| Events Leading
Up To The American Revolution

The year is 1763. The Seven Years War is
over. Britain dominates the North American continent east of the
Mississippi. With the French no longer a threat to her interests,
Britain could now turn her attention to the Colonies. Desiring
revenue from the Colonies to offset the massive expenditures for
defense, the British administration began stricter enforcement of the
Navigation Acts restricting colonial trade with other nations.
And, fearing that New England was becoming too powerful, the King wanted
to control the Colonial legislatures.
In the Colonies, the best land near the coast
was taken and the settlers wanted to push to the interior.
However, the Indians were still in possession of this land and were
rightly distrustful of the settlers motives.
In a Royal Proclamation issued on October 7,
1763 the new territories were organized into four areas: Quebec, East
Florida, West Florida and the island of Grenada. The lands west of
the Appalachians were reserved for the Indians. These lands
werent part of any of the Colonies, settlement was forbidden and land
negotiations with the Indians were prohibited. The right to
arrange surrender of Indian title was reserved for the Crown. The
Indians, according to their own laws, administered this territory though
non-Indian fugitives could be followed and apprehended. The
Proclamation, however, failed to suffocate the appetite of the Colonies
for expansion.
In 1764, the British passed the Sugar
Act, the
first law aimed strictly at raising American money for the Crown,
increasing the duties on merchandise imported into the Colonies that was
not of British origin. This was followed by the Currency
Act.
This law barred the Colonies from printing their own currency, arousing
the ire of many Americans.
The Colonists, naturally, objected to these
acts. At a town meeting in Massachusetts, taxation without
representation was cried out against and co-operative protest throughout
the Colonies was suggested. Non-importation, or declining to accept
merchandise imported from Britain, became the protest of choice in the
Colonies.
But on March 24, 1765, the British subsequently
renewed the Colonists fury by passing the Quartering and Stamp
Acts.
The Quartering Act of 1765 obligated the Colonies to provide lodging and
supplies for British soldiers.
New York became the focus of American
resistance to the Quartering Act since, as headquarters for the British
military in the Colonies, it was greatly affected by the Act. The
New York Assembly refused to support the quartering of troops and a
scuffle took place in which one colonist was injured. Parliament
responded by suspending the Assemblys powers, but never executed the
suspension because the Assembly quickly agreed to give money for the
quartering of troops.
Also established was the Stamp Act, the first
direct levy on the Colonies and passed to generate funds for the
British. Newspapers, almanacs, pamphlets, broadsides, legal
documents, dice, and playing cards were taxed by this act. Stamps,
issued by the British, were attached to the taxed items to indicate that
the tax had been paid.
The Colonists responded to Stamp Act with
organized protest. The non-importation efforts were increased and
the Sons of Liberty, a secret group whose purpose was to frighten the
agents who were to collect the Stamp tax, was formed. Their
efforts were effective all the designated agents had quit before the
Stamp Act had gone into effect.
Also, nine of the thirteen Colonies, on the
advice of the Massachusetts Assembly, formed the Stamp Act Congress to
labor for the revocation of the Stamp Act. The Congress approved a
Declaration of Rights and Grievances. This Declaration
proclaimed that the Colonists were the equal of all British citizens,
objected to taxation without representation and set forth that the
British Parliament could not tax the Colonies unless the Colonies had
representation in Parliament.
Parliament was divided on the issue of American
protest to the Stamp Act. Some believed that the Stamp Act should
be enforced through the use of the military, while others praised the
Colonists for opposing a tax levied by a Parliament in which they had no
representation. Eventually, in 1766, the Stamp Act was repealed.
The Colonies cast aside their policy of
non-importation, but the repeal of the Stamp Act didnt mean that
Britain was relinquishing any authority over the Colonies. On the same day that the Stamp act was repealed, Parliament passed the
Declaratory Act, proclaiming that it could pass legislation binding the
Colonies.
In 1767, Parliament passed the Townshend Acts
to help pay the expenses involved in governing the American Colonies.
This law instituted levies on glass, lead, paint, paper, and tea.
In response to these new taxes, the Colonies again decided to follow the
policy of non-importation.
Also in 1767, the pamphlet Letters from a
Farmer in Pennsylvania to the Inhabitants of the British Colonies,
initially published in a newspaper, was reproduced expansively by John
Dickinson. This pamphlet stated that Parliament could not tax the
Colonies, called the Townshend Acts unconstitutional and denounced the
suspension of the New York Assembly as a menace to colonial freedoms.
In 1768 the Massachusetts Circular Letter,
written by Samuel Adams and endorsed by the Massachusetts House of
Representatives, assaulted Parliament's continued taxation of the
Colonies without proper representation and called for united resistance
by all the Colonies. Many of the remaining Colonies issued similar
statements. In response, the British governor of Massachusetts
abolished the state's legislature. British troops were brought to
Boston; the Sons of Liberty threatened armed opposition, but none
was extended when the soldiers positioned themselves in Boston.
In 1769, the Virginia House of Burgesses
approved resolutions denouncing the British actions against
Massachusetts and proclaiming that the citizens of Virginia could be
taxed only by the governor and legislature of the Colony. Its
members also composed a formal letter to the King, which was concluded
just prior to Virginias Royal governor abolishing its legislature.
