After the seven years' war, the British decided that the colonists should pay for the war debt and the army cost because the British were defending the Americans. The Americans retaliated because they thought that because they fought along side the British, and in their viewpoint, for the British, they shouldn't have to pay for something that was not their problem.
Basic items were taxed such as glass, tea, paper, and lead that colonists had to import becuase they didnt want to produce them.
King George III needed funds to pay for the artillery used in the French and Indian War. He didn't have them, so he taxed the colonies for something they weren't even a part of. King George taxed the colonists because he felt that he was always there to protect the colonists with his army and all that stuff, so he decided that the colonists should pay him back. The colonists got really mad and some decided that they would not buy the things that King George put taxes on.
It got the colonists mad that they had no representatives in the British Parliament and were being taxed. That was all it did though. It did get some more people on the side of the patriots.
In the year 1765 Britain enacted the Stamp Act which placed a government stamp of taxation on all paper documents, such as newspapers and playing cards. The colonists, feeling that they were being unfairly taxed, formed protest groups such as the Sons of Liberty. They would protest English taxing agencies, and in some cases, would demolish the homes of government bureaucrats in charge of taxation. And, it was the first time Parliament tried to tax them.
Many colonists didn't believe this idea applied to slaves
one was ''no taxtation with out representation'' the king taxed the colonists with out caring about what the colonists had to say about it. the colonists thought it was unfair so they boycotted the goods that the the king taxed them on.
Basic items were taxed such as glass, tea, paper, and lead that colonists had to import becuase they didnt want to produce them.
Most colonists smuggled goods because they felt they were being unfairly taxed by the British Empire and this was a way to get around it.
False. They believed that Parliament should make the laws, but when the King interfered, some of the colonists rebelled and started the United States.
King George III needed funds to pay for the artillery used in the French and Indian War. He didn't have them, so he taxed the colonies for something they weren't even a part of. King George taxed the colonists because he felt that he was always there to protect the colonists with his army and all that stuff, so he decided that the colonists should pay him back. The colonists got really mad and some decided that they would not buy the things that King George put taxes on.
The US got involved in the Revolutionary War to become a separate country. American history classes will teach that the colonists wearied of 'taxation without representation'. This meant that while they were being taxed (and taxed and taxed and taxed again), they had no voice in the taxation process.
Some were simply crooks. Some believed they were being unfairly taxed
Basic items were taxed such as glass, tea, paper, and lead that colonists had to import becuase they didnt want to produce them.-Zara =)Read more: What_were_some_of_the_items_taxed_under_the_townshed_acts
Most colonists smuggled goods because they felt they were being unfairly taxed by the British Empire and this was a way to get around it.
It got the colonists mad that they had no representatives in the British Parliament and were being taxed. That was all it did though. It did get some more people on the side of the patriots.
all i no is that groceries cant be taxed
The colonists were being taxed to pay off England's war debt for defending the colonists in the French and Indian Wars. However the colonists had no elected representatives in the English government, which had legislated for these taxes and the means of collection. The colonists were not automatically opposed to paying a tax that paid for them having been defended, but they wanted some say in the voting on such taxes.