The large British debt incurred defending the colonies in the French And Indian War
Grenville
the sugar act and the intolerable act
The Sugar and Molasses Act was a tax imposed by the British Parliament on sugar and molasses imported by American colonies from non-British sources. The act was passed in 1733 as a way for Britain to raise revenue and regulate trade. It was one of several acts that eventually led to increased tensions between the American colonies and Britain, ultimately culminating in the American Revolution.
The Sugar Act was enacted in order to prevent smuggling in the colonies. The British wanted the colonies to purchase goods only from Britain. The Tea Act was a lower in prices of tea from the British East India Company. the British enacted the Tea Act because their tea was too expensive and they couldn't sell. With a lower price, colonists began to buy the British tea. Colonial merchants were angry because their tea wouldn't sell to the colonists since the British tea had a lowered price. The Tea Act led to the Boston Tea Party where colonial merchants protested about British tea and threw crates of them into Boston harbor.
The Stamp act.
The Sugar Act was passed by British Parliament on April 5, 1764. This act put a tax on imported sugar. The Act was repealed two years later, in 1766, but the effects of the Act were felt long after. The Sugar Act was only one of many laws passed by Parliament that caused unease among Americans. Eventually, with the later Stamp Act, the American colony began actively revolting against being taxed without having a voice in Parliament, and the riots eventually led to the American Revolution.
The stamp act
the quartering act, townshend act, stamp act, sugar act, Boston massacre, Boston tea party,etc.
Sugar Act in 1764 Stamp Act in 1765 Declatory Act Townshed Act Quartering Act Tea Act
Give reasons that led to the british govt to pass the enclosures act
The Stamp Act was put into place and passed by the British Parliament. The strongest opponent of this act in Congress was Samuel Adams.