The Sugar Act, also known as The American Revenue Act, was passed by Great Britain’s Parliament on April 5, 1764. The Sugar Act involved taxing imported items like sugar, molasse, wine, coffee, etc. that were delivered to the colonies. The Sugar Act basically replaced the Molasse Act (1763), which was just having to pay taxes when buying molasse, but just added more items to the “taxed list”. Parliament used the tax money to help pay the debt of the French and Indian War. The act caused many financial problems with the lower class colonists and even led some to protest the act. About 50 merchants decided to join up to boycotted certain taxed items and grow/make the items themselves. The following year it was eventually repealed due to the colonist’s…
parliament thought that they had the right to tax the American colonies. “The Sugar Act was an extension of the Molasses Act (1733), which was set to expire in 1763”. In 1756-1763 Great Britain had a 7 year war with France and after the war ended Great Britain had high war debts so they started taxing the colonies. The American colonies got upset about the extremely high taxes so they revolted against Great Britain.…
After the French and Indian War, Britain was left in deep debt. This lead the government to pass various acts and start taxing goods. Many colonists were not happy with these taxes, and had multiple reactions to the acts. Two acts that aggravated the colonists were the Townshend Acts and the Tea Acts. There were multiple actions of the British Government after 1763 that caused unrest in the colonies. There were multiple actions of the British Government after 1763 that caused unrest in the colonies. These acts taxed imported items such as glass, paint, lead, paper, and tea. The acts were made because of a man named Charles Townshend, who thought that the tax on the imports would reduce expenses. However, he was definitely wrong about…
The Townshend Acts. The British government still needed money from the colonist. Because the colonists were upset of the stamp act, they sent Benjamin Franklin to plead their case. He told Parliament that the colonists opposed it because it was an internal but would accept external tax.…
Desiring revenue from the colonists to offset the massive expenditures for defense, the British began to pass a number of acts such as the currency, sugar, quartering, and stamp acts. Naturally, the colonists objected to these acts. They had proclaimed taxation without representation and began to boycott British goods while protesting. On the contrary the most controversial of the acts was the Stamp act, and the way the colonists responded would undoubtedly change America forever.…
British merchants were greatly affected by the colonists determined boycott protests, that they begged parliament to stop the Stamp Act. February 1766, the Act was canceled. But the British didn’t stop, they were resilient and came up with newer Acts and ways of taxing the American colonies. The British parliament passed Acts such as the Declaratory Act, the Townshend Act, the Tea Act and the Coercive Act that further angered the colonists by making them feel restricted, ignored and unfairly treated. 4 1676, Charles Townshend, new finance minister, came up with the Townshend Act.…
In 1765 England passed a new law called the Stamp Act. This act was meant to replace the sugar act because that act did not work. It taxed all printed items. England felt that they needed to tax the colonies because the colonies…
Dispite in the colonies over the Stamp Act had actually begun in the spring of 1764 when Parliament passed a resolution that contained the assertion, "That, towards further defraying the said Expences, it may be proper to charge certain Stamp Duties in the said Colonies and Plantations." Both the Sugar Act and the proposed Stamp Act were designed principally to raise revenue from the colonists. The Sugar Act was to a large extent a continuation of past legislation related primarily to the regulation of trade (termed an external tax), but its stated purpose to collect revenue directly from the colonists for a specific purpose was entirely new. The novelty of the Stamp Act was that it was the first internal tax (a tax based entirely on activities within the colonies) levied directly on the colonies by Parliament. Because of its potential wide application to the colonial economy, the Stamp Act was judged by the colonists to be a more dangerous…
The French and Indian War put the British crown in debt. In order to increase revenues for the costs of defending the expanding British Empire, Britain taxed the colonies. It imposed the Sugar Act in 1764, and, one year later, it added the Stamp Act. Colonists protested the added taxes. The Stamp Act was repealed.…
Events that led to the Boston Tea Party: After the English won the French and Indian war in 1763, the King passed the Sugar Act (a set a tax on sugar and molasses), the Stamp Act (a set tax on all legal papers), and the Townshend Acts (taxes on glass, paint, oil, lead, paper, and tea.) The reason for passing these acts was to make up for all the money lost during the war and to pay for future costs. The colonists saw this as useless, and refused to pay the taxes set on certain items. The British government eventually removed the taxes on everything except tea.…
In 1764, a year after the French and Indian war, the Sugar act was passed. This act forced the colonist to pay a 3¢ tax on sugar, coffee, indigo, and certain kinds of wine. Taxes were raised without the colonist having a say, and this is the moment they wanted to have a say so in how much they were being taxed.…
The Sugar Act in 1764 increased duties on imported sugar and other items such as textiles, coffee, wines and indigo (dyes). It doubles the obligation to store foreign goods from England into the colonies and also prohibits imports of foreign rum and French wines. The colonists disliked this law because they had to pay double for foreign goods. They showed their dislike by mailing 50 letters to Parliament, eventually getting the law changed.…
The Sugar Act taxed all common goods such as sugar, lumber, animal skins, and whale bone. The colonists responded in a mild protest, but it was not a huge issue for most. The next act past was the Stamp Act. The stamp act highly taxed stamps and made it so every paper had to have a stamp. The colonist were very angry about this act so they rioted until the act was repealed. The next revolutionary act was the Townshend Acts. This taxed common goods such as paper, tea, paint, and glass. The colonists responded to this act by boycotting British goods. Eventually British government repealed all the taxes except for the one on tea. This was not good enough for the colonist, they wanted all the taxes destroyed. They acted on this by going out in the middle of the night and throwing in 342 crates of tea into the Boston Harbor. As a punishment British government passed the Intolerable acts. There was four laws included in this act, the Boston Port Act, Massachusetts Government Act, Administration of Justice Act, and the Quartering Act. In the Boston Port Act the Boston Port was closed until the people of Boston had payed for it all. This was very significant because that port was used to import food, the citizens would starve without it. The Massachusetts Government Act stated that all town meetings or…
March 22nd, 1765. News spread like wildfire after the colonists heard that the British Parliament had issued a new tax on the American people. Initially passed on February 17th, 1765, the Stamp Tax was not given Royal Assent, or made an official law by the passing of the British Parliament, until March 22nd, 1765. The Stamp Act was put into place by Britain shortly after The Seven Years’ War: a battle between the British and the French over land. After the bitter war left Britain in crippling debt, Parliament needed to find ways to regain financial stability in their country. They hoped that placing a tax on official documents in the American colonies would eventually produce enough revenue to pay off their war debts. Although the Stamp Act…
The stamp act was affecting family a lot because we didn't have enough money for many items…