Want this question answered?
Representatives from the 13 colonies, except Georgia, met for what became the first Continental Congress. They came togetheroppose British policies that restricted their rights and taxed them without representation in Parliament
No it was the Continetal Congress.
The legislature of the 13 colonies, and later the United States, from 1774 to 1789, which created the constitution among other things
The original 13 colonies had Representatives to sign the Constitution, but only 12 of those colonies had representatives. So the answer is 12 states had people who signed the Constitution.
Because the questions uses the word "colonies," I'm assuming that you mean the Continental Congress.
Representatives from the 13 colonies, except Georgia, met for what became the first Continental Congress. They came togetheroppose British policies that restricted their rights and taxed them without representation in Parliament
they met beacause they needed to discuss the government of the 13 colonies
Congress didn't exist yet in 1748. The First Continental Congress of the United States met for the first time in 1774 and were just representatives of the 13 colonies. The first elected congress, senate and President didn't happen until 1789.
the first Continental Congress was September 5th 1774 when all 13 colonies but Georgia met to discuss their problems with Great Britain.
Each of the 13 colonies got one vote
Continental Congress
Each Of The 13 Colonists Got One Vote
It was the paeliament
It was the paeliament
No it was the Continetal Congress.
The 13 original colonies in the U.S. adopted the Articles of Association. It stated that if the Intolerable Acts were not repealed by December 1, 1774, a boycott of British goods would start in the colonies
No, there were only 13 then.