Spencer - Tea Party Patriots Mission Statement
Tea Party Patriots was formed to promote American values, protect our freedoms, control spending, reduce taxes, and limit the size of our government.
SPENCER -TEA PARTY PATRIOTS
WHO ARE THEY AND WHAT DO THEY DO?
SPENCER -TEA PARTY PATRIOTS ARE HOME GROWN AMERICAN CITIZENS.
THEY ARE REPUBLICANS, DEMOCRATS, INDEPENDENTS, LIBRITARIANS
THEY ARE FARMERS, TEACHERS, LABORORS, MECHANICS, DOCTORS, MILITARY
THEY ARE RETIRED, BABY BOOMERS, YOUNG PARENTS, COLLEGE STUDENTS
THEY ATTEND SCHOOL BOARD MEETING AND CHURCH WITH YOU. THEY ARE YOUR NEIGHBORS
THEY ARE YOU AND ME
ALL THEIR LIVES THEY HAVE WORKED HARD, PAID THEIR TAXES, TAKEN CARE OF THEIR CHILDREN, THEIR PARENTS, THEIR CHURCHES, THEIR SCHOOLS AND THEIR COMMUNITEES
THEY HAVE VOTED OR NOT VOTED
AND HAVE TRUSTED THEIR POLITICIANS TO DO WHAT IS IN THE BEST INTEREST OF THEM AND OF THEIR COUNTRY…………..BUT
IN THE LAST FEW YEARS THEY HAVE STARTED TO WAKE UP
THEY SEE THE CURRUPTION IN THEIR GOVERNMENT
THEY SEE THE CONSTITUTION TRAMPLED ON
THEY SEE MORALS, FAMILY VALUES, AND CHRISTIAN VALUES DISCOUNTED
THEY SEE THE DIRECTION POLITICIANS ARE TAKING THEIR COUNTRY
THEY ARE SCARED ……… AND THEY ARE ANGRY
POLITICIANS WITH THEIR SPENDING, POWER GRABS , AND MASSIVE BILLS
HAVE AWOKEN “THE SLEEPING GIANT”
THE AMERICAN PEOPLE
THEY HAVE LISTENED TO THEIR ELECTED OFFICIALS
NOW THEY WANT THEIR ELECTED OFFICALS TO LISTEN TO THEM
NO TO MORE SPENDING
NO TO GOVERNMENT CONTROLLING BUSNESSES
NO TO PASSING BILLS THEY HAVEN’T EVEN READ
NO TO AMNESTY FOR ILLEGALS
NO TO CHANGING AMERICA FROM THE REPUBLIC IT IS ITTENDED TO BE
TO A SOCIALIST OR FAUCIST COUNTRY
PLEASE JOIN US - LET YOUR VOICE BE HEARD
LET OUR VOICES BE HEARD
On April 15, the deadline for filing taxes, conservatives are planning Tax Day Tea Parties around the country. Inspired by the Boston Tea Party in 1773, the rallies are designed as protests against the use of taxpayer money for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, the stimulus package and other government spending.
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Victory in the French and Indian War was costly for the British. At the war's
conclusion
in 1763, King George III and his government looked to taxing the
American colonies as a way of recouping their war costs. They were also
looking for ways to reestablish control over the colonial governments
that had become increasingly independent while the Crown was distracted
by the war. Royal ineptitude compounded the problem. A series of
actions including the Stamp Act (1765), the Townsend Acts (1767) and
the Boston Massacre (1770) agitated the colonists, straining relations
with the mother country. But it was the Crown's attempt to tax tea that
spurred the colonists to action and laid the groundwork for the
American Revolution.
![]() Colonialists attack, tar and feather a hapless tax collector |
The colonists were not fooled by Parliament's ploy. When the East India Company sent shipments of tea to Philadelphia and New York the ships were not allowed to land. In Charleston the tea-laden ships were permitted to dock but their cargo was consigned to a warehouse where it remained for three years until it was sold by patriots in order to help finance the revolution.
