Sending troops to Boston and if you are a Connections student like me it will be right because I took the quiz and it was
by sending 2 regiments of troops of Boston
(so you know i got this information out of a textbook so its reliable.)
Sending troops to Boston.
Hjg
passage of the Reform Act of 1832
Good question. Great Britain wasn't formed until the union of the English and Scottish parliaments in 1707, so England before 1707 and Great Britain after 1707 until independence.
In 1801, the parliaments of Britain and Ireland merged and their title became 'The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland'.
Britain viewed the tax as a repayment of the costs of governing the colonies. Since this was common practice at the time, England was surprised at the response from the colonies.
Hjg
In the Sepoy rebellion, Indians rebelled against the Great Britain, which had set up colonies in India.
At the time of the American Revolution, all of the colonies were 'Atlantic' colonies. The exception was the Canadian Colonies, which wanted nothing to do with the rebellion against Great Britain. Those loyal to the crown moved north to Canada.
sending troops to Boston
sending troops to Boston
Because the colonies in America felt that Britain had no right to tax US goods and services.
passage of the Reform Act of 1832
Good question. Great Britain wasn't formed until the union of the English and Scottish parliaments in 1707, so England before 1707 and Great Britain after 1707 until independence.
The American Revolution began when Britain sent troops to suppress a growing rebellion in its North American colonies. The people of the colonies eventually declared independence from Britain as the United States of America.
That believing the colonies will continue to do well is misleading.
The British hoped to put down the trend to rebellion by the colonists by making an example of Massachusetts. These acts were passed in response to the Boston Tea Party. They were interested in keeping the colonies as a source of revenue.
Parliament's ability to reflect colonial interest