chapter 5 outline - The American Revolution Flashcards
What acts had been implemented prior to the Seven Years’ War to regulate the empire’s commerce?
The Seven Years’ War made clear to British rulers the significance of the empire to Britain’s well being and high international status
They started implementing new regulations to ensure the empires’ strength and prosperity, since Parliament’s prior attempts were frequently ignored by the colonists
The Wool Act of 1699, Hat Act of 1732, and Iron Act of 1750 forbade colonies from manufacturing these items
The Molasses Act sought to prevent trade between New England and the French Caribbean by instigating a tax on French-produced molasses
The Navigation Act channeled key American exports like tobacco through British ports
What was British policy towards overseeing the colonies prior to the Seven Years’ War?
STATUTORY NEGLECT - The British government had previously been negligent in overseeing the colonies, although the Board of Trade (in charge of colonial affairs) made attempts to strengthen its imperial authority prior to the Seven Years war
What did the British hope to accomplish with their new policies after the Seven Years’ War? How did they justify this against the colonies’ protests?
After the Seven Years’ War, Britain reverted back to seeing the colonies as subordinates with the main purpose of enriching the mother country, and began imposing regulations on the colonies in unprecedented ways
- They hoped to make the empire more efficient and raise some funds that would help pay off Britain’s great debt
- Most British political leaders supported the new laws that - enraged the colonists, believing that Americans should be grateful to the empire for defending them in the Seven Years’ War
- They also believed that Parliament was representative of the entire empire, partaking in the widely accepted theory of “virtual representation” in which each member supposedly represented the whole empire and not just the district
How did the cycle of British taxation of the colonies develop?
When Americans complained that they weren’t represented in Parliament and therefore couldn’t be taxes, they had little support in the mother country
A pattern started in which British governments would be pressured to back down in the face of colonial resistance, only to return later with new regulations to centralize power, heightening colonial defiance
What were writs of assistance written for, and how did they affect the colonies?
Colonists felt their liberty was already threatened by the British government issuing writs of assistance to combat smuggling, general search warrants that allowed customs officials to search for smuggled goods
What was the Sugar Act, and how did the act affect the court system?
The Sugar Act reduced existing taxes on French-produced molasses from the West Indies, but also disencouraged colonial smuggling
To avoid colonial juries acquitting merchants accused of smuggling, the act also strengthened admiralty courts that allowed smugglers to be judged without a jury trial
What were the Revenue and Currency Act?
Simultaneously, the Revenue Act put goods like wool and hides on the enumerated list, meaning they had to be shipped through England
The Currency Act was also put in practice, banning the use of paper money as compensation for debt to protect British merchants and creditors from being paid with depreciated colonial currency
What was the Stamp Act?
While the Sugar and Revenue Act were attempts by the colonial government to strengthen the Navigation Acts and tax through trade, the Stamp Act was a direct tax on the colonists
It required all printed material produced in the colonies to carry a stamp purchased from authorities, and the revenues generated were meant to finance the operations of the empires, including stationing British troops in North America
Why was the Stamp Act’s impact so significant and why did it anger the majority of colonists?
The Stamp Act effectively aggravated every free colonist, especially detested by citizens that published and read books and newspapers
By taxing without colonial consent, Parliament had also challenged the authority of colonial assemblies that had established their control over financial expenditures and taxing, and they were ready to defend their power
What was the Quartering Act and what was its impact?
The Quartering Acts were two or more Acts of British Parliament requiring local governments of the American colonies to provide the British soldiers with housing and food - Angered lots of ordinary colonists and infringed on property rights
Why was opposition to the Stamp Act so significant to the Revolutionary Era, and what did colonial leaders reference when they argued against it?
Resistance to the Stamp Act was the first major contention of the revolutionary period and caused the first major divide between colonists and Great Britain over the definition of freedom
Most colonial political leaders voiced their opposition to the act by invoking the rights of freeborn Englishmen that they claimed colonists should also enjoy
They usually referenced long standing British values like a community’s right to not be taxed except by its elected assemblies
How did Americans view themselves in relation to Britain, within the empire? How did the British government’s view differ from that?
Americans believed the British empire to be composed of an association of equals, in which free settlers overseas enjoyed the same rights as British men at home
Colonists in other parts of the empire echoed their sentiments and everyone claimed the right to govern their own affairs in the name of liberty
The British government and its appointed officials in America disagreed and viewed the empire as a hierarchy in which everyone was under the authority of Parliament
Surrendering the right to tax the colonies would set a dangerous precedent for the entire empire, posing a threat to the supreme power of the government
Why did colonists believe Parliament shouldn’t be taxing them? What resolutions were passed in Virginia in opposition to British taxation?
However, an increasing number of colonists were starting to believe that Britain shouldn’t have the power to tax them at all since Americans had no representation in the House of Commons
The popular rallying cry of “No Taxation without Representation” emerged
In Virginia, the House of Burgesses approved four resolutions proposed by passionate speaker Patrick Henry
Colonists enjoyed the same liberties and privileges as residents of the mother country and the right to consent to taxation was a foundation of British liberty
How did the colonies protest the Stamp Act in unity?
Later, the Stamp Act Congress, composed of delegates from nine colonies, convened in New York to endorse Viriginia’s positions
Soon, merchants throughout the colonies conspired to boycott British goods until Parliament repealed the Stamp Act, the first act of cooperation between colonies
Cries for liberty and symbols of freedom were common during the colonial resistance to the Stamp Act
Colonial leaders succeeded in preventing the implementation of the new law
Colonies exchanged ideas and information about resistance
The movement was started by the colonial elite, but they were joined by a far broader range of Americans
How did colonists organize mass resistance to the Stamp Act?
Stamp Act resistance extended beyond political debate
Before the law went into effect, crowds of angry colonists forced officials chosen to administer it to resign and destroyed stamp shipments
The Sons of Liberty, a group of young men that enriched themselves plundering French shipping as privateers during the Seven Years’ War, were instrumental to the resistance
In New York City, the Sons of Liberty organized processions of hundreds of residents to shout “liberty” and march through the streets on most nights
They also posted notices about the movement and lead others in enforcing the boycott of British goods
Their actions alarmed the aristocratic families that dominated New York politics