December 16, 1773: The Boston Tea Party

On the night of December 16, 1773, over 100 Bostonians disguised as Mohawk or Narragansett warriors  boarded three merchant ships of the British East India Company moored at Griffin’s Wharf in Boston Harbor and proceeded to dump  342 chests of tea overboard in what would become known as the Boston Tea Party. It was organized and carried out by the Sons of Liberty—a secretive organization led by Samuel Adams and John Hancock—who were the driving force of opposition to British rule over the colonies. The tea party was an act of protest driven by long standing colonial grievances against British rule but the primary complaint was the Tea Act of 1773 and the fact that the American colonies were taxed as subjects of the British crown but denied representation in Parliament. The tea party set off a series of British punitive measures known as the “Coercive” or “Intolerable” Acts that eventually plunged New England and the remaining American Colonies  into armed rebellion against British rule two years later.

In the decade prior to the tea party, Great Britain was facing serious economic difficulties. It emerged victorious from a seven year struggle against arch rival France in 1763, known as the French and Indian War in North America, but its treasury was depleted. Moreover, the British economy was mired in a recession as a result of policies that were implemented to finance the war. The British government looked for new and untapped means to replenish its coffers and beginning in 1764 it levied a series of new taxes and customs duties on the American Colonies to raise more revenues. Over the next, eight years the British Parliament in London passed the Sugar Act, Stamp Act, and the Townshend Acts, provoking violent protests by the outraged colonists. 

The colonist anger stemmed from a deep seated  conviction that the power to tax derived from the consent of the governed, a principle dating back to 1215 and the Magna Carta. The colonists were already paying taxes levied by their colonial legislatures for public goods and services and since there was no colonial representation in parliament, they argued, London had no right to impose additional taxes and duties on the colonies. British authorities disagreed. As such, the brewing crisis was not simply about taxes but about the power relationship between Great Britain and the colonies.

By the 1770s, relations between the American colonist and the British government had become increasingly acrimonious, if not confrontational, with Boston serving as ground zero for all anti-British sentiment and protests. In March 1770, British troops, who had been deployed to Boston earlier to quell violent protests over the Townshend Acts, opened fire on a small group of angry Bostonians, who had been heckling them, killing five in what would become known as the Boston Massacre. The massacre only served to further roil an already indignant public. In May 1773, the British Parliament passed the Tea Act which was intended to help the East India Company, one of Britain’s most important commercial institutions, stave off financial ruin and reassert its authority over the increasingly rebellious American colonies.

The Tea Act was a complex plan that actually lowered the price of tea but it also forced the colonists to pay a tax of three pence on every pound of tea while granting the East India Company a monopoly on the tea market in the colonies. Many colonists denounced the act, seeing through it for what it was, a ruse to make them accept Parliament’s right to tax them. Moreover, the act threatened to put smugglers and legitimate importers out of business because it undercut the price of tea that smugglers were offering and the tea had to be purchased from designated consignees. As a result a nexus of opposition  emerged to include radical political activists, smugglers, and the merchant class.

The first tea ships of the East India Company began to reach North America in November of 1773. Seven ships were bound for Boston, New York, Philadelphia and Charleston. The ships encountered strong opposition in all four cities and in New York, Philadelphia, and Charleston the ships were prevented from unloading their cargo and forced to return home. In Boston, a defiant Royal Governor, Thomas Hutchinson, was determined to assert his authority demanded that the ships be allowed to dock and that colonial merchants pay the duties on the cargo. On 28 November, the Dartmouth, arrived in Boston Harbor. It was soon joined by two other ships, the Eleanor and the Beaver. Threats from the Sons of Liberty and other like-minded groups prevented the ships from unloading their tea while Hutchinson would not allow the ship to leave the port without the customs duties being paid. The stage was set for a historical showdown.

On the afternoon of December 16, nearly 5,000 Bostonians crammed into the Old South Meeting house to listen to Samuel Adams, John Hancock, and others debate a course of action to resolve the tea crisis. Late in the day, word spread that a last ditch effort to persuade Hutchinson to send the ships back had failed. Frustrated by the impasse Adams concluded, “This meeting can do nothing more to save the country!” With those words the meeting came to an abrupt close, and it was the signal for the Sons of Liberty to carry out a more radical plan, one which they had been preparing for for some time.

