The Intolerable or Coercive Acts
The First Continental Congress was actually called in response to the BritishÕs punishment of Boston for the Boston Tea Party, which was a reaction against the tea tax. The Congress considered an economic boycott of British trade as well as a petition to George III to redress the CongressÕs rights and grievances. If this petition was unsuccessful, there would be another Continental Congress to address what to do next.
Authority
The Nullification Crisis was the reaction of the south, and the Force Bill(written by Andrew Jackson) was the document written.
many different historians argue on this kind of essay. on one hand it was shaped by reaction because of the creation of buffer states, territorial arrangements and restoration of legitimate rulers. on the other hand it was shaped by conservatism because of peace ,abolition of slave trade and german unification.however this is a critical analysis
The Intolerable or Coercive Acts
The First Continental Congress was actually called in response to the BritishÕs punishment of Boston for the Boston Tea Party, which was a reaction against the tea tax. The Congress considered an economic boycott of British trade as well as a petition to George III to redress the CongressÕs rights and grievances. If this petition was unsuccessful, there would be another Continental Congress to address what to do next.
Authority
Restate that question no one knows what it means
Continental drift or gravity pulling
The Constitution and slaves still weren't freed so the reaction was as normal as they are today. corrupt
The US Congress passed laws limiting the activity of the Communist Party in the US, in reaction to Cold War tensions. The Cold War lasted from 1945 to 1991.
The Nullification Crisis was the reaction of the south, and the Force Bill(written by Andrew Jackson) was the document written.
You need to tell us what incident you are referring to before we can say what the reaction was
The document was the Declaration of Rights and Grievances, which was drafted by the Stamp Act Congress but not signed by the delegates. The declaration was one of the first assertions of 'no taxation without representation', and was generally the main reaction to the Intolerable Acts.
It gave some courage and determination but made others unhappy.
To test the reaction of congress interest groups, and the public,