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Boston Harbour Tea®

Boston Harbour Tea® Boston Harbour Tea is a fine blend of select Ceylon and Darjeeling teas. Its sweet aroma and brisk flavor have been applauded by tea connoisseurs for many years. Britain’s oldest tea merchant Davison, Newman & Co., whose tea chests were destroyed in the 1774 tea party, still operates today and has developed this famous tea blend, now available exclusively from the Mark T. Wendell Tea Company. With several packaging styles, this small piece of our country’s tea history makes a great gift idea. The small tea bag pouches make great Boston-themed party or wedding favors.

5 tea bags (contains 5 tagless tea bags packed in a pillow pouch) $2.50

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12 x 5 tea bags Display Sleeve (contains 12 individual pillow pouches) $27.00

25 tea bags (box with string and tag tea bags with foil overlay) $6.50

75 tea bags (display box with string and tag tea bags with paper overlay) $14.50

Tea Chest (wood-style replica chest, 20 string and tag tea bags with paper overlay) $12.95

Tea Mug (attractive logo mug filled with 5 ct teabag pouch pack) $9.95

4 Ounce Loose Tea Tin (attractive tin with hinged lid and historical graphics) $9.50

The Boston Tea Parties – On December 16, 1773 a group of Boston patriots boarded three English Ships, the Bedford, Beaver and Dartmouth, and threw the tea aboard into Boston Harbour. These patriots were disguised as Mohawk Indians and, in order to gain access to the ships, armed themselves with hatchets and axes. In protest against the duty imposed on tea by the Government of King George III, they split open every chest and dumped each into the water. When the first Boston Tea Party was over, three hundred forty-two chests of tea were left floating in the frigid harbor waters. In the months that followed this historic event, many other American seaports took similar action in boycotting British tea. On March 7, 1774, at a second Boston Tea Party, 16 chests of tea from British tea merchant Davison, Newman & Co. were among those once again thrown into Boston Harbor. This was another symbolic prelude to the American War of Independence.

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