Causes > Greenwich Tea Party
Greenwich Tea Party
Background
The Greenwich Tea Party was an incident that took place on December 22, 1774, early in American Revolutionary War, in what is now Greenwich Township, a small community in Cumberland County, New Jersey on the Cohansey River. That night, a load of tea meant to be sent overland into Philadelphia, Pennsylvania was torched by a group of 40 Patriots dressed as Native Americans. The event took place a year after the Boston Tea Party. One participant of the Greenwich Tea Party was Richard Howell, who would become the third governor of the state of New Jersey and whose granddaughter, Varina Howell, would marry Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederacy. In 1908, the Cumberland County Historical Society erected a monument to mark the event, which is located at Main Street at Market Square in Greenwich Township.[1] On September 27 and 28, 2008, there was a weekend celebration of the 100th anniversary of the monument.Revolutionary War Causes
Causes List
- Administration of Justice
- Albany Congress
- Annapolis Tea Party
- Battle of Alamance
- Battle of Golden Hill
- Boston Massacre
- British Acts
- Colonialism
- Currency Acts
- Declaration of Independence
- Declaratory Act
- French and Indian Wars
- Gaspee Affair
- Greenwich Tea Party
- Habeas Corpus
- Halifax Resolves
- Hanged, Drawn and Quartered
- Intolerable Acts
- Lord Dunmores War
- Magna Carta
- Malcom Affair
- Massachusetts Government Act
- Mercantilism
- Molasses Act
- Navigation Acts
- No Taxation Without Representation
- Olive Branch Petition
- Parsons Cause
- Powder Alarm
- Quartering Act
- Quebec Act
- Royal Proclamation of 1763
- Stamp Act Congress
- Stamp Act
- Tar and Feathering
- Tea Act
- Townshend Acts
- Virginia Resolves
- Writ of Assistance