Today marks the 240th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party. This historical event is often credited as being the spark that set off the American Revolution. This evening many Bostonians will participate in the annual re-enactment of the Tea Party starting at the Old South Meeting House and ending up at Griffin's Wharf (we can talk about historical accuracies of the new Boston Tea Party Museum some other time).
When creating social studies lesson plans around the Boston Tea Party, it is important to teach not only the event in historical context, but also about current movements that claim to be descendents of the original movement. It would be helpful to spend a couple class periods using primary sources to answer the inquiry question, "Were the Boston colonists justified in their acts during the Boston Tea Party?" This could be followed with a debate or a mock trial. Afterward, the students should learn about the Parliament's reaction to the Tea Party and the ensuing Coercive Acts or Intolerable Acts (as some of the people in the colonies called them). Finally, students can be asked to examine modern movements claiming to be rooted in the Boston Tea Party and assess if those groups live up to the spirit and the philosophies of the Boston Tea Party of 1773. For some excellent resources in teaching the Tea Party, see the links below:
Resources for teaching the original Boston Tea Party (and the woman-led Edenton Tea Party that followed):
Boston Tea Party: Lesson Plan (Secondary)
Boston Tea Party: Lesson Plan (Elementary)
Boston Tea Party: Video Game: From Crown or Colony?
Boston Tea Party: National History Education Clearinghouse
Boston Tea Party: Massachusetts Historical Society [Set 1]
Boston Tea Party: Massachusetts Historical Society [Set 2]
Boston Tea Party: National Archives
Boston Tea Party: The Smithsonian
Boston Tea Party: Public Broadcasting Service (PBS)
Boston Tea Party: The History Channel
Boston Tea Party: University of Houston's Digital History (Account of George Robert Twelve Hewes)
The Shoemaker and the Tea Party by: Memory and the American Revolution by Alfred Young
Edenton Tea Party: North Carolina History Project
Edenton Tea Party: Learn NC
Boston and Edenton Tea Parties: University of North Carolina
Resources for teaching about modern day movements linked to the Boston Tea Party:
Lesson Plan: The Tea Party
Lesson Plan: Occupy Wall Street
Lesson Plan: Immigration Reform
Lesson Plan: Gay Marriage
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