Yes, women's groups throughout the colonies helped with boycotts of British goods by creating substitutes for tea, textiles, and other commodities they were boycotting.
The protest that caused Parliament to pass the Coercive Acts was the Boston Tea Party.
The Intolerable Acts
An unexpected result of the Coercive Acts was the increased support for Massachusetts and its resistance to the authority of England. The Coercive Acts were originally meant to subdue disobedience.
why did the coercive act fail
The Port of Boston was the port that was closed as a result of the Coercive Acts. British Parliament issued the Coercive Acts after the Boston Tea Party in 1774.
Intolerable Acts
The Coercive Acts
The American Colonists renamed the Coercive Acts to the Intolerable Acts because they found them so unbearable.
First, it is worth noting that the "Coercive Acts" were what England and the British monarchy called the laws meant to punish the American colonists. But in the colonies, these acts had a very different name: they were referred to as the Intolerable Acts. The harbor in question was Boston Harbor, and the colonists defied the British government by dumping a large quantity of tea into the harbor as a protest.
The Boston Massacre took place in 1770 while the Coercive acts took place in 1774 4 years later.
In Great Britain, these laws were referred to as the Coercive Acts and seen by the colonists as one of the Intolerable Acts.
The Intolerable Acts