Matters reach a crisis when the time…
December 1773 CE
Matters reach a crisis when the time period for landing the tea and paying the Townshend taxes is set to expire.
The protest meeting held at Boston's Old South Meeting House on the night of December 16 is the largest yet seen.
On this Thursday, the evening before the tea is due to be landed, Captain Roach appeals to Governor Hutchinson to allow his ship to leave without unloading its tea.
When Roach returns and reports Hutchinson's refusal to the massive protest meeting, Samuel Adams says to the assembly "This meeting can do nothing more to save the country".
As though on cue, the Sons of Liberty, thinly disguised as either Mohawk or Narragansett natives and armed with small hatchets and clubs, head toward Griffin's Wharf (in Boston Harbor), where lie Dartmouth and the newly arrived Beaver and Eleanor.
Swiftly and efficiently, casks of tea are brought up from the hold to the deck, reasonable proof that some of the "Indians" are, in fact, longshoremen.
The casks are opened and the tea dumped overboard; the work, lasting well into the night, is quick, thorough, and efficient.
By dawn, over three hundred and forty-two casks or ninety thousand pounds (forty-five tons) of tea worth an estimated £10,000 or $1.87 million USD in 2007 currency had been consigned to the waters of Boston harbor.
Nothing else had been damaged or stolen, except a single padlock accidentally broken and anonymously replaced not long thereafter.
Tea will wash up on the shores around Boston for weeks.
Attempts are made by the citizens of Boston to carry off some of the tea.
A small number of small boats are rowed where the tea was visible, then beating it with oars to render it unusable.
The fourth East India Company ship carrying tea had not arrived with the other three because it had run aground in Provincetown.
All fifty-eight tea chests are salvaged and put onto a fishing schooner, which arrives safely in Boston and into Bostonians' teapots.