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How Did The Laws That Led To The American Revolution

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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

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