"1773" Boston Tea Party Vinyl Decal

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"1773" Boston Tea Party in a vinyl decal | For Hardcore History Folks

Size: 4"

Placement: The design is placed on the outside of the glass, facing the viewer.

Shown here together with our smaller, "1773" Boston Tea Party sticker.

How to apply your new vinyl decal

Remove the paper backing. The tape will hold the individual pieces of your sticker in place while you position it on the surface of the item. Once positioned, press it onto the surface and use the edge of a credit card to go over the entire surface several times, making sure that you apply pressure to each element of the design so that it’s fully adhered.

If your design is especially delicate, let it sit for 24 hours before removing the transfer tape. This gives your sticker time to adhere more strongly to the surface so that when the transfer tape is removed, the design remains intact on the surface of the item.
Slowly peel the transfer tape away at a 180 degree angle and the sticker will be adhered to the surface of the item.


Also available,
the "1773" Boston Tea Party design is also available in a crewneck shirt, women's v-neck, crewneck sweatshirt in brown, leather patch cap, embroidered cap , a handmade bracelet, and a sticker.

Browse our entire collection of stickers, magnets, bookmarks and patch.


The historic event behind the design

There's no name or other explanation on the design, which is why we labeled it "for hardcore history folks." We asked our Facebook community to explain the history behind the design:

"The Tea Act of 1773 gave the British East India Company a monopoly on tea sales in America.

On evening of December 16th, 1773, Bostonians, following the lead of the Sons of Liberty and disguised as Narragansett or Mohawk Indians (sources disagree), boarded three ships and destroyed 342 chests of East India Company tea, which they dumped in the harbor.

The destruction of the tea was the final straw for Parliament and led to the Intolerable Acts of 1774. These closed the port of Boston, instituted a military government, quartered troops among the population, and allowed all British officials charged with a crime to stand trial in Great Britain instead of the Colonies.

Many years later George Hewes, a 31–year–old shoemaker and participant, recalled "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."

Thanks to Chuck Burks, Nicole René Shults, Dennis Conley, Janet Raychouni, and Kevin Nelson for their contributions.

As Larisa Moran Prinz commented, "Be a rebel and stump the average person."

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