The result of the seven year’s war (1763) changed relations between Britain and the colonists. From 1763 to 1776, British enforcement of new taxes and establishment of restrictions on colonial life led to increased colonial resentment of British rule which eventually led to the declaration of a new nation. In 1763, Britain emerged from the Seven Year’s war with a burden of heavy debts. To pay off their debts, they increased the taxes on the people of Britain. However they felt that the Colonies should be paying the majority of the taxes as the war was fought to protect the colonies. So in 1764, the British passed the sugar act which placed a tax on molasses and sugar. This tax was different from the Molasses tax placed on the colonies 30 years back because it was the first time it was being enforced. When the British …show more content…
By not enforcing this act, it allowed the colonists to get used to running their own affairs. So when the British stiffened the enforcement of the sugar act, the colonists resented it. About a year later, Parliament places the stamp act which taxed all paper goods. Many of the colonists were angered by this new tax because they were being taxed without their consent. The Stamp Act congress was held as a response to the acts. The congress declared the acts to be unjust and passed resolutions that parliament had no authority to tax the colonists. Throughout the colonies, the line “taxation without representation” was heard. The acts has also created violence throughout the colonies. The Sons of liberty tarred and feathered tax collectors sent by the British which forced the tax collectors to resign. Without proper collection of the tax, Parliament had no choice but to repeal the
The French and Indian war sunk Great Britain into deep debt, so they decided to put tax on items that the colonies often used or needed, which of course the colonists refused to pay. “no taxation without representation” was the colonists chant, they did not want to pay the taxes unless the elected representatives had a right to pass taxes if wanted and if the laws passed by their own governmental body. The British were being unfair towards the colonists so the colonists did not do the task given to them easily but brutally. Molasses were a big part of the triangular trade and was very highly taxed which resulted in most people smuggling in the molasses. In 1764 Greenville asked parliament to raise taxes on molasses.
Also, the British could search any ship they wanted, so they didn’t let us receive sugar from other countries. The Stamp Act also was very unfair. This was when England made the colonists only buy paper with the English stamp on it. Every paper product had to be made out of it, and this special paper had a heavy tax on it.
Sugar and molasses were not the only items being taxed with this act, they began taxing items such as indigo, pimento, allspice, coffee, and some wines. Britain had made it so they could collect revenue from the colonies directly and thus still having some
The sugar act put taxes on sugar and molasses that was imported into the colonies. This act affected the construction of rum in New England. The Sugar act was unfair to the colonists because The second thing that made the Second Continental Congress want to break from Great Britain were all the Acts, specifically the intolerable acts. The intolerable were a set of acts set in place in order to punish those who had taken part of the Boston Tea Party. One of the intolerable acts was the Quebec Act.
The French and Indian war (also known as the seven year war) marked a huge turning point in American relations with Great Britain. Prior to the war the British and the French were in conflict and it reached America and was know as the seven year war which was from 1754 to 1763. The British had neglected any involvement with the colonies affairs except maintaining their policies for mercantilism. After the war the British were in debt and the colonies relationship with the mother country was strained. The war ended the period of neglect and conflicts worsened greatly.
In order to make up for the economic costs of the war, the British government responded by greatly increasing the income of the colonies. Sugar Act, Stamp Act and Townsend Acts are three of them. Specifically, sugar, honey and other commodities are taxed. All printed matter must be approved and taxed by the British Government; moreover, import duties were imposed on goods such as glass, paint, paper and tea. These taxes covered every aspect of people's daily life.
The colonists were not too happy about these new acts, they argued that they could only directly taxed by their elected representatives. In response, the Parliament repealed the Stamp act, at same time they passed the Declaratory Act declared its right to govern the colonies. Following, the Parliaments passed series of acts to raise more revenue. These acts raised tensions between the colonists and the British. The colonists began to protest against these new acts as they set up their own
An important event in North American history was the Proclamation of 1763. The United Kingdom administration oversaw it after the Seven Years' War, also called the French and Indian War, which ended with Britain's victory over France. The Proclamation sets up a structure for interactions with native peoples. It was meant to handle issues due to Britain's expansion into the recently acquired areas. The Proclamation of 1763 profoundly affected the lives of French Canadians and Native Americans in North America, historically and currently.
As teens rebel against their mothers, so to did America rebel against the British during the 18th Century. However, also like children they followed their mother’s footsteps. Oliver Cromwell led a revolt against the Staurt monarchy and similarly colonists revolted against the British. During this time, an English philosopher named John Locke wrote works on political philosophies, mainly against the Stuarts. John Locke would have believed that the American colonists justified their resentments against the British especially, since the British stole their fundamental rights of liberty, property, and life.
The primary participants in the Seven Years War, known as the French and Indian War in the British Colonies, were France and Great Britain. The basic premise of the war was to determine who would gain control of North America. The war began in 1754 and ended in 1763 with France’s defeat. The Treaty of Paris between France and Great Britain turned over all French lands in North America to the British with the exception of New Orleans which was passed onto Spain. While this was a victory for Great Britain, this could be put into the category of be careful what you wish for.
While modern time is separated from the American Revolutionary period by roughly 250 years, many measures enacted then still take place in society today. Traditionally in history, wars are extreme expenses upon nations, and throughout the time of human history, different countries have dealt with such causes of debt in a variety of ways. A common measure taken by governments around the globe to raise money for war debt is none other than taxation. The United States utilizes the tactic of taxation upon their citizens to fund various areas of a wartime effort, as our mother country, Great Britain, had done centuries ago during the Revolutionary Era. It is argued that due to the various taxes placed on the British colonials of North America, the American Revolution began.
After the French and Indian War, the British government was low on funds. Their solution was to tax the colonies, beginning with the Sugar Act of 1764. This act, designed in part to eliminate the illegal sugar trade between the colonies and the Caribbean, strengthened enforcement of the tax on sugar. It also lowered the tax on molasses, which further damaged the market for colonial-grown sugar. The Stamp Act of 1765 followed shortly afterwards.
After the French and Indian War, the relationship between American colonists and the British quickly worsened. The deteriorating relationship eventually led to the American revolution, in which the colonists claimed their independence and formed a new nation. The Colonist’s desire to separate was not due to a single cause, but various factors such as geography, economics, public policy, and acts of violence. As a direct result of the French and Indian War, Britain gained a vast amount of territory. However due to perceived Indian threats and Britain’s desire to tighten its’ control over America, Parliament issued the Proclamation of 1763.
Several years before the Revolutionary War began, in 1763, the end of the French and Indian War, or the Seven Years War, came, halted by the Treaty of Paris. The British, who had assisted the Americans throughout the war thought that they rightly deserved payment for their the troops and supplies they lent
Because England had sent soldiers to the colonies and provide for all defense, they deemed it necessary to implement taxes on the colonists as a way of making up for the colonies’ lack of effort during the war. For example, the Sugar Acts and all that followed were created for the sole purpose of fixing the economic losses from the war. A successful outcome was achieved due to the strategies in which the colonists were able to gather and assemble people to lead the revolution. Through many protests, boycotts, and literature, such as the use pamphlets, information was spread throughout the colonies and united these people under a common goal.