As the people filed out of the Old South Meeting House, a mob began to form and shouts of “Boston Harbor, a teapot tonight!” filled the air. The mob made its way towards Griffin’s Wharf where the three ships of the East India Company were moored. Along the way, 150 Sons of Liberty donned disguises as Mohawk and Narragansett warriors to conceal their identities and avoid any future retribution for acts they were about to carry out. The affair was planned and executed meticulously. The mob boarded the ships roughly around 7pm under a cover of darkness meeting little resistance from the ships’ crews. They proceeded to pry or smash open the 342 tea chests dumping their contents overboard into harbor. The conspirators were careful to ensure that no other property or people were vandalized or harmed or that anyone from within their ranks stole any of the tea. After three hours of heated work, they dispersed from the ships and returned to their homes, with each man having sworn an oath of secrecy about the affair.

Word of the tea party reached London little over a month later prompting a strong response from the British Government. British Prime Minister Lord North was determined to reassert British authority over the rebellious colonists and teach them a lesson they would not forget. In March 1774, British Parliament passed the first of a series of measures known as the “Intolerable Acts” intended to punish the colonists for their tea escapade. The first measure was the Boston Port Act which authorized the Royal Navy to blockade Boston, effectively shutting down the port to almost all commerce and trade until the tea was paid for. The port closure halted virtually all maritime trade, causing massive job losses, shuttered businesses, and created a humanitarian crisis as food supplies became scarce. The second, which was passed in May, was the Massachusetts Governing Act which ended the Massachusetts Constitution and the free election of local officials. Instead, it gave the Royal Governor the power to appoint local officials which posed a direct threat to representative government in the colony. On the same day, parliament also approved the Act for the Impartial Administration of Justice which gave the governor the ability to move a trial to another colony or Great Britain if it is determined “that an indifferent trial cannot be had within the said province.” The Act eliminated the right to a fair trial by one’s peers, removing an established judicial principle dating to Magna Carta. The fourth and final punitive measure was the Quartering Act passed in June which obligated the colonist to pay for housing British soldiers in North America. Lastly, Parliament wanted someone with a stronger hand to implement these acts and replaced Thomas Hutchinson with General Thomas Gage as Governor of Massachusetts, effectively putting the colony under military rule. In addition to serving as Royal Governor, Gage was also Commander-in-Chief of British forces in America. Gage and four fresh regiments set sail for Boston in mid-April 1774. 

It was the fervent hope of the Crown that these strict and punitive acts would serve as punishment for the colony of Massachusetts and as a warning and threat to the other American colonies as well. The calculation was that other colonies would soon submit to British authority and resume their place as subordinates to Parliament and the Crown out of fear of similar reprisals.

However, these measures backfired on the British. Other colonies recoiled in horror at what they witnessed. After seeing the power Great Britain leveled on Massachusetts, other colonies quickly became sympathetic with their fellow colonists and began to wonder how much longer it would be before the same type of actions would be done to their own cities or colonies. The other American colonies soon sent aid and supplies to the beleaguered people of Boston.

On top of the fear these acts caused in colonies throughout America, they also forced the colonists to begin asking more important questions. These questions included: where had Great Britain received its authority? And to what degree did they have the right to use such force on the colonies? The word tyranny was used to describe the actions of Parliament and the Crown.  Men like George Washington in Virginia would write, “Shall we supinely sit, and see one province after another fall a sacrifice to despotism?” In a years time, “the shot heard around the world” would ring out on Lexington green marking the beginning of the American Revolution.

Storming of the Bastille: July 14, 1789

On July 14, 1789, Parisian mobs stormed the Bastille—a notorious prison and symbol of royal tyranny—in what is generally regarded as arguably the  beginning of the French Revolution. Inspired by the American Revolution, the French Revolution would prove to be a watershed event in the history of Western civilization helping spread many of the ideas that now form the foundation of modern liberal democracy.  It would also inspire Karl Marx and other future socialists, with its emphasis on egalitarianism. However, the Revolution, which was originally a popular uprising against the absolute power of the king and the vast inequality between the rich and the poor, would eventually consume itself giving way to the dictatorship of Napoleon Bonaparte and eventually a restoration of the monarchy.

By the mid-1780s, France found itself in deep economic crisis. Decades of war against Great Britain, especially support for the American colonies in their war for independence, had emptied the state coffers. Moreover, an inefficient and regressive taxation system in which the urban poor and middle class paid most of the taxes and the nobility lived lives of luxury combined with two decades of poor harvests left the country on the brink of financial ruin and a social implosion. 

