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 The following year it was eventually repealed due to the colonist’s…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 King George III went into great debt funding the war. In order to pay back his debts the British Parliament passed a series of laws and taxes these were called Acts. The first acts was known as the Sugar act. This Act taxed sugar and molasses imported to the colonies. This mainly affected colonist who sold rum because they needed the sugar to make the rum.…
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…
With the Treaty of Paris 1763, the French were completely removed from North America and England took control of all lands west to the Mississippi River and Canada. When the British took control of the lands west of the Appalachian Mountains, Indians began to rise up and attack English settlements. Still recovering from the expenses of the French and Indian War, King George declared that he should consolidate all settlements east of the Appalachian Mountains. In addition, England made a formal proclamation that no one could settle west of the Appalachian Mountains. Many of the colonists felt that they earned the right to settle west of the Appalachians since they were instrumental in winning England’s victory during the Seven Years War.…
When the British came back to the colonies they had to have a way to pay off their war debt. The British started to limit trade to only the mother country. This allowed Britain to make money off of the colonies, this was called mercantilism. When the king could not make enough money off of that he turned to taxes. His first act was called the Sugar Act. This act put taxes on sugar and the main drink in the colonies was tea. People were furious they had to pay taxes on sugar and molasses.(doc 2)…
The colonists in the British government, had to pay more than they had to for their taxes. Which seemed really unfair because the Parliament needed the money and the colonists had the pay for the Parliament. The Parliament had passed three laws: Sugar Act, Quartering Act, and Stamp Act. In 1764, the Sugar Act was passed by George Grenville who was the new prime minister. The Sugar Act lowered the duty of foreign molasses.…
Great Britain imposed many taxes on the colonists, one being the Sugar Act. The reason the Sugar made the colonists so mad was because it was a tax solely created to raise revenue. The Quartering Acts were put into effect by Great Britain and that stated that colonists must provide for British soldiers, such as housing and feeding them, if necessary. Great Britain also imposed…
The sugar act led to harsh enforcement of tax collection from the colonist and making it seem the colonies were a source of income to England.…
April 5,1764 - The Sugar Act is passed by the English Parliament to offset the war debt brought on by the French and Indian War and to help pay for the expenses of running the colonies and newly acquired territories. This act doubles the duties to imported sugar, textiles, coffee, and other items. This is more work for the colonies, for a war that they didn’t want to happen.…
In 1763, Britain won the French and Indian War. Under the terms of the Treaty of Paris, Britain gained the French territories in Canada. However, the war left Britain with enormous amounts of debt. Because these high repercussions, Britain needed to raise taxes to keep its economy well-balanced. Britons believed it was only right for the colonists to deal with higher taxes as well, for they were benefiting from the effects of the French and Indian War. In 1764, the British Parliament passed the Sugar Act in the colonies. The Sugar Act revised a past act: The Molasses Act of 1733. Under the terms of the Molasses Act, the law required colonial merchants to pay a tax for the imported goods, such as molasses and rum. However, the implementation…
The American Revolution started in 1775 and ended in 1783. There wasn’t just one particular event that led up to the Revolutionary War but it was a series such as the Molasses Act of 1733, the Proclamation of 1763, Sugar Act of 1764, Currency Act of 1764, Stamp Act of 1765, Quartering Act of 1765, Townshend Acts, and Boston Massacre. After those events the Colonists broke ties from the British by declaring the Revolutionary War. The won the war because they were fighting for something that was important to them and they had a lot to lose.…
5) Yes, the English lost the revolutionary war more than the colonist won it because the colonist barely won the war. The colonist had virtually no chance against the British. The British had money, the best navy in the world, and a large standing army. The only reason why America had the advantage that they did was because of France and Spain.…
After Great Britain’s prevail in the Seven Years War or the French and Indian War, Britain went in debt, causing them to impose taxes on the colonists as their source of revenue which led to the Proclamation of 1763…
In 1764 England passed the first series of taxes on the colonist, known as the Sugar Act and the Currency Act. As a result it would be the beginning of colonial opposition against the crown. These Acts were a result of England’s debt after the Seven Year war and they saw the colonies as a source of revenue. When England implemented the Sugar Act it actually cut taxes on English goods, and in so doing it thought it would reduce smuggling from the French West Indies, but it had the opposite effect. The tax also hit during an economic recession which caused colonist to reduce their buying in general.…