The American Revolution marked the historical intensity associated with this great nation. The revolution was multifaceted and was also dynamic in nature as it involved a lot of twists and turns that later shaped the course of the American citizens. There are numerous causes linked with the triggering and commencement of the revolution. The discussion below critically exploits and explores various reasons that led to the start of the revolution. The French and Indian War The wars which happened between 1754 and 1763 had a high impact on the colonies that were initially proud to be part and parcel of Great Britain. However, as it was noted later after the war, most colonists got increasingly bothered by various Acts passed by the Britain …show more content…
The Americans were unhappy with the idea of taxing items and goods which used to be free and readily available. Hence, they automatically started boycotting all goods from Great Britain. King George did not take the boycotts lightly and hence turned furious. He acted swiftly by sending troops across the vast Atlantic to ensure the colonies followed the laid down law and behave appropriately.The debts accrued by the king after the “French and Indian War” is considered as the primary cause of the revolution because each and every event associated with the revolution after that, revolves around it. Boston Tea Party When taxed tea was brought to the American Harbor, the Americans made a concrete decision not to allow the tea to be unloaded from the ship. A gathering of colonists masquerading as American Indians got into the ship during the night and poured the tea on board all over destroying it. When one of them tried to keep some of the tea in his pockets, other members stripped him naked and took the drink from him. They also removed the ship owner all his garments and tarred him. The Intolerable Acts King George reacted to the “Boston Tea Party” by imposing “the Intolerable Acts” A core and critical cause of the revolution. Some of “the Intolerable Acts” were as follows: First “the Boston Port Act” which stated that, a complete shutdown of the Boston port to a future time when the Dutch East India Company would’ve been
The French and India war was a war that took place in today’s Pittsburgh. The war was both caused by the English and French. The English and the French both felt that they were entitled to land and each was to willing to fight and they were also, willing to go into war so they could prove that they owned the land. (odellreads.com)
As generations grew up in America, nationalism within the colonies grew towards their new country. These settlers slowly lost their patriotic tie to Great Britain and it’s ruler, King George III. So when the French and Indian War ended in America, and the indebted England needed some compensation from American settlers in the form of taxes, the colonists questioned the authority of England and their ability to rule them. British imperial policies such as the Sugar Act of 1764 and the Townshend Tea Tax caused uproar within the colonies against British rule without
The British had sent more than 10,000 troops to North America by the end of the French and Indian War. The British felt like they had spent a great deal of money in protecting the American colonists. They were in debt around 140 million pounds. To pay off all of their debt the British decided to increase the enforcement of existing taxes on the Colonists and impose additional taxes. The British issued The Proclamation of 1763 which meant the colonists couldn’t cheat the Indians out of land. They also establish a border in where they could not buy land. This made the colonist mad because it made them feel like the British were interfering and trying to limit their economic growth.
The French and Indian War altered political, economic, and ideological relations between Britain and the American colonies in many different ways. The French and Indian war caused the British to become more involved in the politics of its colonies, such as who ran the colonies, where the colonists could move to (Proclamation Line of 1763), and increased their authority throughout the colonies which was different from their Salutary Neglect that they had in the past up until the end of the French and Indian War. The French and Indian war altered the economic relationship between Britain and her colonies in America via war debt which was being payed off by increased taxes, especially in the colonies who were the most taxed out of all British
During the French and Indian War of 1754-1763, the French and the British were competing for land throughout the Ohio Valley, the Mississippi River, and the St. Lawrence River and for trading rights in North America. Both nations saw this territory as a necessity to increase its own power and wealth while simultaneously limiting the strength of its rival. Although, after the French and Indian War the British gained all of the French land in North America. Following the war the British government revoked certain liberties of the colonies, they increased economic regulation, and exerted greater control over the colonies. Therefore, the aftermath of the French and Indian War caused a
By the 1750s, the American colonies had come a long way from their original struggles and failures. They had grown in both population and economic stability. Even so, relations between the colonies and Great Britain were strained. The colonists became more and more discontented with England’s control of their political and economic affairs. The colonies were dissatisfied with the rules of British Mercantilism, or the idea that the colonies were a mere source of raw materials and market for the British mainland. This animosity for the motherland had then been seeded by the lack of economic freedom and the harsh taxes that had been set on everyday luxuries and necessities;
The American Revolution, one of the most significant events in our world’s history, has established a huge impact on not only life back in the eighteenth and nineteenth century but our society today. The Acts of Parliament highly benefited the British but did not afford those same rights to the colonists until the formal issuing of the Declaration of Independence on July 4th, 1776, in which colonial freedom was granted. The most controversial issue is which group caused it; a result of propaganda by the colonists. Multiple acts and protests contributed to this war, three influential ones being the Stamp Act, Boston Massacre and the Boston Tea Party.
