He wanted independence
No, you'll have to research your work and write the paper yourself. However if you need some help verifying facts and such feel free to ask
They were intolerable (hence the Intolerable Acts). At first England had little involvement and now they want to take over and be strict in order to get more money, but the Americans had been doing their own thing for years. It made them angry and resentful. Did this help?
He went to the south and founded schools
Parliment passes the Intolerable Acts simply because the colonist were apparently being stubern because they weren't buying british goods. or also know as boycotting. THen King George III passed the Intolerable Acts and he also shut down the harbor. This meant that no shipped goods could come in or out. Also, parliment was suffering already from debt, so they thought that taxing the colonists would help. but look at how that turned out. the colonists did not want the Intolerable Acts and they tried to reason to King George and said they would side with him if they took the taxes away. However King George III refused and soon the Boston Tea Party started and later the Revolutionary war
to help pay for the French and Indian war.
Some of the effects are as follows:A. Suicide throughout coloniesB. Plagues and diseasesC. Mass MurderD. Increased sale of tobaccoE. Livestock being destroyedF. Depression throughoutG. Mass MigrationsEtc.Did that help?
come on people answer i need help so answer ANSWER!!!!!!
The Intolerable Acts were a series of acts meant to punish Boston. This means that if Parliament can do this to one colony, it can do it to all the others. However, the act that really angered the colonists was the Quebec Act. It gave the right to self government to the French in Quebec and extended the territory (think of it, they just fought a war with the French about this!).
After the Intolerable Acts were passed in 1774, colonists from other regions rallied to support Massachusetts through various means, including economic boycotts and the establishment of the First Continental Congress. They organized donations of food and supplies to assist those affected by the harsh penalties imposed by the British government. Additionally, many colonies sent delegates to the Congress to coordinate a collective response and to express solidarity with Massachusetts, highlighting the growing unity among the colonies against British oppression.
The American colonies refused to submit to the Intolerable Acts of 1774. The Continental Association was formed to boycott British goods, and the colonies pledged to support Massachusetts if they were occupied by the British. A plan to stop exports to Britain after a year was never implemented, because open warfare erupted at Concord and Lexington just five months later in April, 1775.the Boston tea partyColonists grew increasingly angry and began the Revolutionary War.Americans from all colonies reacted by trying to help the people of Boston.
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enforcement acts