On today, I will be talking about my topic that I have chosen for my research paper which is called The Sugar Act of 1764. I will be sharing background and general information about my topic that has changed throughout the year which some don’t know and probably don’t remember inside of an history class that they have taken. As during this research experience I’ve learned so much and the information I received help me gain more knowledge than what I already knew about the topic I’ve chosen. So with that before the Sugar Act came along it was known as others but no one knew that but their names before was the American Revenue Act and the American Duties Act. The Sugar Act “was a British Law passed by the Parliament of Great Britain and …show more content…
And today its identified as the Sugar Act of 1764. Do you know how or when the Sugar Act started well it, “was enacted on April 5,1764, in order to help reduce the staggering national debt incurred during the French and Indian War” . This is stating when the Sugar Act was passed and what was experience during the French and Indian War and it also marked the Parliament tried to directly tax the colonists. During the Sugar Act of 1764, it “was viewed as a direct tax on the consumption of many popular items including sugar, wine, silk, and numerous other purpose; as its stated purpose, the purpose of raising revenue for the crown.” . The purpose of the Sugar Act is to “reduce the rate of tax on molasses from size pence to three pence per gallon, but ensured the new tax could be collected by increased British military presence and …show more content…
So with that according to the website landofthebrave.info says, “the colonists were the economic impact as well as the constitutional issue of taxation without representation. The colonists were undergoing a period of financial difficulties and their resentment was due to both the economic impact of the Sugar Act as well as the constitutional issue of taxation without
The Molasses Act of 1733 came from the parliament of great Britain was something that taxed the citizens of the colonies 6 pence every time a gallon of molasses was shipped. This act was imposed to make trades with the french cheaper. This act vitally impacted the global mass trade. The Molasses was used to make rum in New England, this made it much more valuable than anything the colonies had to offer, may it be fish or anything else. Since they had the molasses the British west Indies were considered the most valuable trade partners out there.
But there were also different things taxed too. The Sugar act took place in great Britain. The Sugar act put 3 cents on supplies, back then that was a lot of money. What was the Sugar Act and, how did the Sugar Act lead to the Revolutionary War?
The Sugar Act taxed imports such as sugarcane and molasses. This made the colonists angry because they didn’t have any say or representation to oppose this act. The second event was the Stamp Act of 1766. The Stamp Act taxed things such as stamps, paper, newspapers,
This resulted in larger taxes on the colonists, as well as laws to force them to pay the new taxes. One of the first laws was the Currency Act of 1764 to make sure colonists would not pay in paper money, as it was not actual currency to them. The Sugar Act renewed an old law that states that sugar and rum from anyone except Britain would have a tax. The difference between the old law and the new one was that the new one was reinforced, and the tax on the sugar was lower. This tax was fueled by the Sugar Interest.
During the 1700s, the British Parliament used their authority to make laws regarding tax collection. One of these was the Molasses Act of 1733, but it did not work well. This was because the tax was not collected and people refused to pay it. During King George the third rule the Sugar Act, which was passed on April 5, 1764, replaced the Molasses Act. The background, purpose, and effect of the Sugar Act must be explained to understand the economic impact on the American colonies.
Many events occurred in the year 1764, including the Sugar Act, an Act meant to better enforce British trade laws, the Currency Act, and James Otis’s “taxation without representation,” which led to a boycott of British goods. The Sugar Act was passed as a result of Britain’s war with France, and the debt it caused. The Act was supposed to help pay for the defense of the colonies as well as the newly acquired territories. The Act increased the taxes on imported sugar, and other items like textiles, coffee, wines, and indigo dye.
The lack of authority with which the act was carried out got the colonists used to conducting and executing their own affairs. When the Sugar Act was
After the French and Indian War, the British set out to reform the relationship with the new colonies, (Shultz,n.d.). They issued a number of tax acts on the colonists to raise money. These acts were met with great opposition from the colonists, as they felt it was interfering with the liberties they had fought so hard for. Acts such as the Sugar Act, the Quartering Act, and the Stamp caused the colonists great frustration and this lead to rebellion toward the Crown. The Sugar Act would lower the taxes sugar and molasses, but much to the dismay of the colonists Europe had increased its enforcement of these taxes, (Shultz,n.d.).
The Sugar Interest already hiked up the price of sugar for the colonists, and that led to many acts being placed on the colonists which caused complications. First came the Currency Act of 1764. This was practically reinforcing the Currency Act of 1751 because Parliament was scared of the colonists bonding together. This act was created just for the New England colonies, and it really made money have no value as England prohibited the colonists from issuing new bills or reissuing new currency. Soon the Sugar Act was enforced also after already having been in existence for a while.
Americans believed that the Sugar Act taxed the colonists in a manner inconsistent with their rights and privileges as British subjects. The sugar act never resulted in any violent protests, and the protests stayed within to the colonial assemblies, merchants, and the upper class who had personal interests in commerce. This event started to get
The Prosperous and poor joined forces in America because of the taxation put on them by the English crown. The passing of Sugar Act in 1764 was the first of many small but economically divisive taxes passed by the British in an attempt to recover expenses from the colonists. The colonists however were not represented in parliament. Following Locke’s theory of the social contract they demanded representation otherwise they would not pay taxes. These taxes affected the rich and poor alike and when tensions escalated and after Jefferson wrote the Declaration Of Independence, the colonists rebelled.
The idea of taxation without representation was a major factor in the ongrowing tension the American colonists developed towards the British government and only fostered the resentment they had towards them. And in some instances, they lashed out, like the Boston Tea Party. These acts of rebellion are what fueled Britain’s hatred towards the colonists and caused them to grow impatient and unleash their wrath onto them through the tax acts they imposed onto the colonies in a sort of way that declared to the colonists that they would no longer tolerate their
Britain needed a way to fix this. They came up with the Sugar Act, a set of taxes to help Britain raise money. Taxes were not a new thing for the colonists, but these new taxes caused big issues. The Sugar Act was suggested by Prime Minister George Greenville.
The French and Indian War caused England to lack sufficient funds to pay for any damages. To quickly rebuild their funds, England decided to pass heavy taxes on the colonies in 1764. The Sugar Tax and the Stamp Act angered colonists. Since the colonists were used to governing themselves, they did not like how controling England was trying to be. They saw it as an act of that it violation, and that it went against the “no taxation without representation” policy.
The Currency Act was originally created in 1751 and later modified in 1764. It was created to stop the American colonists from printing their own money, because Britain wanted to control the American colonies by making the colonies dependent on them. They used Acts to do this and so they could get their way. One of these Acts is the Currency Act which dealt with production of money. The Currency Act gave power of taxation to appointed officials not local leaders.