You are currently viewing the United Kingdom version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
19 MIN READ TIME
Boston Tea Party

“People like to tell themselves that the origins of American independence were non-violent. But it’s not true”

The Boston Tea Party is often cited as a model of peaceful civil protest. But, as Elinor Evans reveals, on the 250th anniversary of this milestone in America’s foundational story, it occurred against a backdrop of bloodshed
Costume party Protesters dressed as Native Americans empty the contents of crates of tea from an East India Company ship into Boston harbour in December 1773. Though the Boston Tea Party involved no bloodshed, it was preceded and followed by violence
GETTY IMAGES

On a warm August evening in 1765, Thomas Hutchinson, lieutenant governor of the British colony of Massachusetts, sat down to supper in his mansion, one of the finest homes in the colonial city of Boston. As he prepared to eat, word reached Hutchinson that an angry mob was advancing. He swiftly “directed my children to fly to a secure place” and withdrew to a nearby house, “where I had been but a few minutes before the hellish crew fell upon my house with the rage of devils and in a moment with axes split down the door and entered”.

The horde tore apart Hutchinson’s mansion, from room panelling to roof tiles, drinking his wine and stealing silverware and money. By the following day, he wrote, “nothing remained but bare walls and floor”.

Unlock this article and much more with
You can enjoy:
Enjoy this edition in full
Instant access to 600+ titles
Thousands of back issues
No contract or commitment
Try for 99p
SUBSCRIBE NOW
30 day trial, then just £9.99 / month. Cancel anytime. New subscribers only.


Learn more
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

This article is from...


View Issues
BBC History Magazine
Christmas 2023
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


BBC History
THIS ISSUE’S CONTRIBUTORS
Joanna Arman “Matilda was the ultimate forgotten queen:
Editorial
WELCOME
CHRISTMAS 2023
EVERY MONTH
ANNIVERSARIES
HELEN CARR highlights events that took place at Christmas in history
How do intractable conflicts come to an end?
BEHIND THE NEWS
Hard times: what centuries of cost-of-living crises reveal
BEHIND THE NEWS
MICHAEL WOOD ON…
THE GLORIES OF BUDDHIST ART
HIDDEN HISTORIES
KAVITA PURI on the price China paid in the Second World War
LETTERS
Historian and broadcaster Mary Beard, whose expertise, reader
Q&A
A selection of historical conundrums answered by experts
2023 BOOKS OF THE YEAR
@SIMONMASKELLART It’s been another excellent year for history
Emily Brand
In exploring how thousands of Indigenous Americans experienced
James Holland
You can accuse me of fraternal bias, but
Kavita Puri
I spend a lot of time thinking about
Roger Moorhouse
Personal portrait A photo of author Daniel
Charlotte Lydia Riley
A Northern Wind: Britain 1962–65 (Bloomsbury) is the
Michael Wood
Nearly 60 years on, the Cultural Revolution still
Jeremy Black
My choices cover three very different topics, all
Tracy Borman
Hampton Court Palace is most famous as the
Hannah Skoda
I begin in the early Middle Ages with
Peter Frankopan
GETTY IMAGES One of the best things about
Hannah Cusworth
Nandini Das’s Courting India: England, Mughal India and
Rana Mitter
Sweeping in ambition and scale, Peter Frankopan’s The
ENCOUNTERS DIARY
DIARY By Jonathan Wright, Rebecca Franks and Eleanor
HISTORY ON THE AIRWAVES
SATHNAM SANGHERA (left) tells us about his new BBC Radio 4 series on tea and imperialism, exploring exploitation and international relations
A Christmas feast
RECIPES
ENCOUNTERS PODCASTS
Every issue we highlight a recent edition of our podcast. You can find it along with more than 1,700 previous episodes at our website: historyextra.com/podcast
Coastal treasure
EXPLORE… WHITEHAVEN, CUMBRIA
Budapest in five places
There’s much more to the city on the Danube than its hot springs and Cold War heritage. THOMAS LORMAN highlights five sites to visit in the Hungarian capital
CHRISTMAS QUIZ 2023
’Tis the season to test your knowledge of all things historical with our fiendish festive quiz
PRIZE CROSSWORD
Across 1/39 Nickname of legendary frontierswoman buried next
Here’s a selection of the exciting content that’s available on our website historyextra.com
Killers of the Flower Moon: the true story
NEXT MONTH
January issue on sale 21 December 2023
Lady Hester Stanhope
1776–1839
FEATURES
The long death of the Roman republic
Julius Caesar’s murder is often seen as the event that ushered in the age of emperors. Yet structural weaknesses had plagued Rome’s republic long before his death
THE RACE ACROSS THE ATLANTIC
In 1969, everyone from Prince Michael of Kent to Billy Butlin competed in a dash between London and New York aboard tandems, sedan chairs and jump jets. Rachel Harris-Gardiner recalls a madcap forerunner of Race Across the World
THE MANY FACES OF NAPOLEON
As a major new film explores the life of the French emperor, Matt Elton asks historians Laura O’Brien and David Andress how we can make sense of the diverse and contradictory aspects of Napoleon’s character and career
The queen behind the veil
Matilda of Scotland, wife of Henry I, did perhaps more than any other figure to bridge the chasm between the Anglo-Saxons and their Norman conquerors. So why, asks Joanna Arman, has she been written out of history?
Walter Cowan Britain’s oldest commando
For some servicemen hardened by a long military career, death in battle is preferable to simply fading away in old age. JOSHUA LEVINE tells the story of one such man, a retired naval officer who leapt bravely back into the fray during the Second World War – at the age of 70
ADVERTISEMENT
THE ROYAL MINT
royalmint.com
Advertisement
martinrandall.com www.classicbattlefieldtours.com
Advertisement
TEMPLARS
Bolsover Cruise Club
www.bolsovercruiseclub.com/into-the-blue
Stroke
stroke.org.uk/legacy
RadioTimes
WATERSTONES
Buy subscriptions
buysubscriptions.com/X23AD
Espionage, Intrigue and Murder
ancestry
yourstory@ancestry.co.uk