In the period from 1756 to 1765 England was fighting the French in the Seven Years War in Europe. The English also fought the French in North America. The English won both at home and abroad, but at a high financial cost. The English government decided to make the American colonists pay for their protection against the French and help subsidise the costs of the Seven Years War. The American colonists, on the other hand, did not agree that they were vulnerable and believed they could protect themselves as they had done for the past one hundred years. So the British government passed acts such as the Townshend Revenue Act, which put a tax on tea, paper, paint, and lead. These acts forced the American colonists to pay off some of the great debt left by the Seven Years War. Some acts even allowed the British regular troops to stay in the colonists’ houses. The colonists were given no say in any one of these laws and acts. The colonists then began the outcry “No taxation without representation!” This eventually led to rebellion and the colonists went to war with Britain in 1775 in defence of their rights thus resulting in the American Revolution.…
The American war of independence was also known as the American revolutionary war. This war was fought between the American colonies and England. The war itself started with the battle of Lexington and concord. It started when some soldiers of the British army arrived in Lexington, Massachusetts. Over there, they fired at the colonial militia which it was a group of farmers, boys as well as old men. Then on the following day they headed to Concord and over there they killed some Americans. Thus, this was the first engagement of battle of the revolutionary war. The broader sense of the revolution began when parliament started to impose laws and regulations to the colonies. For instance, After the French and Indian war was over, Britain turned its attention to the colonies. They restricted the colonies to trade with other nations. Thus trough the navigation act the colonies were allowed to trade only with England. So goods such as sugar, tobacco, and cotton that were produced in the colonies could only be exported to British ports. Indeed, these rules and regulations ended up restricting the colonist's life and freedom…
Thomas Whately, advisor to George Grenville, the British chancellor of the Exchequer, was correct by saying in Document 1, "We are not yet recovered from a war solely fought for their protection." Whately was referring to the French and Indian War (1754-1763). This war indeed cost Britain much, and I do believe the colonists were greatful. However, Britain, after 1763, did not allow the colonists to move west. The colonies were increasing by becoming crowded. New taxes angered them as well. Not being represented in Parliament was tyranny. "Taxation without Representation" was the battle cry. The Stamp Act of 1765 started it all. Every paper, from playing cards to legal documents were taxed. Document 2 refers to this tax as well as the Townsend Act which required the colonists to pay a tax on all British goods. According to Document 2, this taxes purpose was for simply "Levying money upon us". Still, this tax like the Stamp Act, was levied without representation in Parliament. Colonists boycotted British goods in favor of their own manufactured goods. The 13 colonies were gradually becoming aware of self-government. Men like Patrick Henry and John Dickinson considered these taxes unconstitutional. They voiced their opinions openly.…
The colonists needed to show Britain that they were not going to be dictated and told what to do if it wasn't to their advantage. The colonists proceeded to throw protests during political assemblies, they put forth pressure through popular crowd actions and riots, and they boycotted English goods. This gave Parliament a taste of what they were in for in the future when situations of colonial resistance would arise. A more formal way of the colonists' rebellion can be seen through the Stamp Act Congress. As first suggested by James Otis, the Massachusetts legislature issued for a general congress to meet in New York and find ways of resisting the British law. As a result, unity occurred within the colonists, and 27 delegates from nine colonies were sent to the meeting. They drafted a set of resolutions that stood for the colonial attitudes in response to the Stamp Act. Among the resolutions, the congress resolved that since they possessed the rights of all British-born subjects, it was their right not to be taxed without their consent, that no taxes could be imposed against the colonies except by their own assemblies and that they were not properly represented in Parliament. In addition to this, many of the colonies agreed to not purchase any British goods until the Stamp Act was…
Although the English won the war, the consequences that they faced were immense. The war had increased Britain's debt to 133 million pounds by 1763, which led to much hatred towards the colonies who were unwilling to help pay this debt. Grennville, and other men of the British Empire bestowed it upon the colonies as their duty to participate in paying the debt.. Grenville took it upon himself to impose harsh acts, such as the Sugar and Stamp act, inorder to take revenue from the colonies. This outraged many colonialists, including Patrick Henry, who at one of Virginias House of Burgesses meetings, openly protested the stamp act, and the unjust acts of the empire. Not only did the British feel that they colonies should take part in paying the debt, but they also held a feeling of resentment due to the colonists minimal…
Stated in history.state.gov," Parliament, said they had the right to tax the American colonies to help pay bills for the war." With that being said they had no choice, no say, and no freedom. In addition, they didn’t have many rights which was unfair. They overall didn’t like the way they were being governed.…
The colonists had refused to be ruled by what they had described as a tyrant, which is why they ceased fighting and declared themselves independent. Before the Declaration, the colonists had been withstanding a lot of oppression from their government 3,000 miles away, the British Parliament. Starting with the Proclamation Line of 1763, issued by parliament to prevent the colonies from having war with the surrounding Native Americans, this was one of the first causes that had caused the seed of distrust in the colonists to sprout. Because this Proclamation was issued soon after the French and Indian War, the British were up to their ears in war debt. As a result, the British had passed several acts raising colonial taxes. One of the first of these was the Sugar Act, which had set a tax on sugar purchased in the colonies specifically. The colonies had already been experiencing a multitude of financial difficulties, so a tax act to feed that struggle was indeed a burden. This was soon followed by the Stamp Act, which had placed a tax on every piece of printed paper they had used. The British were very relentless on reasserting their authority over the colonies, however, the colonists are even more so. Boycotting the goods the British taxed, the colonists were successful in…
