So in the latter part of the 1760s, the dispute with Britain is continuing because of the Townshend duties as well as other British legislation which tended to control the colonies. But to a large extent the opposition seems to have shifted to Massachusetts partially because Redcoats are actually stationed in Boston. That's partially because of the riots that have been there for the Stamp Act and because of some customs duties enforcement. But the opposition is going to be there when we get the Boston Massacre in March of 1770. British troops are going to be withdrawn as a result of the Boston Massacre, and the only thing that's going to be left by mid-1770 is the duty on tea. England decides to withdraw the other Townshend Duties on paper, paint, and some other items; so all we have left is this duty on tea. It's rather small, and so many people are just paying the duty, and that opposition which had been at a low boil with this continued boycott under the Townshend Duties seems to be falling apart. But Sam Adams and others in Massachusetts view the issue as one of principle, that we're still paying a tax that we shouldn't be paying, and they saw the issue in much broader terms. There's still the fundamental question of who's going to control here in the colonies. Shouldn't we be controlling things ourselves. Well, in 1773 we get the Tea Act, which actually reduces the duty on tea, but sees to it that we're going to enforce it more fully, that people are going to have to pay the duty, and we're going to stop smuggling of, of tea from the Dutch East Indies Company. So once again, we're going to have a boycott on tea. Women's participation is once again going to be very important. We've got to get the people together and if you're going to boycott consumer goods like tea, you have to have the women and support, and on December 16th we have the Boston Tea Party. Now the Boston Tea Party is important but efforts were made in other colonies as well. The tea ships were kept out of the Philadelphia port by the Committee on Tarring and Feathering. The tea ships are kept out of Charleston and other ports in New England. Britain though is going to react to the Boston Tea Party because here this mob is destroying private property. And Britain imposes the Intolerable Acts, what they know of as the Coercive Acts. Port Closure Act: Boston, which depends on fishing and on trade, basically is told that nothing will come in and out of the port except for food from local areas. So this is going to bring Boston to its knees commercially. The Government Act, sheriffs are going to be appointed by the governor. Sheriffs are very important because they're the ones who choose the juries in local trials. The Administration of Justice Act, Redcoats who are accused of committing a crime can be sent to England for trial instead of being tried in the colonies. The Quartering Act, troops can be kept in private buildings. The Quebec Act, which allows Catholics in Canada, which has been captured from the French in the French and Indian War, it allows the Catholics to continue to practice Catholicism and also puts Quebec in charge as an administrative matter of all of that territory north of the Ohio River, what we know of as Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Michigan. So it's again back to this issue of British control of the colonies. Essentially Massachusetts has been locked down, and Britain is going to see to it that Massachusetts obeys British law. Fundamental question was whether the colonies, the other colonies, were going to come to the aid of the Massachusetts hotheads. After all, they had thrown this private property, the tea which was not owned by the British government, they'd thrown the tea into the Boston Harbor and destroyed what today would be millions of dollars worth of private property. Well, as I mentioned in the introduction, we call a Continental Congress; it's going to meet in Philadelphia; all of the most famous politicians and lawyers from the colonies will participate: Henry, George Washington, Peyton Randolph, and they're going to support Massachusetts in its fight with Britain. We've already talked about that. The Continental Congress then does two other things that are very important. The one is it adopts the Continental Association, and this was going to be a continent-wide boycott, and importantly they asked each county to appoint a committee, a committee of safety, which will enforce the boycott on a county-by-county basis. And they don't have any legal authority to do so but these committees are going to make sure that you don't violate the boycott. So suddenly the commercial boycott of Britain is going to be very effective. The other thing which the Continental Congress does, which will have enormous implications, is based on the Suffolk Resolves coming out of Suffolk County Massachusetts, they urge the colonies to gather arms. They recognize we may end up in a fight with Britain. Henry certainly is in support of this. John Adams reports later that Henry had said to him that he understood that we were going to come to blows with Britain. John Adams writes later there was "not one member except Patrick Henry, who appeared to me sensible of the Precipice or rather the pinnacle on which he stood, and had the candor and courage enough to acknowledge it." So Henry, after the Continental Congress ends, goes back to Virginia, and he seems to be ready for what is going to be a coming war. He seems to recognize that's going to happen. Well, in March of 1775 the Virginia Convention decides to meet in Richmond rather than Williamsburg because they want to get away from the king's authority. So they meet in Richmond to decide what to do as a colony. Now the convention had no, technically no legal authority. It's not the House of Burgesses. It's just a group of all the leaders of Virginia who are going to really control things throughout the American Revolution, and they meet here in St. John's Church. They meet in St. John's Church because it's the largest building in Richmond, and it was the only place where they could bring everybody in and participate in the various actions. Patrick Henry is certainly here and one of the things he does on March 23rd, 1775, he rises to propose that Virginia put itself in military readiness, that it buys weapons and trains men for what might eventually be a war with Britain, and he's going to make his most famous speech here in St. John's Church. Now the church would have looked a little different at that time. You certainly would not have had the balcony. The church ended before that. The stained glass windows wouldn't have been here but this is basically the building where the convention decides to meet.