Sugar and molasses were important commodities for Britain since they were its source of revenue from the colonies. The British West Indies were originally the colonists’ main molasses provider; however the colonists bought molasses from foreign markets where the commodity was cheaper. Because the colonists depended on other countries, the British government passed the Molasses Act in 1733, which implemented a tax of six pence per gallon on molasses bought from non-British colonies. The British hoped that the high tax would persuade the colonists to buy molasses from the British West Indies. In addition, the Molasses Act was supposed to help the West Indies gain profits and raise revenue to pay off the debt from the French and Indian War in 1763. Nonetheless, it was never seriously enforced because the colonists found ways to avoid paying the tax such as smuggling molasses and bribing custom officials.…
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 first act that parliament enforced was known as the Sugar Act. The Sugar Act cut the taxes of molasses and multiple other products. This tax on molasses affected the New England colonies because they would distill the molasses to make rum. This distilling process was bringing in good amounts of money to the colonies. The Sugar Act was supposed to cut down the temptation for smuggled good and this was supposed to help pay for the soldiers staying in America to protect the colonist.…
The Sugar Act The Sugar Act was not really new legislation by the time British Parliament passed it in 1764, but mere an extension of the 1733 Molasses Act. The Molasses Act placed an import tax of 6 pence per gallon of molasses and a 5 shilling tax per hundred pounds of sugar not produced in the British West Indies. Colonists generally ignored the Molasses Act and intimidated tax officials or smuggled the contraband into the colonies.…
When the Parliament passed the Sugar Act of 1764, Adams became a figure of resistance to British authority in Massachusetts- leading those who wish to cry out against the taxations. A year later when the Stamp Act of 1765 was instituted,…
Gunnars, K. (2013). Daily Intake of Sugar - How Much Sugar Should You Eat Per Day?. Authority Nutrition. Retrieved 12 May 2016, from https://authoritynutrition.com/how-much-sugar-per-day/…
The British didn’t want the Colonist trading with anyone except the British. The Colonist were angered by this and began to smuggling goods showing their dislike in British rule and willingness to rebell. The sugar act of 1764 was the first of many acts for raising tax revenue in the colonies for Britain. The Colonist protested…
Two years after the Sugar Act was in acted, the placed the Stamp Act into effect. This, however, fell into wide disfavor, and through boycotts of European goods, was repealed one year later, causing wide spread unity of all living in the colony. Then, two years later, the British again tried to tax colonial citizens by implementing a tax on all glass, lead, and paint, which not surprisingly, was unpopular the…
In the year of 1764 the Sugar Act has been passed by the British Parliament. This is an act, according to the British Parliament, that will help pay off their war debt that came of after the French and Indian War. This act placed an order on the American colonist to pay taxes for items such as molasses sugar, and other items. Being that we American Colonies had no say in what was to be taxed upon as well as who and how much, we colonist are upset to be taxed without representation! People of our colonies have resorted to smuggling these taxed items in response to this unjust decision! For raiding our homes we bring to you mobs and rebellions. We the people will not stand for this as we are not to be treated as your money slaves! Give me…
Sugar Act - a law passed by the British Parliament in 1764 raising duties on foreign refined sugar imported by the colonies so as to give British sugar.…
The American Revenue Act is most commonly known as the Sugar Act. The Sugar Act was passed as a revision to the already existing Molasses Act of 1733. The Molasses Act stated that merchants must pay six pence for every gallon of imported sugar product, coming to the colonies from the West Indies. In an effort to avoid the tax “… smugglers paid off customs officials at the rate of one and a half cents a gallon” (Oakes et al., 2015, p. 167). After the French War, Britain was in debt and was looking for compensation from the colonies. Since the Molasses Act wasn’t bringing in the…
Sugar was not a very well know product back in the late 1300s. However, sugar became a very popular ingredient when Columbus introduce sugar to the West Indies in 1493. After being introduced to other countries, sugar spread like wildfire, and was wanted everywhere. Of course, after sugar became popular, there was going to be a rise on merchants selling cane sugar. The sugar trade was driven by the higher demands of people, profit, and the slave trade.…
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…
“How far should the Government go to protect us from ourselves?” (Huffingtonpost.com). That is a question some New Yorkers have been asking themselves since September 13th, 2012, when the New York City board of public health officially put into effect a ban of selling sugary, soft drinks over 16 ounces (about half a liter). This soda ban has divided the city separating residents into two distinct views. Will this new ban benefit New York City and create yet another stepping stone against the obesity epidemic, or is it an unnecessary abuse of power by the government, that is unfair to big corporations and businesses?…
In 1650, the Navigation Laws passed; it required that European goods for America had to land in Britain first, where tariff duties would be collected and British middlemen would take a piece of the profits. Other laws issued that Americans were restricted in what they could produce and enumerated goods could only be shipped to England. Since the colonists bought more than they sold, hard money had to make up for the difference, which depreciated. Still in need of paying off war debts, Prime Minister George Grenville passed the Sugar Act of 1764, the first law passed for raising tax revenue; it increased the duty of sugar being imported from the West Indies. Americans protested, the tax lowered, and things calmed.…