Peggy Stewart was a Maryland cargo vessel burned on October 19, 1774, in Annapolis as a punishment for contravening the boycott on tea imports which had been imposed in retaliation for the British occupation of Boston following the Boston Tea Party.

  8. Intolerable Acts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intolerable_Acts

    The Intolerable Acts, sometimes referred to as the Insufferable Acts or Coercive Acts, were a series of five punitive laws passed by the British Parliament in 1774 after the Boston Tea Party. The laws aimed to punish Massachusetts colonists for their defiance in the Tea Party protest of the Tea Act , a tax measure enacted by Parliament in May 1773.

  9. Penelope Barker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penelope_Barker

    Barker wrote a statement proposing a boycott of British goods, like cloth and tea. Followed by 50 other women, the Edenton Tea Party was created. [1] [7] On October 25, 1774, Barker and her supporters, Edenton Ladies Patriotic Guild, met at the house of Elizabeth King to sign the Edenton Tea Party resolution that protested the British Tea Act ...