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  1. The Boston Tea Party, a Bootleg of songs by The White Stripes. Released 20 April 2003. Genres: Garage Rock, Garage Rock ... The Boston Tea Party By The White Stripes. Artist: The White Stripes: Type: Bootleg / Unauthorized: Released: 20 April 2003: RYM Rating: 4.19 / 5.0 from 13 ratings Ranked #62 for 2003, #3,011 ...

  2. The Boston Tea Party, a Bootleg of songs by The White Stripes. Released 20 April 2003. Genres: Garage Rock, Garage Rock ... The Boston Tea Party By The White Stripes. Artist: The White Stripes: Type: Bootleg / Unauthorized: Released: 20 April 2003: RYM Rating: 4.19 / 5.0 from 13 ratings Ranked #72 for 2003, #3,323 ...

  3. The White Stripes fue una banda estadounidense de rock alternativo, también algunas veces considerada dentro del movimiento del garage rock.Fue formada en 1997 en Detroit por la pareja compuesta por Jack White (voz, guitarra, bajo, piano) y Meg White (batería, voz). [1] [2] Después de publicar sus primeras canciones y grabar dos álbumes de estudio, formaron parte del resurgimiento del ...

  4. The Sons of Liberty flag is very meaningful to us, as it’s the flag that inspired the backdrop of our logo.Its origins go back to 1765, when a secretive group of patriots known as “the Loyal Nine” was formed – the group behind the original Boston Tea Party.The flag was then known as “the Rebellious Stripes” and it was banned by the British king, the highest endorsement the Crown ...

  5. The Boston Tea Party was an American political and mercantile protest on December 16, 1773, by the Sons of Liberty in Boston in colonial Massachusetts. The target was the Tea Act of May 10, 1773, which allowed the East India Company to sell tea from China in American colonies without paying taxes apart from those imposed by the Townshend Acts.The Sons of Liberty strongly opposed the taxes in ...

  6. Four years previously, on December 16 1773, the Boston Tea Party revolt had signalled the approach of the American Revolution. The protest – in which 342 chests of British-owned tea were thrown ...

  7. On the evening of August 15, 1765, the Sons of Liberty and others blockaded the Boston brick mansion of Hutchinson and demanded he denounce the Stamp Act in his official letters to London. In typical Loyalist fashion, Hutchinson refused. In response, on the night of August 26, a mob organized by the Sons of Liberty attacked Hutchinson’s mansion.