Then, in 1770, due to the reduced profits from
colonial non-importation, Parliament revoked all of the Townshend Act
levies except for the tea tax. In reply to Parliament's easing of
its taxation laws, the Colonies reduced their boycott of British
imported goods.
However, this apparent lessening of tension
wasnt to last. A leading New York Son of Liberty issued an
announcement attacking the New York Assembly for conforming to the
Quartering Act. A riot erupted between citizens and soldiers,
ending in serious injuries, but no deaths.
In Boston, the presence of British troops acted
as a nettle to the radial politicians in that city. Then, on Monday,
March 5, 1770, after a weekend of minor encounters, the hostility
between the British soldiers and the Colonists came to a head.
A crowd of men and boys taunted a guard at the
Boston customhouse. Slurs were exchanged between the guard and a
local shopkeeper and the sentry responded by striking the merchant with
his rifle, resulting in a small riot. A small unit of troops,
commanded by Captain Thomas Preston, responded. The mob jeered and
threatened the soldiers, but nothing happened until a club was thrown,
striking Private Hugh Montgomery. Montgomery fired into the crown
and, without a command from the Captain, the other soldiers joined him.
Three Colonists were killed and eight injured, two fatally. The
troops were removed to islands in Boston harbor, barely avoiding a major
revolt. The soldiers were tried for murder, but defended by John
Adams, were convicted of only minor charges.
This event, known as the Boston
Massacre, was
the first forceful influence in forming a blunt anti-British sentiment
in the Colonies. Most importantly, it gave the radical Colonists
propaganda to use against the British. In fact, it has been
intimated that Samuel Adams incited the entire affair, entirely to this
end.
In 1772, the British customs schooner Gaspee
grounded near Providence, Rhode Island and was attacked by several
boatloads of Colonists. The Royal governor of Rhode Island
extended a reward for the capture of the Colonists, scheming to ship
them to Britain for trial. This only fueled the Colonists
outrage.
Also in 1772, a Committee of
Correspondence was created during a Boston town meeting called by
Samuel Adams. Similar committees were soon initiated all through
the Colonies.
In 1773, Parliament passed the Tea
Act,
decreasing the tax on imported British tea and in effect, giving British
merchants an inequitable edge in selling their tea in the Colonies.
On May 10, Parliament sanctioned the East India Tea Co to ship half a
million pounds of tea to the Colonies. Parliament was planning to rescue
the bungling company from bankruptcy by not imposing the normal duties
and tariffs on the tea. Therefore, the firm could undersell any
other tea obtainable in the Colonies, including smuggled tea.
On November 27, when British tea ships arrived
in Boston harbor, many citizens wanted the tea sent back to England.
On December 16, a group of Colonists, sparsely disguised as Indians,
sneaked onto the ships and tossed 342 chests of tea into Boston Harbor.
Britain responded to this act, known as the Boston Tea
Party, by passing
the Intolerable or Coercive Acts in 1774.
These acts included the Boston Port Bill (June
1), Administration of Justice Act (May 20), Massachusetts Government Act
(May 20) and Quebec Act (May 20). The
Quartering Act was also
broadened to include occupied buildings.
The Boston Port Bill put the port of Boston off
limits to all Colonists until the damages from the Boston Tea Party were
paid. The Administration of Justice Act established that British
officials could not be tried in the Colonies, but rather would be sent
to Britain and tried there. This basically gave British
administrators free reign as no justice would be served while they were
still in the Colonies. The Massachusetts Government Act gave the
British governor of Massachusetts control of town meetings and placed
the election of most governmental offices under control Royal control,
basically doing away with the Massachusetts charter of government.
The Quebec Act was used as a mechanism to
reaffirm the Crowns control within the Proclamation lands. It
expanded the boundaries of Quebec south to the Ohio River near present
day Pittsburgh, down the Ohio to the Mississippi and north to Ruperts
Land, effectively cutting the Colonies of Connecticut, Massachusetts and
Virginia off from the west. This blocking of Colonial
expansion was one of the complaints set forth by the Colonists in the
Declaration of Independence two years later.
Massachusetts proposed a return to
non-importation as protest of the Intolerable Acts. But certain
Colonies favored a congress of all the Colonies to consider unified
protest. With the exception of Georgia, the Colonies selected
delegates to attend the first Continental Congress in Philadelphia on
September 5.
Boston was fortified and ammunition belonging
to Massachusetts was seized by British troops. No fighting
occurred, though American militiamen were ready to resist. Groups
of Minute Men, militia who were to be prepared on a minutes notice were
organized and a Provincial Congress and Committee of Safety were formed
by Massachusetts to decide when they would be called into action.
In 1775, Parliament passed the New England
Restraining Act. This prohibited the New England Colonies from
trading with any country other than Britain. It was also decided
to use force to impose compliance with recent Acts.
On April 18th, the Boston Committee of Safety
discovered a British plan to send troops to Concord to seize ammunition.
Paul Revere and William Dawes were sent to relay the warning and alert
the Minute Men. On the 19th, the British troops came upon the
Minute Men at Lexington. During the encounter, a shot the
shot heard round the world was fired and the American
Revolution had begun.
- British customs schooner Gaspee
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