Boston send troops to Boston to protect the tax collectors and as well as some loyalists that are loyal to the crown, because at that time the colonists and the Parliament felt pretty abominable in that period for each other.
Also, to keep the colonists in the British control.
The British sent troops to Concord in 1775 out of sheer stupidity.
After the Boston Tea Party, King George III had closed The Port of Boston in an effort to starve out the citizens of Boston. It did not work. The other colonies shipped food and supplies to Boston. They would send it by boat to the closest port and from there by wagon to Boston.
Governor Guy Carleton of Quebec gave guns to Indians. The people living in various towns kept guns in an arsenal for defense. Farmers kept guns at home. King George III ruled that no individual was allowed to have a gun and all guns had to be turned in.
General Gage sent solders to Concord to collect the guns in the arsenal in Concord.
In a number of places British solders took guns and burned down houses.
The British Army left Boston heading toward Concord. On the way, they searched the farmhouses. They took what they wanted and then they set the houses on fire.
Then at Concord, the met the Colonial Army.
King George the Third wanted the patronism to stop in Boston because there were murders breaking out such as the Boston Massacre.
The British had seized John Hancock's ship for violating trade regulations,
and rioting had followed. Therefore the British sent soldiers to Boston.
to get tea
William Pitt helped the British by by pouring in money, troops, and equipment. The result was that the British won the war.
president eisenhower
British General Gage learned that the colonists had stored supplies and ammunition at Concord, MA, some 20 miles from Boston. On 19 April 1775, he sent 700 of his troops to seize the munitions and, if possible, capture and arrest Samuel Adams and John Hancock. Gage had received information that those two “rebels” were hiding out in Concord. Warning the Americans that the British were marching to Concord were the trio Revere, Dawes, and Prescott, of the famous “Midnight Ride.” When British Major John Pitcairn arrived at Lexington, which was on the way to Concord, he found 70 American minutemen (actually, they were almost all farmers) in battle formation at the town square. Pitcairn ordered the Americans to disperse but when they didn’t move after the second order to do so, someone fired a shot. It is not known if the shot was fired by Americans or British. The British easily cleared Lexington and marched on to Concord. He found more Americans arming the bridge into the town so Pitcairn order the British to return to Boston. All the way back to Boston, the Americans sniped at the British from behind trees and rocks, inflicting serious injury to the British troops. When the Redcoats reached Boston, 250 had been killed or wounded.
sent in federal troops
Samuel Adams wrote a letter known as the "Circular Letter" in 1768 that directly criticized the Townshend Acts. This letter was sent to all the American colonies to coordinate resistance against the acts and to call for unity in opposing British taxation policies.
King George the Third wanted the patronism to stop in Boston because there were murders breaking out such as the Boston Massacre.
The British sent troops to enforce rule in Boston because of many problems in Boston like the revolutionists. Sending the soldiers made many civilians in Boston angry. The troops were allowed to stay at peoples homes. So sending troops in to Boston made people more angry.
The British sent troops to enforce rule in Boston because of many problems in Boston like the revolutionists. Sending the soldiers made many civilians in Boston angry. The troops were allowed to stay at peoples homes. So sending troops in to Boston made people more angry.
colonial resistance to the Quartering Act of 1767.
They were sent because of the quartering act which was a act that the colonists had to give food and shelter to the troops and because the troops were to watch over the colonists so they won't rebel or -protest or any against things.
because of the tea act protest troops were sent to america to watch over the citizens
The British closed down the port of Boston and they also sent troops that were quartered in the colonists homes. This was called the Intolerable Acts.
King George the 3rd was king, and he sent his British troops out to war in the American Revolution.
During the Revolutionary War the British were sent to Boston to ensure that the colonists obeyed the ruling against them for the Boston Tea Party. When they were headed back to Boston they were met by General George Washington that ordered his troops to point their cannons at the British and demanded that they leave.
There was no Tea Party Act, but there was a response from the king. He sent more troops to Boston and closed the port. One observer wrote that he thought “the whole of London “ was coming into Boston. There were 2,000 British men of war full of troops entering Boston Harbor.
THE BRITISH TROOPS SENT
American soldiers pointed cannons with no ammo at the fleet of British ships. The Brittish fleet got scared and left