Here is the schedule of events planned for Sunday, 13 December, at the Lexington Visitor’s Center (1875 Massachusetts Avenue) and nearby:
- 9:00 A.M.: Lexington Minute Men encampment open for visitors.
- 10:00: Musket drill, inspection, and run-through of the Manual of Arms at the encampment.
- 11:00: Demonstrations of 18th-century cooking.
- 12:00 noon: Parade by the Lexington Minute Men in military formation with fife and drum. Militia muster on the town common.
- 12:15 P.M.: Musket drill, inspection, and run-through of the Manual of Arms on the common, concluded by ten volleys, one for each Lexington militiaman killed on 19 Apr 1775.
- 1:00-7:00: Special holiday tours of Buckman Tavern, across the street from the common. (Free for members of the Lexington Historical Society; $5 for others.)
- 1:30: Ceremonial bonfire of tea at the encampment, with members of the public invited to join reenactors in consigning the hazardous herb into the flames. Music by the William Diamond Junior Fife and Drum Corps.
- 2:00-4:00 P.M.: Lexington Minute Men encampment open for visitors.
I had heard - or read somewhere - that Boston wasn't the only town to have a tea party. So far, I haven't been able to find other examples. This tea burning at Lexington is the closest. Do you know if there were other "tea parties" similar to Boston's?
ReplyDeleteAmericans didn't start using the term "tea party" for the destruction of the tea until the early 1800s, and then the romanticization of the Boston act made local historians attach that name to every destruction of tea. So there was nothing on the scale of what happened in Boston in December 1773, but over the following months there were stocks of tea destroyed in Boston (again); New York; Salem; Greenwich, New Jersey; Annapolis; and elsewhere.
ReplyDeleteThat makes sense. One more question which I am sure you know the answer to. How certain are we that we know who was behind the now-called Boston Tea Party? My kids' history books all say the Sons of Liberty, but I don't believe anyone ever 'fessed up. I suspect a few people mentioned the event in their letters or diaries, but people were probably as prone to embellishing their involvement in events then as they are now.
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