Passed on April 5, 1764 by Parliament, the Sugar Act was a remodeled version of the Sugar and Molasses of 1733, which was about to expire. Under the Sugar and Molasses act of 1733, merchants in the Colonies were required to pay six pence per gallon on the importation of foreign molasses, however, due to English policy of salutary neglect, merchants often smuggled goods in rather the have the burden of paying taxes. Parliament implemented the Sugar Act in order to produce new revenue for Britain, while also stopping trade between the colonies and the French, Dutch, and Spanish. This tax was the most enforced tax at the time, with the British Navy inspecting merchants for smuggled goods and an increased British presence. Even though Parliament…
As a result of Britain’s ever-growing debt the Parliament in acted additional acts on top of the Sugar Act. These new acts included the Stamp Act, the Declaratory Act, and the Townshend Act each of these acts the colonist responded uniquely. With some acts there was protest such as harassing officials and in some there was complete boycotting of goods. In contrast some acts such, as the Declaratory Act was not protested at all.…
For example, every time they wanted to buy a Will or a newspaper, there was a big increase of tax involved. The tax went right back to Britain. In fact, there was a set of laws passed called the Townshend Acts. These acts included a tax on glass, lead, paints, paper and tea imported into the colonies. These laws…
1. In revolutionary America, five groups of people, which was the New England merchant, the southern planters, the royalists, labors, and small farmer were important because they led independent from Great Britain because of conflict with taxation, trade, and commerce. 2. Samuel Adams and some people who disguised as “Mohawk” led Boston Tea Party because colonial merchants feared that the monopoly would hurt their business.…
The Sugar Act was a British Law passed by Parliament during the reign of King George III. This act set a tax on sugar and molasses, and other foreign goods, imported to the colonies. The Stamp Act was another act passed by Parliament that set a tax in the form of a stamp required on all newspaper, legal and commercial documents. The Sugar Act was passed in 1774 and the Stamp Act in 1765 both to help raise revenue for the British. These acts made the colonists upset because they were essentially being taxed to pay for a war…
These acts contained taxes which outraged the colonists. The Sugar Act of 1764 passed by the British parliament eliminated the illegal sugar trade between the colonies with the French and Spanish West Indies. It also established new vice-admiralty courts. This act damaged the sugar market in the colonies and deprived colonists of their sympathetic local juries. The Currency Act of 1764 required colonial assemblies to stop issuing paper money.…
The crown decided to implement higher taxes on foreign goods to limit the amount of foreign trade with other countries. Colonist consumers were encouraged to buy goods from Britain. However, it prevented many plantation owners from trading with other countries to generate…
The American Journey, 127). Second, the Declaratory Act was passed, and the third part was Parliament passing the Revenue Act of 1766, which reduced the tax on molasses. Parliament was happy because the calmed down the colonists, and the colonists rejoiced because they took the repeal as affirmation of the claim that the Stamp Act was…
This act made the tax on sugar from the French and Spanish West Indies much higher than it would be from the British West Indies. The British hoped that by enforcing the Sugar Act the colonies would buy from the British Islands or…
They had to pay a lot for the sugar so that meant that they had to raise their prices on goods. This again would lead to the American Revolution. Britain would lose its gain on the Americas so it would concentrate on India, which led to cultural problems…
The colonies had been relatively independent and tax free until 1763. To pay for the war, taxes like the Stamp Act were put in place by the British Council. The colonies hadn't brought in enough revenue under salutary neglect, therefore, costing more than they were worth. Britain began to pay closer attention, enforcing trade regulations. Previously, the colonists regularly traded with Native Americans, other colonies, and far off countries, but this changed under Britain's new authoritative approach.…
In 1764 the Sugar Act was enacted to raise tax revenue in the colonies for England and it increased the duty on sugar imported from the West Indies. However, the colonists were accustomed to having their own colonial legislatures creating taxes, so they fought back when Britain tried to control them. In 1765 the Stamp Act mandated the use of stamps on certain types of commercial and legal documents. The purpose of this tax was to raise revenue for the new military force, but the colonists did not want to pay for an army they did not ask for. The Townshend Tea Tax placed an import duty on glass, lead, paper, paint, and tea in 1767.…
The patriots have been making trouble for the Loyalist. They only want to preserve their lands when the colonies stand up to Britain. They will only brew more trouble for the Loyalist. The Patriots have been making trouble with the British by turning down the acts and boycotting the products of the British to prove that they won 't buy anything until they are heard and respected. The British would only help the colonies if they would buy taxed goods so they have money to protect them.…
King George III and the British accumulated a massive debt after the French and Indian war. British Funds experience a dramatic shortage, so Parliament was forced to place taxes on the colonists to offset the accrued war expenses. Paying off the debt from the seven-year war was King George’s main concern. By taxing anyone who was neglected during the seven years’ war the British funds could add to their empire thus by strengthening it more. Taxation came in many forms, the first was the Sugar Act (1764), the Stamp Act (1765) and the Townshend Duties (1767).…
The goal of it was to raise revenue from American colonists. This Act imposed a tax on sugar and molasses imported into the thirteen colonies which affected the economic and the constitutional problem of taxation without representation. Therefore, it led to anger the American colonists and made their lives more difficult. Regardless of the income raised by the Sugar Act, British Parliament continued to impose a new tax on the colonies. In 1765, The Stamp Act created to make American colonists pay a new tax on every piece of printed paper they used in order to protect them.…