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The errors of the British in the Stamp Act can be summed up in three sentences. Firstly, they did not enforce the Act. Secondly, they did not understand that the colonists believed themselves to be full British citizens. Thirdly, they did not consider the impact of the Act on their domestic economy. For the longer view, read on.


The stamp tax was never enforced and collected. Britain did not protect the tax stamp distributors, who were targetted by mobs and intimidated into giving up their positions. Imagine if modern IRS agents were the subjects of demonstrations (and worse) everywhere they went. It isn't hard to imagine that they would choose to quit eventually. That's what happened to Britain's tax stamp distributors.

Britain guaranteed to its citizens that they could not be taxed without representation, and the colonists considered themselves citizens. The Stamp Act was a very direct tax on the colonies, requiring tax stamps on nearly all printed materials. Earlier taxes had skirted the issue of whether the colonists themselves were being taxed, but the Stamp Act was unmistakable, and so lent great strength to claims of Taxation Without Representation. The colonists claim was that they were not being treated as citizens at all.

The stamp tax disrupted trade between Britain and the colonies, threatening the business of many export-oriented British merchants and manufactories, who were already facing trouble due to instability in the colonies and other troubles. The American colonies organized effective boycotts of British imported goods, resulting in Parliament facing internal opposition to the stamp act as well.


When Parliament revoked the Stamp Act, they also passed the Declaratory Act. The Declaratory Act declared that Parliament had the right to make laws for the colonies "in all cases whatsoever". At this point there was no doubt whether Parliament was giving colonists the rights of citizens, for the Declaratory Act openly and unambiguously put the colonies as subjects to Parliament just as the Irish Declaratory Act earlier had done to Ireland. They were not British citizens; Parliament did not consider them as British; they had no rights before the British government.

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Q: What are the mistakes British made during the Stamp Act?
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What reason did the colonists have for protesting the stamp at?

becuz they were being taxed so much already that the stamp act made them mad that the british monarch was abusing its power. also with the stamp act, the british was trying to push its debt onto the colonist by trying to make them pay for it


What made the colonies angry at the british government?

What made the colonists angry at Great Britain was all of the taxes, such as the Sugar Act, Stamp Act, Quartering Act, and the Townshend Acts. "No taxation without representation!"


What British act levied an internal tax on various documents and articles in the American colonies?

The Stamp Act levied this tax, and it made the colonists very angry since they had no say in the matter. The Stamp Act quickly became one of the reasons many of the colonists wanted independence from England.The Stamp Act levied this tax, and it made the colonists very angry since they had no say in the matter. The Stamp Act quickly became one of the reasons many of the colonists wanted independence from England.The Stamp Act levied an internal tax on various documents and articles in the American colonies.


British laws that affected the colonies were made by?

British laws that affected the colonies were made by the King and the British Parliament. The colonists had no voice in the laws.


1764 sugar act?

british made the colonist pay a tax on molases and sugar ,but the colonist were angered.therefore, colonist convinced all 12 colonies except one to stop buying tea from the british, leading up to the stamp act of 1765.

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