The civil war has often been called "The second American Revolution," primary because many Americans actually thought they were once again fighting for their freedom and rights. While this is true, the Civil War itself was revolutionary. It was revolutionary in the political, social and economic conduct of the war. Each Revolutionary conduct of the war impacted America then and some still impact the world today.…
The American colonists were in fact justified to fight a war to break away from great Britain. The colonists had full right and freedom to escape English control. Despite many diplomatic pleads from the American colonists, Britain ignored them; thus making rebellion the only option for the American colonists as the treatment from the British was unnecessarily petty and unfair. The British parliament and King, George III believed they had the right to demand the colonists to pay tax in order to pay back British war debts caused by the French and Indian war. This was the Quartering act in the year 1765, however, a large majority of the colonists did not agree with paying taxes to Great Britain as the law was passed by the British king and parliament…
Parliament quickly repealed the Stamp Act, but passed another act establishing their right to tax the colonies. The colonies, after having been pretty much left to themselves for so long, did not take kindly to being brought to task, so to speak. The Sons of Liberty and similar organizations grew as did the colonists displeasure with what they perceived as an increasingly oppressive and tyrannical parent. Britain, determined to enforce something, levied "external" or indirect taxes on the import of many goods in hopes that the colonists would accept it. However, even this light tax was rejected violently by the already enraged colonists. They retaliated by staging protests, boycotts, the destruction of ships, and the infamous "Boston Tea Party". The colonists had stopped seeing their king and mother country as nurturers and had begun to view them as cruel, corrupted tyrants bent on forcing them into a kind of slavery to…
Civil War: a war between citizens of the same country. This was the end result of the enlargement and expansion of slavery throughout the United States of America. Back in the mid-1800’s, the United States was expanding fast towards the west but there were large decisions to be made: What states should be slave states? How can we balance out everything? Should we expand slavery to the north?…
To ultimately decide which characteristics of the American Revolution make it a “true” revolution or just a civil war, one must first have knowledge of the definition of a “revolution.” A revolution is defined as “a drastic and far-reaching change in ways of thinking and behaving…a relatively sudden and absolutely drastic change...a process of change involving the mobilizing of a mass social movement in order to break the political status-quo and radically transform the society…a complete often violent, overthrow of an established government or political system.” Two of these definitions fit the American Revolution, one of them being that there was that a government (British) being overthrown due to the violence of war. It could be argued that there was not radical social changes, for slavery still existed, women still had very few rights, and only landowning white males could vote. However, society did radically change because as the loyalists fled to Canada after the war, political and social structures were opened up to new people. Slave emancipation also gave strength in the North. Also, a large mass of people mobilized for battle, as 1/3 of the colonists were patriots. The other two definitions do not fit the American Revolution. The…
Taxation on the Colonies was one of the main reasons that the people felt the need to start a revolution and eventually become independent. The French and Indian war caused a massive amount of debt for Britain’s people, they had to find out a way to pay that amount of money throughout the years. By 1770, Britain’s debt was about 140 million. As they obviously were not able to pay by themselves, using the Colonies seemed the best plan. Without thinking of how their next actions could affect the Colonies, the Parliament started applying taxes non-stop to the 13 colonies to pay. “Additional taxes were levied on the American colonists, there were objections and dissension-“(The Road to Revolution). All taxes were made so Britain could raise their revenue. The first tax that brought anger to the colonists was the sugar act. The sugar act required all colonists to pay a tax for their cargo, if the tax was not paid, any royal official could freely and legally take the cargo and not have any punishment to its actions. The colonies were going through post war depression and could not afford to be paying any taxes, moreover the people were angry how the British could did…
The American Revolution was the uprising of the existing thirteen American colonies to gain independence from Britain in the mid 1700’s. The American colonists began questioning Britain’s authority as early as the French and Indian War. During the French Indian War, the colonies wanted to defend themselves against the French in North America. They asked King George for permission to raise armies in order defend themselves. Although their reason to raise an army was sincere, George II was suspicious of the intentions of the colonial government and disapproved their petition. After the French Indian War, Britain decided to raise money by taxing the American Colonists for reparations. Taxes such as the Stamp and Tea Acts created controversy throughout the citizens. Some thought that Britain stepped over the boundary with taxes and some reacted violently. The Boston Tea Party as well as the Boston Massacre arose from such actions. With Britain’s Intolerable acts, the colonists made a daring proposition. The colonists, in the First Continental Congress sent a letter to King George declaring war. Although the British government likely procured strong reasons for limiting the opportunities, rights, and freedoms available to American colonists under British rule, the American Colonists were justified in their desire to claim independence from the British government due to taxation without representation in government meetings, limitations by laws that restricted their freedom and the violence and control they were subjected to on the part of the British soldiers.…
After the French and Indian war, a huge debt weighed heavily upon Great Britain. In attempt to repay these debts, Britain imposed several Acts that greatly affected the American colonies. Many issues arose from both taxing the colonist and how the colonies were represented in the Parliament. This in turn caused difference of opinion between both the British government and the American colonies. On one hand, the Parliament wanted ultimate control over issues and decisions made. While on the other hand, the Colonist wanted someone speaking up for them on these issues because to them this was inadequately justifiable.…