FIGURES AND TABLES
Figures
1.1. Boston Harbor, circa 1775
7.1. Tea advertisements in colonial newspapers, October 1, 1773 to July 4, 1776
7.2. Parker & Hutchings Litany Ad, 1774
7.3. Smith, Richards advertisement, New York, 1774
7.4. Samuel Gordon’s tea ad, 1773
7.5. and 7.6 William Donaldson advertisements listing tea, 1774
7.7. Joseph P. Palmer’s “NO TEA” ad, Massachusetts, 1774
7.8. William Beadle’s mocking tea advertisement, Connecticut, 1774
7.9. and 7.10 William Donaldson advertisements with and without tea, Charleston, July 1774
7.11. Front page of South Carolina Gazette with Gordon’s ad, 1773
9.1. Philip Dawe, A Society of Patriotic Ladies, at Edenton in North Carolina, 1775
10.1. Philip Dawe, The Alternative of Williams-Burg, 1775
10.2. Thomas Lilly’s apology, March 1775
12.1. South Carolina sells the East India Company’s tea, 1776
13.1. Tea seller’s license, Joseph Baker, Beverly, Massachusetts, 1781
B.1. Late colonial consumption of legal tea, three-year moving average
B.2. American tea consumption, 1760s–1810s, three-year moving average
B.3. American tea and coffee consumption, 1760s–1810s, three-year moving average
C.1. Colonial Bohea prices, 1773–1776 (wholesale)
C.2. Colonial Bohea prices, 1773–1776 (retail)
Tables
2.1. Tea legally imported into North America, 1768–1772 (pounds weight)
7.1. Number of tea ad-weeks by place, October 1, 1773–July 4, 1776
12.1. Tea advertisers, April–June 1776
B.1. British tea and coffee shipments to the thirteen colonies, compared (pounds weight)
C.1. Dutch and English wholesale bohea prices, annual averages, 1772–1776