In Boston, the arrival of three tea ships ignited a furious reaction. The crisis came to a head on December 16, 1773 when as many as 7,000 agitated locals milled about the wharf where the ships were docked. A mass meeting at the Old South Meeting House that morning resolved that the tea ships should leave the harbor without payment of any duty. A committee was selected to take this message to the Customs House to force release of the ships out of the harbor. The Collector of Customs refused to allow the ships to leave without payment of the duty. Stalemate. The committee reported back to the mass meeting and a howl erupted from the meeting hall. It was now early evening and a group of about 200 men, some disguised as Indians, assembled on a near-by hill. Whopping war chants, the crowd marched two-by-two to the wharf, descended upon the three ships and dumped their offending cargos of tea into the harbor waters.
Most colonists applauded the action while the reaction in London was swift and vehement. In March 1774 Parliament passed the Intolerable Acts which among other measures closed the Port of Boston. The fuse that led directly to the explosion of American independence was lit.
Take your tea and shove it.
George Hewes was a member of the band of "Indians" that boarded the tea ships that evening. His recollection of the event was published some years later. We join his story as the group makes its way to the tea-laden ships:
"It was now evening, and
I immediately dressed
myself in the costume of an Indian, equipped with a small hatchet,
which I and my associates denominated the tomahawk, with which, and a
club, after having painted my face and hands with coal dust in the shop
of a blacksmith, I repaired to Griffin's wharf, where the ships lay
that contained the tea. When I first appeared in the street after being
thus disguised, I fell in with many who were dressed, equipped and
painted as I was, and who fell in with me and marched in order to the
place of our destination.
When we arrived at the wharf, there were three of
our number who assumed an authority to direct our operations, to which
we readily submitted. They divided us into three parties, for the
purpose of boarding the three ships which contained the tea at the same
time. The name of him who commanded the division to which I was
assigned was Leonard Pitt. The names of the other commanders I never
knew. We were immediately ordered by the respective commanders to board
all the ships at the same time, which we promptly obeyed. The commander
of the division to which I belonged, as soon as we were on board the
ship, appointed me boatswain, and ordered me to go to the captain and
demand of him the keys to the hatches and a dozen candles. I made the
demand accordingly, and the captain promptly replied, and delivered the
articles; but requested me at the same time to do no damage to the ship
or rigging. We then were ordered by our commander to open the hatches
and take out all the chests of tea and throw them overboard, and we
immediately proceeded to execute his orders, first cutting and
splitting the chests with our tomahawks, so as thoroughly to expose
them to the effects of the water.

The Boston Tea Party
In about three hours from the time we went on board, we had thus broken and thrown overboard every tea chest to be found in the ship, while those in the other ships were disposing of the tea in the same way, at the same time. We were surrounded by British armed ships, but no attempt was made to resist us.
...The next morning, after we had cleared the ships of the tea, it was discovered that very considerable quantities of it were floating upon the surface of the water; and to prevent the possibility of any of its being saved for use, a number of small boats were manned by sailors and citizens, who rowed them into those parts of the harbor wherever the tea was visible, and by beating it with oars and paddles so thoroughly drenched it as to render its entire destruction inevitable."
References:
How To Cite This Article:
Hawkes, James A, Retrospect of the Boston
Tea-Party, with a Memoir
of George R. T. Hewes... (1834) reprinted in Commager, Henry Steele,
Morris Richard B., The Spirit of 'Seventy-Six vol I (1958); Labaree,
Benjamin Woods, The Boston Tea Party (1964).
"The Boston Tea Party, 1773," EyeWitness to History,
www.eyewitnesstohistory.com (2002).
Tea party sites
- Spencer, Ia Tea Party
- The National 912 Project
- Calendar 912 Blogspot
- Teaparty Day
- Pajamas TV Coverage


