When James Otis said “No Taxation without Representation”, the thirteen colonies followed. His idea led to one of the most significant revolutions of all time. The taxation started with the Navigation Acts that eventually led to Stamp Act, then the Intolerable Acts. British Parliament taxed the colonies without a personal embodiment and as the Parliament continued taxing the colonies, they resisted and this resistance led to the American Revolutionary War. The continuous taxation of the colonies affected the way that the majority of the colonists felt about the British and about King George III. There were many laws thrust upon the colonists and some include the Molasses Act of 1733, the Sugar Act of 1764, the Stamp Act, the Townshend Acts, …show more content…
King George III passed this law to be in favor of the Native Americans. The proclamation was an attempt to lose the debt that burdened Great Britain after the French and Indian War. The colonists responded negatively to this law. The farmers were the most upset, for they lived near the mountains and longed for the idea of flat and fertile land that might be across the mountains. Several of the colonists disregarded the Proclamation of 1763. The resentment of this law was clear, hunters, trappers, and small farmers especially disliked it. This resentment and disregard was the first step of unity that the colonist experienced. The Proclamation of 1763 drew a latitude line, showing the power that British Parliament had to take charge of the …show more content…
In 1765, the British Prime Minister Grenville passed the Stamp Act. The Stamp Act obliged the colonists to purchase particular stamps to put on paper utilized for business or legal documents, newspapers, deeds, and pamphlets. This law was seen as the first time that Parliament was not trying to control the trade of the colonies but was attempting to obtain funds to get out of debt. At that point, in time, Great Britain obviously wanted an income from the American Colonists. Documents were used often; therefore, the prime minister was clever in placing a tax on paper. The colonists relied on paper documents and they had developed an economy based on written and legal documents, pamphlets, and many transcribed documents. As a result, of the Stamp Act the majority of the colonists objected. The Stamp Act also resulted in a high resentment of monarchy and distant rulings that would lead to conflict. Even though this tax would be seen as usual to the British, it was an inexperienced idea for the majority of the colonists. The idea of being taxed for paper was strange and unknown by the colonists. This tax was a major checkpoint for the American Revolutionary
These stamps were required on bills of sale for trade items, and on various types of commercial and legal documents, anything from playing cards to diplomas to marriage licenses. Grenville claimed that the Stamp act was needed in order to help defray the cost of keeping British troops stationed in the colonies in order to protect them. To the colonists this was an invalid answer, because the French were out of North America, and they no longer needed protection. Instead, this Act was viewed as a tax solely to make money for England: "A right to impose an internal tax on the colonies, without their consent for the single purpose of revenue, is denied..." (Document B). Also, anyone that disobeyed these laws was tried in the admiralty courts, were juries were not allows, and you were guilty until proven innocent. In response, the colonists formed the Stamp Act Congress, in which the members drew up a statement of the rights and grievances of the colonists to send to the king, however it was ignored by England. Instead, they started a steady boycott of British goods. It is after this that the colonists realized that they were being used by England, and began their cry of "no taxation without representation!" Parliament had thought that it was making easy money off of the colonies; instead it had started the fire of rebellion burning, and the Stamp Act was soon repealed.
One of the acts was the stamp act. This was a way to force the colonies to help pay off the war debt. The British pushed the Stamp Act through Parliament in March 1765. This act required Americans to buy paper, newspapers, playing cards, and legal documents such as wills and a marriage license strictly from
Protests broke out all across the colonies, with revolts, boycotts, and even fights. British Parliament established the acts to raise revenue through trade taxes on the American colonies. The Sugar Act was established in 1764 to increase controls on non-British trading and taxed not only sugar but other materials such as; coffee, coconuts and different animals parts. The Stamp Act was established in 1765 to tax people for a royal stamp, it also taxed paper, shipping and legal documents, pamphlets, and many more. The act was not as large as other taxes, but it changed the way of Parliament authority, from trade to direct taxes on the colonies. The famous saying “no taxation without representation”,
Beginning in 1764, Great Britain began passing acts to exert greater control over the American colonies. The Sugar Act was passed to increase duties on foreign sugar imported from the West Indies. A Currency Act was also passed to ban the colonies from issuing paper bills or bills of credit because of the belief that the colonial currency had devalued the British money. Further, in order to continue to support the British soldiers left in America after the war, Great Britain passed the Quartering Act in 1765. This ordered colonists to house and feed British soldiers if there was not enough room for them in the colonist’s homes. An important piece of legislation that really upset the colonists was the Stamp Act passed in 1765. This required stamps to be purchased or included on many different items and documents such as playing cards, legal papers, newspapers, and more. This was the first direct tax that Britain had imposed on the colonists. Events began to escalate with passage of the Townshend Acts in 1767. These taxes were created to help colonial officials become independent of the colonists by providing them with a source of income. This act led to clashes between British troops and colonists, causing the infamous Boston Massacre. These unjust requests and increasing tensions all led up to the colonist’s declaration as well as the Revolutionary War.
The passing of the Stamp Act by Parliament in 1765 caused a rush of angry protests by the colonists in British America that perhaps "aroused and unified Americans as no previous political event ever had." It levied a tax on legal documents, almanacs, newspapers, and nearly every other form of paper used in the colonies. Adding to this hardship was the need for the tax to be paid in British sterling, not in colonial paper money. Although this duty had been in effect in England for over half a century and was already in effect in several colonies in the 1750?s, it called into question the authority of Parliament over the overseas colonies that had no representation therein.
