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Colonial Unrest

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Colonial Unrest Causes of the Revolutionary War Proclamation of 1763 When: 1763 What is it: British formally ended all settlement west of the Appalachian Mountains. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Colonial Unrest


1
Colonial Unrest
  • Causes of the Revolutionary War

2
Proclamation of 1763
  • When 1763
  • What is it British formally ended all settlement
    west of the Appalachian Mountains.
  • Who did it effect Colonial Settlers / Native
    Americans
  • How did it contribute to the Revolution It
    closed off the frontier for expansion. Colonists
    felt that it deprived them of land for settlement
    and that they were paying for something that only
    England wanted.

3
Sugar Act
  • When 1764
  • What is it Revision of the Molasses Act of 1733
    Reduced tax on Sugar, but NOW it was going to
    be enforced!
  • Who did it effect Colonial Merchants
  • How did it contribute to the Revolution When the
    British started strictly enforcing the taxes,
    this eliminated the merchants profits for their
    illegal trade with the Spanish and French West
    Indies

4
Currency Act
  • When 1764
  • What is it Parliament took control of the
    colonial currency system by abolishing all
    colonial money (Bills of Credit).
  • Who did it effect All Colonists / Colonial
    Merchants
  • How did it contribute to the Revolution There
    were no gold or silver mines and currency could
    only be obtained through trade which was
    regulated by Great Britain.

5
Stamp Act
  • When 1764
  • What is it  The Act was created to help cover
    the cost of maintaining troops in the colonies.
    All printed materials and commercial documents as
    well as printed material including, newspapers,
    pamphlets, bills, legal documents, licenses,
    almanacs, dice and playing cards, were taxed and
    had to carry a special stamp. 
  • Who did it effect All Colonists / Colonial
    Merchants
  • How did it contribute to the Revolution It was
    the first direct tax imposed by Britain on its
    American colonies. Americans had to pay tax not
    to their own local legislatures in America, but
    directly to England The American colonists
    opposed the Act because they could not pay the
    tax, and because it violated the new principle of
    "No taxation without representation."

6
Quartering Act
  • When 1765
  • What is it Colonist were required to give
    quarters, food, and transportation to the British
    soldiers. 
  • Who did it effect All Colonists / Colonial
    Merchants
  • How did it contribute to the Revolution The
    British forced the colonist to accept it because
    they were protecting the colonists from the
    French.  The colonists did not consider the
    French a threat and did not like the idea of
    paying for the British protection.

7
Declaratory Act
  • When 1766
  • What is it Parliament declared that the colonies
    were under the sole rule of the Crown, and any
    law made by the colonial legislatures opposing
    this was null and void.
  • Who did it effect All Colonists / Colonial
    Merchants
  • How did it contribute to the Revolution The
    colonists believed that were not under the rule
    of England, but ruled themselves under the
    colonial legislatures. It took away their
    perceived right of self-government.

8
Townshend Act
  • When 1767
  • What is it Taxes on glass, paint, oil, lead,
    paper, and tea were applied with the design of
    raising 40,000 a year for the administration of
    the colonies.
  • Who did it effect All Colonists / Colonial
    Merchants
  • How did it contribute to the Revolution
    Resurrection of colonial hostilities created by
    the Stamp Act.

9
Boston Massacre
  • When 1770
  • What is it The Boston Massacre (the killing of
    five men by British soldiers on March 5, 1770)
    was the result of  tensions that had been
    growing  between the colonist and the English
    troops.
  • Who did it effect Boston Citizens / All
    Colonists
  • How did it contribute to the Revolution The
    massacre served as anti-British propaganda for
    Boston radicals and elsewhere heightened American
    fears of English armies.

10
Tea Act
  • When 1773
  • What is it 1773 Act that gave a monopoly on tea
    sales to the East India Company. The Tea Act
    lowered the price on this East India tea so much
    that it was way below tea from other suppliers.
  • Who did it effect All Colonists / Colonial
    Merchants
  • How did it contribute to the Revolution American
    colonists saw this law as yet another means of
    "taxation without representation" because it
    meant that they couldn't buy tea from anyone else
    (including other colonial merchants) without
    spending a lot more money. Their response was to
    refuse to unload the tea from the ships. This was
    the situation in Boston that led to the Boston
    Tea Party.

11
Intolerable/Coercive Acts
  • When 1774
  • What is it Britain responded to the Boston Tea
    Party in 1774 by passing several laws that became
    known in America as the Intolerable Acts.  One
    law closed Boston Harbor until Bostonians paid
    for the destroyed tea.  Another law restricted
    the activities of the Massachusetts legislature
    and gave added powers to the post of governor of
    Massachusetts.  Those powers in effect made him a
    dictator. Another required that British
    officials accused of a crime to be tried in
    British NOT Colonial courts.
  • Who did it effect All Colonists / Massachusetts
    Colonists and Merchants
  • How did it contribute to the Revolution In
    response to these actions and laws, the colonist
    banded together to fight back.  Several
    committees of colonists called for a convention
    of delegates from the colonies to organize
    resistance to the Intolerable Acts.  The
    convention was later to be called the Continental
    Congress.
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