that would be the quartering act
not trying to tell you how to live your life but if you had looked this up on Google you could have had 4,000,000 results in one second
hope this helped couchpotato56 out
The Quartering Act
It forced colonists to accept British soldiers into their homes. The Quartering Act was an act, passed by Parliament that made colonists house or quarter British soldiers. While many sources claim that the 1774 act allowed troops to be billeted in occupied private homes, this is a myth. The act only permitted troops to be quartered in unoccupied buildings. It did not, as generations of American school children were taught, permit the housing of troops in private homes. When the US was still colonies of Great Britain, there was a law that required the colonists to allow the British soldiers to live in their homes.
British Soldiers seeking refuge during the war would barge into colonists' homes and demand the colonists inside the home to take care of them.
During the American Revolution, King George III and the British government passed the Quartering Acts, which allowed British soldiers to live in citizens' homes without the homeowner's permission and be fed and clothed.
in private homes
Writs of Assistance were passed to empower British soldiers to search any colonial home they believed harbored smuggled goods. Writs of Assistance enhanced the Townshend Acts. The Writs of Assistance aroused a lot of anger and were challenged in every court in the thirteen colonies.
It's the Writs Of Assistance that allowed the British to search homes. =) This was on my History Test!
British soldiers were given writs of assistance that allowed them to conduct searches. This angered many colonists who argued the writs violated their rights.
Actually it was the quartering act that forced the colonials to accept British soldiers in their homes.
It forced colonists to accept British soldiers into their homes. The Quartering Act was an act, passed by Parliament that made colonists house or quarter British soldiers. While many sources claim that the 1774 act allowed troops to be billeted in occupied private homes, this is a myth. The act only permitted troops to be quartered in unoccupied buildings. It did not, as generations of American school children were taught, permit the housing of troops in private homes. When the US was still colonies of Great Britain, there was a law that required the colonists to allow the British soldiers to live in their homes.
British soldiers were placed in colonists homes.
It allowed British soldiers to enter the colonists homes without permission and take anything that seemed like a threat to Briton. (They also sometimes took stuff that they wanted)
it forced colonists to accept British soldiers into their homes
It was the Quartering act made by the british soldiers. It allowed them to stay in your home and eat your food without payment.
It allowed British soldiers to enter the colonists homes without permission and take anything that seemed like a threat to Briton. (They also sometimes took stuff that they wanted)
It allowed British soldiers to enter the colonists homes without permission and take anything that seemed like a threat to Briton. (They also sometimes took stuff that they wanted)
British Soldiers seeking refuge during the war would barge into colonists' homes and demand the colonists inside the home to take care of them.
During the American Revolution, King George III and the British government passed the Quartering Acts, which allowed British soldiers to live in citizens' homes without the homeowner's permission and be fed and clothed.