Road to Revolution The New Imperial Policy (1763-1770) Strict enforcement of Navigation Acts Peacetime army of 10,000 remains in America, indicating willingness.

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Road to Revolution The New Imperial Policy ( ) Strict enforcement of Navigation Acts Peacetime army of 10,000 remains in America, indicating willingness to use force to retain authority

Early measures ( ) –Prime Minister George Grenville taxation program Sugar Act threatened triangular trade by interfering with French molasses imports –Some colonists argued that Sugar Act was illegal, that all taxes needed to arise from the people –Violators would be tried by Admiralty Courts, not juries (which often resulted in acquittals) Bureaucracy doubled in size to collect taxes and arrest smugglers

Stamp Act (1765) –sought to raise funds for defense of America –requiring all legal documents, as well as newspapers, playing cards, etc. to bear a government stamp. Before the actual war of the Revolution could begin, there had to be a revolution "in the minds and hearts of the people," as John Adams put it. One of the most important factors in this change of heart was an innocent-looking document which received the assent of George III "by commission" on March 22, It was to be known as the Stamp Act. That it was also to be a piece of political dynamite was soon evident. - The American Heritage History of the American RevolutionJohn Adams

What would be the colonial reaction and what action would they take? –Colonial opposition to new program Stamp Act affected lawyers, merchants, editors most heavily. Stamp Act Congress met to call for boycott of British goods and state that Parliament had no right to tax colonies without consent. Sons of Liberty used mob violence to force all stamp agents to resign.

Protest against the Stamp Act The sign in the background reads: "The Folly of England and the Ruin of America" Designed by Franklin, and drawn and engraved by an unknown artist, this cartoon was distributed by Franklin among his London associates as part of his campaign to have the Stamp Act repealed.

Parliament repealed Stamp Act but asserted its rights (with Declaratory Act) to regulate colonies "in all ways whatsoever."

Townshend Acts ( ) new duties placed on a number of goods (paper, paint, glass, and tea) led to protests against the collection of customs duties. Leading up to the Boston Massacre. –Job competition (British soldiers vs. locals) –Presents of British soldiers created hostilities Samuel Adams led radicals in urging a renewed boycott of British goods and provided an issue to unify American sentiment –Boston Massacre resulted in deaths of four persons (1770) when soldiers sent to protect agents were attacked by a mob. – By 1770 all duties except that on tea were repealed. Tea tax was seen as symbolic of Parliament's supremacy

Tea Act (1773) –In an attempt to support the East India Tea Company, Parliament removed the tax on tea and allowed it to be sold in the colonies through its own agents, not American retailers. British tea was cheaper, but to buy it was to pay a Townshend duty. –Mobs turned back tea ships in several ports and dumped shiploads into Boston Harbor.

Parliament responded with Coercive (Intolerable) Acts which –Closed Boston Harbor –Removed trials involving royal officials out of New England –Allowed for quartering of troops in colonists' homes –Extended Quebec's boundaries south, convincing colonists that liberty was threatened.

First Continental Congress (1774) –Declaration of Rights and Grievances condemned Coercive Acts, denied Parliament's right to tax colonies, but promised obedience to the king –Organized economic resistance (boycotts)

April 19, When British attempted to capture Concord, Minutemen responded with gunfire at Lexington and Concord –73 British soldiers killed, 176 wounded –Armed conflict between England and the colonists had now begun In an engraving by Amos Doolittle, British Major John Pitcairn and Col. Francis Smith survey Concord from a hill in the town cemetery.