The sugar and stamp acts drew fierce opposition from colonists because they felt it wasn't fair for them to be taxed without having a vote on how the money was going to be used. They called it "taxation without representation, and dumped the tea in Boston Harbor in protest.
No, the colonists didn't agree with the Sugar Act and Stamp Act. The colonists protested because each act put taxes on stamps, sugar, molasses and more. Colonists thought it was unfair to them because the British were taxing them. They protested at the side of more acts and they eventually had the Revolutionary War.
They asked King George to repeal them and he did.
The colonists were angry because of the famous line "no taxation without representation." Britain kept passing acts and the colonists had no say. The Sugar Act and Townshend Acts had been passed before the Stamp Act. In the end, Britain did repeal (get rid of) the Stamp Act, but then passed an act requiring the colonists to house British soldiers.
King George the III passed the Quarting Act, the Stamp Act, and the Sugar Act.Read more: What_acts_did_King_George_III_pass
The colonists claimed that the stamp, sugar, tea, and townshend acts violated the right to only be taxed with representation. The colonists had no representatives in the Mother country; this is where the popular phrase "no taxation without representation" came from.
The colonists opposed these acts because the colonists considered them to be unfair taxing (taxation without representation). Britain placed these taxes without their consent so they rebelled.
The stamp and sugar act happened because the british were taxing the colonists on little things such as stamp and sugar. The colonists, of course, protested. This lead to the Boston Tea Party. The stamp and sugar act happened because the british were taxing the colonists on little things such as stamp and sugar. The colonists, of course, protested. This lead to the Boston Tea Party.
The English King reacted to the colonists petition about the Sugar Act and Stamp Act by repealing the Stamp Act. Ben Franklin went and argued in front of English Parliament warning of a revolution.
they boycotted the idea and stopped paying taxes to the british
No, the colonists didn't agree with the Sugar Act and Stamp Act. The colonists protested because each act put taxes on stamps, sugar, molasses and more. Colonists thought it was unfair to them because the British were taxing them. They protested at the side of more acts and they eventually had the Revolutionary War.
There was the tax stamp, tea tax, and the sugar act.
the name of this Act was the Sugar Act which taxed the colonists for the first time
It did work and the colonists all loved it. The sugar act may have been the best idea parliment had sense the Stamp act.
The Sugar Act The Stamp Act The Tea Act Writs of Assistance
taxation N
They asked King George to repeal them and he did.
Because they were being taxed immensely on common goods.