The British law was the stamp act of 1765 that required the colonists to put stamps on all legal documents. From document 3 they put the tax on court documents and publications and the land agreements between the people. The reason that great Britain put the stamp tax on the colonists is because Britain had to pay for the French and Indian War. The stamp act put the tax on land and the warrants surveying for the land document 3. The colonists started delivering their papers by hand to resist the British law. Everything that to do with a court document you had to have a stamp on it or it would not be legal.
All the documents had to be formally printed in England and were distinguished by a special stamp. Then these pieces of paper had to be bought from a special agent at a price. This meant that the colonists had to pay taxes on every thing they bought from the British government. It was expected that this tax would raise 60,000 pounds annually. The colonists despised this and tried to buy as little as they could from England. After this act the colonists realised that the British government was revenue-raising. The colonists felt that the British Government should be helping to protect ones property not to take it. The colonists argued that they had no say or representation in the government and that is when the outcry started, “No taxation without representation!”
First, the Stamp Act of 1765 is an act that required the colonists to pay on paper items. This act angered many colonists and the colonists can not let this pass them. “The English passed the Stamp Act so the colonists can help pay their expenses from the French and Indian War”(Colonial Unrest). With anger, groups like the Sons of Liberties stopped stamped paper being unloaded off decks. Then, merchants had a plan and agreed not to buy anything from the British. Also, representatives from different colonies formed the Stamp Act Congress and demanded Parliaments to reverse the act. In conclusion,
“We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal.” (The Declaration of Independence, U.S. 1776, para. 2). The Declaration of Independence is one of the most important documents in American history. The colonists said that Parliament and the king, George III, were violating the people’s natural rights. The colonies were on their own for such a long time that they got used to handling stuff their own way. Out of nowhere, the king and Parliament started giving the colonists taxes. From this taxing we got the saying “No taxation without representation.” Some of the taxes they gave the colonists were the Stamp Act, Sugar Act, and the Quartering Act. The Stamp Act was tax on every piece of paper and book published or used. The Sugar Act was a tax on sugar being imported and any food containing sugar. The Quartering Act was when the colonists were forced to house british soldiers, the soldiers were there to enforce the taxes being placed. All of these problems started the American Revolution.
Comment Powered by Hannah Johns The Stamp Act required that British Colonists pay a tax in the form of a stamp on all printed materials such as; land titles, licenses, playing cards, court documents, newspapers and more. It was the idea of George Grenville in an attempt to raise a revenue from the colonies and it became an incredibly hated tax by the colonists; one in which they would protest in extreme measures such as, tarring and feathering tax collectors, forming mobs and rioting in the streets. Acts such as the Currency Act and Sugar Act were passed by parliament at the request of Grenville and were met with some resistance but not measured by the same degree as the Stamp Act. (power point 4) (pg. 207) In
Due to the Sugar and Quartering Act, the relationship with the British is strained, quickly moving to an impending confrontation because of the festering descent among the colonists. The extensively detested Sugar Act, which potentially endangered their lucrative profits from the rum trade, and the Quartering Act, which stated that the colonies would support the British troops by housing and feeding them, was at a monumental crossroad (Schultz, n.d.). However, it was the Stamp Act which would light the fuse and blow the powder keg into a full-blown revolution. The controversial Stamp Act, which was passed in 1765, mandated a tax levied on all official paper documentation forcing all printers to decide whether to stop printing or abide by using the stamped paper risking those who opposed (Mellen, 2012). This was the turning point, unifying educated and powerful opposition contributing to the Revolutionary movement.
The American Revolution was a political change that occurred somewhere around 1765 and 1783 amid which pilgrims in the Thirteen American Colonies dismisses the British government and privileged, toppled the power of Great Britain, and established the United States of America. The Stamp Act was gone by the British Parliament on March 22, 1765. The new duty was forced on all American settlers and obliged them to pay an assessment on every bit of printed paper they utilized. Ship's papers, authoritative archives, licenses, daily papers, different productions, and notwithstanding playing cards were burdened. The cash gathered by the Stamp Act was to be utilized to help pay the expenses of shielding and securing the American wilderness close to
Britain’s responded to the colonists’ dislike of the Sugar Act by adding a new harsher tax. Grenville and parliament enacted The Stamp Act. The Stamp Act required colonists’ to purchase special stamps and place them on all legal documents. Stamped paper was required for everything from newspapers to playing cards. Once again British thought of this tax to be reasonable because they had employed a tax similar to this in Britain. This only made the situation worse because colonists’ got very upset and protested against it. Crowds of angry colonists’ attacked homes of British officials.
Consequently, the British Parliament imposed taxation on the colonists in the 1760’s. The colonists resented this intrusion, for they felt they were not truly represented in the British government. Taxation without representation became the rallying cry of the colonists.
To help pay off their debt, England scheduled the initiation of the Stamp Act, which placed a tax on fifty different documents, on November 1, 1765 (Gale Par. 2; Brindell 13). This act was to put a tax “upon every paper commonly called a pamphlet and upon every newspaper” (Copeland 193). Because the Stamp Act was an internal tax, which meant this tax law was only enforced in America, this made the colonists even