Hello, Your Majesty. We think highly of you and never would want to question your rules and laws, but just to add suggestions and a different point of view from the receiver.
We, my family and friends, have written to you today to show our concerns and point of view of the new laws and acts and to hopefully give you a broader outlook of this struggling situation.
The first act would be the Quartering Act. This act is where we, as the colonists, have to provide food, shelter, and bed for your soldiers and if the British soldiers do not have enough houses they have to stay in barns, buildings, and inns, which leads to the fact that almost every home is filled with soldiers. Sometimes we can feel a little over-powered and we feel that they should
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The Stamp Act was passed by the British Parliament because we know that Great Britain is in debt from the French and Indian war. By taxing us, this may seem like a good idea to you, but we are actually paying for your financial problems and struggles which is very unfair to us. Some things you have taxed us for are amusements such as playing cards and dice to papers such as licenses and newspaper. These are everyday items that we use. Our concern is that we just can’t buy the things taxed because we just think that by paying a little every day is going to add up and it is not worth it. This impacts our freedom of separation of the countries. We believe that we need representatives if you should be able to tax us from all the way across the …show more content…
Please do not get frustrated because we really just want to be reasonable and have a small amount of conflict between us. The Intolerable Acts were passed when we upset You with the Boston Tea Party. Then you were very upset and angry with us and so to punish us you passed the set of 5 laws. Some of the laws were that the Boston Port was closed until we paid for all of the tea, the governor could ban town meetings, and the quartering act. We realize that we have done wrong, but we are concerned because there are people out there who want to fight and want no peace, so that we can have independence, and if you keep passing laws such as these we don’t think it will end very well. These acts take away are freedom and we are feeling controlled by you, but we believe that you should still have say but please give us
I believe that the Intolerable Acts had more of an effect on the colonists. I say this because after the Stamp Act was passed the colonists did things like boycott and protest. Although, after the Intolerable Acts the colonists all gathered together and decided they needed to make everyone aware of their suffering and declare freedom from British rule.
1) The Stamp Act Congress consisting of twenty-seven delegates from nine of the colonies. They met and passed resolutions that were meant to make Parliament repeal the Stamp Act. However, they still insisted that they were subjects of the king. They never tried to split themselves from Britain. In fact, while they were protesting taxations without representation, they still claimed obedience to the government. All they wanted was to reform the acts, not stop being British or remove all British government. By the definition given, they were trying to remove the imperfections, as they saw it, of the stamp act to make the British government over them better.
The Stamp Act was proclaimed in 1765, and it taxed every piece of printed paper. It taxed such goods as dice, playing cards, legal documents, newspaper and almanacs. The goal of the act was to raise money for the Seven Years War.
The Stamp Act was an important act introduced by the British Prime Minister George Grenville that was then passed in March 1765 by the British Parliament. The purpose was to raise money for national debt of Britain after the Seven Years War and Parliament needed means to help fund expensive costs of keeping troops inside the colonies. The act levied a tax on legal documents, almanacs, newspapers, and nearly every other form of paper used in the colonies. The British Government felt that the colonies were the primary reason of the military presence and should pay a portion of the expense. The American colonies did not take kindly to this matter.
During the Stamp Act of 1765, the American colonists successfully repealed the tax by lobbying. Unfortunately this resulted in the failed attempt to end taxation without representation. The Stamp Act crisis occured prior to the Revolutionary War from 1765-1766. It was one of the important influences of the start of the war ten years later. The Americans demonstrated their courage many times throughout history, and it was shown during this crisis.
The Intolerable acts were a set of Acts that were set to punish the colonists and for the British to regain STRICT control over the colonists. The Intolerable Act were Acts that the colonists just could NOT telerate. The Acts part of the set were the Boston Port Act, Massachussetts Government Act, Administraition of Justice Act, and the Quebec Act, out of many. The Boston Port Act was caused from the Boston Tea Party. The Boston Port Act made it so no one could enter or exit the the harbor until all of the money spent on the tea thrown overboard was acheived. Many people lost their jobs or became poor because of this. Another Intolerable Act was the massachussetts Government Act. This Act revoked the charter of 1691, which then made Massachussetts a crown colony. The next Intolerable Act was the Administraition of Justice Act. The Administraition of Justice Act made it so that British officials who have been charged for capital offences could go to England or another country for trial. Lastly, the Quebec Act. The Quebec Act removed all the fur trades and territory from Mississipi-Ohio
I was at school, during history I told Mr.Bush if the Stamp Act was enacted. Some historians believe that the Stamp Act was one of the most ridiculous enactments because the British taxed everything the colonists bought from the British. Even though it was a good way of raising money,(the British did not have enough money after the French and Indian war) it was unnecessary. The British could have raised money multiple different ways, like conquering another area or mining in the mountains near the colonies, but instead of these ways the British created the most ridiculous enactments in U.S. history. They made multiple families suffer from financial problems. That is why the colonists protested against the Stamp Act. This is also why people burned down tax collectors houses they felt like the took their freedoms away.
There we go again King George III strikes again. We need to put a stop to the taxes. The stamp act was passed by the British Parliament on March 22. It was that there had to be taxes on every piece of paper sold. The king wanted more money so he put taxes on everything. The money raised from the act was given to the King George. All the king wanted was money for him. To get the money he wanted he got in from the colonist.
Did you hear about the taxes that were put on many of our papers. On March 22, 1765, the British Parliament passed the “Stamp Act” to help pay for British troops stationed in the colonies during the Seven Years’ War. It required the colonists' to pay a tax, represented by a stamp, on various papers, documents, and playing cards. They had colonists pay for British soldiers to stay in their homes. They put a lot of taxes on tea also.
The Stamp Act was one of the initial problems brought in by the British rule to tax the colonies in an attempt to recoup monies that were lost during the Seven Years War. It was supposed to be a tax on paper goods and included such things as cards and dice. The law was opposed, often violently by the colonists from almost every colony. The colonists boycotted, rioted, and intimidated stamp distributors to avoid paying this tax.
Stamp Act: basically required the colonists to pay a tax on every single paper document or products made out of papers (for example, dice and paper cards). This Act was passed without colonists’ approval, which is why the issue of Taxation without Representation within British Parliament became a controversial issue.
The Stamp Act was something that was supposed to create revenue for Great Britain. The act meant that all
The British Empire dramatically changed when Christopher Columbus located America. Countries were rushing to get a piece of the shiny new land they could conquer. No country wanted to be left behind on the road to colonization, the more they owned the more powerful they were. The French came and colonized central and northern America. The Dutch collected patchy parts of northern America and Spain got southern America (Keene et al, section 2).
The French and Indian War ended in 1763, and although England won, it left them in enormous debt. The solution was the Stamp Act, a tax on all paper goods. Enacted in 1765, the Stamp Act upset nearly every English colonist in America. This was one of the first times colonists resisted England and this renegation acted as a precursor to the revolution ahead. England was surprised because they didn't consider the Stamp Act as anything people wouldn't agree with and felt that the colonists were responsible for paying in return from the protection England provided them during the war.
Beginning in the year 1765 the British began taxing the colonies, as a result of war debt, yet this only put a stress on the relationship between the two, due to the colonist’s belief that they were not being directly represented in the British parliament. The first act that was made to raise money and anger was the Sugar Act. The Sugar Act was created in 1764 and it increased the tax on sugar that was imported from the West Indies. The colonies responded to this act with bitter protests. Due to these protests Britain lowered the duties substantially.