First of all, the colonists came together to rebel against the British because of economic sanctions imposed on them. The Intolerable Acts were a series of inimical laws imposed by the British after the Boston Tea Party. One aspect of the Intolerable Acts was that the colonial ports were ordered to be shut down which could have caused starvation within the colonies. According to the “Circular Letter of the Boston Committee of Correspondence,” by Samuel Adams, “it is said that [a] fleet of British ships of war is to block up our harbour until we make restitution to the East India Company for their loss of tea,” (Document 2). Adams described how the British were shutting down colonial ports and blocking the Boston Harbor. He stated that all colonists should be united in opposition to Britain’s violation of liberties. Adams believed that the British’s goal was to divide the colonies and therefore, wished to unite by suspending all trade with Britain. Parliament cut off commercial intercourse of entire colonies with foreign countries and each other. According to Document 3, “several [colonies] were entirely prohibited from the fisheries in the seas near their coasts, on which they had always depended for their sustenance;” (Document 3). The British
America was going through many changes in the years of 1775 to 1783. Americans were preparing to break off from Britain’s harsh oppression. The colonists felt like separation from Great Britain was necessary to gain their independence they always desired. Britain, after the French and Indian War (1754-1763), was left with a massive debt that had to be paid. Without compromising with the American Colonists, Parliament started to tax them without representing them in Great Britain's government. Some taxes imposed by Parliament included Sugar Act, Stamp Act, and Townshend Act. These acts had one thing in common and that was to gain money from the American colonies to pay off the accumulated debt. Colonist saw this as a violation of their freedom
The relationship between the British and the colonist was destroyed after the war. The British did not see the colonist as one of them, but the colonist did. The Treaty of Paris restricted the colonist from taking land from the Indians. After the war the colonist wanted to move west of the Appalachian Mountain, the British rejected their request. The Proclamation Line of 1763 forbid them from moving to the land.
For more detail and following the stamp act in 1770, the colonial boycotting was affecting British merchants. In Boston tension rose between the colonists and the British soldiers on March 5, 1770. Shots were fired and five people laid dead, this event became known as the Boston Massacre. As a result, Britain removed all taxes except the tax on tea. The Tea Act stated that the British East India Company was the only company allowed to sell tea to the colonists. Angry Boston colonists led by Samuel Adams dressed as Mohawk Indians and threw a load of tea off a British ship into the Boston Harbor. This event became known as the Boston Tea Party. That action caused Britain to punish Boston further and their furious attitude towards Britain increased
1770 the British troops arrived in the colonies to enforce these Acts,this made the Americans angry. The protest became less about saving money and more about ‘’taxation without representation. In 1773 Britain defeated France in the French and Indian war.The colonists had secretly been bringing in tea into the area from dutch, the tea was cheaper and not taxed, this helped many families in America. It caused parliament to be short of money. In effort to replenish.
Since the beginning of history, wars have been fought to gain territories, independence, or to fight against those who take away one’s rights. The French and Indian War was fought in North America over the Ohio Valley, however, it is much more than just a war to gain territory. This war opened doors to the colonists who decided that fighting for independence was something they were in need of doing. The French and Indian War was the portion of the Seven Year’s War that was fought in North America between Great Britain and France. Within every war there are winners and losers. There are never two winners in a war. With Great Britain’s anate ability to fight France overseas in the Atlantic Ocean was how they received their win in the French and Indian War. Although, Great Britain won the war while France lost, both of these countries had many positive and negative affects during and after the war.
Tension between the British and Americans grew even more severe when parliament passed the Townshend Act. The act issues taxes on in-demand imports such as glass, paint, paper, and tea. The outcome of it was a colonial boycott against the British products. Trade between England and America fell off by 50 percent as a result of the boycott. The reason of the Townshend act was because they protested saying that the taxes violated their rights as British
In 1776, Parliament passed the Sugar Act. The act increased the prices on all sugars that the colonies used. The profits from it went directly to Britain to pay for the French and Indian War debt. This upset the colonists because they were previously told that they would not have to pay for any of the war, then the King of England imposed this tax on them anyway. This began the colonists anger toward Britain.