The Colonists responded to the proclamation with a combination of anger and disdain.
The American colonists' rebeled after the British redcoats' taxes and mistreatment
To make colonists want to fight the British ~APEX~
Britan started to say that the colonists had to pay taxes.
They had learned that the British had thought of them as the colonists not equals so this angered the colonists and their anger along with the taxes made them start to revolt and eventually led to the Revolutionary war.
The start of the Revolutionary War was primarily caused by events such as the Stamp Act, the Boston Tea Party, and the Intolerable Acts. These actions by the British government angered the American colonists and led to increased tensions, ultimately resulting in the outbreak of war in 1775.
To have money for the war.
It started in Philadelphia when England refused to stop taxing the colonists.
At the start of the Revolutionary War, the British were generally seen as the stronger force, possessing a well-trained army, a powerful navy, and substantial resources. The American colonies, on the other hand, were largely untrained and lacked a cohesive military strategy. Despite these disadvantages, the colonists were highly motivated and committed to their cause, which gradually allowed them to gain momentum as the war progressed. Initial battles, such as those at Lexington and Concord, showed that the colonists could stand up to British troops, hinting at the potential for a protracted conflict.
English did not like the colonists and wanted to start a war with them
Before the formal start of the American Revolutionary War, events such as the Boston Massacre contributed to the escalation of hostile sentiments especially among the colonists. The opinion of British soldiers involved in the Massacre (or any of the other pre-war confrontations) would most likely have been approving, as British opinion of the colonists was generally negative, even contemptuous. It is possible that some few British soldiers were apathetic or even sympathetic toward the welfare of the colonists affected by the Massacre.
Before the formal start of the American Revolutionary War, events such as the Boston Massacre contributed to the escalation of hostile sentiments especially among the colonists. The opinion of British soldiers involved in the Massacre (or any of the other pre-war confrontations) would most likely have been approving, as British opinion of the colonists was generally negative, even contemptuous. It is possible that some few British soldiers were apathetic or even sympathetic toward the welfare of the colonists affected by the Massacre.
Before the formal start of the American Revolutionary War, events such as the Boston Massacre contributed to the escalation of hostile sentiments especially among the colonists. The opinion of British soldiers involved in the Massacre (or any of the other pre-war confrontations) would most likely have been approving, as British opinion of the colonists was generally negative, even contemptuous. It is possible that some few British soldiers were apathetic or even sympathetic toward the welfare of the colonists affected by the Massacre.