King Louis XVI of France

King Louis XVI sought to replenish the state treasury by raising taxes, including a universal land tax from which the nobility would no longer be exempt. However, he lacked the authority on his own to levy any new taxes. The only institution in France with that power was the Estates General an assembly representing France’s clergy, nobility and middle class. The King agreed to convene the Estates General in May 1789, which had not met since 1614, to garner support for his proposed reforms. The assembly consisted of equal numbers of representatives of each estate, and voting had been by order, with the First Estate (the clergy), the Second Estate (the nobility), and the Third Estate (middle class and peasants) each receiving one vote. Under this framework, the Third Estate routinely was outvoted by the combined vote of the nobility and clergy. Now representing roughly 95 percent of the population, the Third Estate demanded political power commensurate with the amount of the population it represented. Members argued that the Third Estate should be doubled in size and that voting should be by headcount and not order. However, a majority of the clergy and nobility balked at this idea.

Unsatisfied, the Third Estate now decided on a more radical course of action. They declared themselves the National Assembly, that was representative of all the people. This new National Assembly expressed its desire to include the other two Estates in its deliberations but also made it clear that it was determined to conduct the nation’s affairs without them. Faced with a growing insurrection and a threat to his absolute power, King Louis XVI tried to prevent the National Assembly from meeting by locking them out of the Salle des États, claiming it needed to be prepared for a royal speech. On 20 June, the Assembly met in a tennis court outside Versailles and swore not to disperse until a new constitution had been agreed. Messages of support poured in from Paris and other cities; by 27 June, they had been joined by 100 clergy and 47 members of the nobility. On July 9 the Assembly reconstituted itself as the National Constituent Assembly.

A showdown between the crown and the general public was looming. The only questions remained how and when and what would be the catalyst. On 11 July, Louis XVI, acting under the influence of the conservative nobles, dismissed his finance minister, who had been sympathetic to the Third Estate, and rumors soon spread that he was preparing to use the military to shut down the Assembly. The news brought crowds of protestors into the streets who thought this was the beginning of a conservative coup and soldiers of the elite French Guards refused to disperse them. Paris was soon consumed with riots, anarchy, and widespread looting. The mobs now had the support of the French Guard, including arms and trained soldiers who were sympathetic to the people.

Storming of the Bastille


Events came to a head on July 14, when a mob, with the support of the disgruntled French Guard, stormed the Bastille in search of arms and ammunition and to release the large number of political prisoners rumored to be held behind its walls. After several hours of fighting the Governor of the prison surrendered. Shortly thereafter he was executed and his headed paraded around the city on a pike. Although the revolutionaries found stores of arms and ammunition, there were only seven prisoners at the Bastille: four forgers, two noblemen held for “immoral behavior”, and a murder suspect. Nonetheless, a blow had been struck against Royal authority and noble privilege.

The storming of the Bastille had fundamentally changed the balance of power and revealed the monarchy for the sclerotic and delegitimized institution it had become. It also put in motion a series of events over the next decade that would set not only France but the entire European continent aflame. By 1791, the moderates who held power following the attack on the Bastille gave way to more impatient and revolutionary Jacobin elements of the Sans Culottes—the working class—amidst growing food shortages and a worsening economic crisis. The following August, these revolutionaries would arrest Louis XVI, his wife Marie Antoinette, and the rest of the Royal family. The King was executed by guillotine the subsequent January for allegedly conspiring with Austria and Prussia to overthrow the revolution and his wife suffered the same fate nine months later.

The execution of Louis XVI

The execution of the royals ushered in the most violent and bloody phase of the revolution, known as the “Reign of Terror.” Over a 10 month period, 17,000 suspected enemies of the revolution were guillotined without a public trial or any legal assistance. Many of the killings were carried out under orders from Maximilian Robespierre, one of the Jacobin leaders who dominated the draconian Committee of Public Safety that had been set up to root out enemies of the revolution. Intoxicated by his power, Robespierre called for increasingly more executions and purges, even though the threat to the revolution, at home and abroad, had receded. By the summer of 1794 many had begun to turn against Robespierre and his excesses. An uneasy coalition of moderates and revolutionaries formed to oppose Robespierre and his followers. On July 27, 1794 Robespierre was arrested and the next day he and 21 of his supporters were guillotined without a trial.

The death of Robespierre would bring the Reign of Terror to an end and lead to a less radical and less violent phase of the revolution. Executive power was now invested in the hands of a five-member Directory (Directoire) appointed by parliament. The Directory, however, would fail to distinguish itself as an effective governing body. The Directory’s four years in power were riddled with financial crises, popular discontent, inefficiency and, above all, political corruption. On November 9, 1799, as frustration with the Directory reached a fever pitch, a young and brash General named Napoleon Bonaparte staged a coup d’état, abolishing the Directory and appointing himself France’s “First Consul.” The event marked the end of the French Revolution and the beginning of the Napoleonic era, in which France would come to dominate much of continental Europe.