In response to the Boston Massacre in 1770, Britain sought to quell colonial unrest by repealing many of the Townshend Acts, which had imposed tariffs on imported goods. However, tensions remained high, and the British government maintained a military presence in Boston to enforce order. The incident fueled anti-British sentiment and became a rallying point for colonial resistance, ultimately contributing to the growing desire for independence. The British response was seen as insufficient to address the underlying grievances of the colonists, further escalating the conflict.
It made people angry, as massacres often do.
No Boston is a city in US, Britain another country
Britain abandoned Boston because they lost the war, so Britian wanted no part in Boston anymore. They were disgraced.
they made a blockcade in the boston harbor
The repealed the act.
Parliament enacted a law that blockaded Boston Harbor
Because innocent colonists died from British soldiers in the Boston Massacre, and the Boston Tea Party made the King furious and take away almost every right Boston had, so it made the colonists angry at Britain.
It made people angry, as massacres often do.
No Boston is a city in US, Britain another country
Britain abandoned Boston because they lost the war, so Britian wanted no part in Boston anymore. They were disgraced.
they made a blockcade in the boston harbor
the boston harbor
The repealed the act.
No Boston was not yet founded when Britain in the colonial times it was founde later on around the 1800's
penis
The repealed the act.
Great Britain responded to the Boston Tea Party by enacting the Coercive Acts in 1774, also known as the Intolerable Acts. These laws aimed to punish Massachusetts for the tea protest and included measures such as closing Boston Harbor and revoking the colony's charter. The British government sought to reassert its authority, but these actions further inflamed tensions between the colonies and Britain, ultimately contributing to the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War.