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Quartering Act Writs of Assistance Stamp Act. Treason Repeal Boycott. Main Idea ... The Quartering Act. Parliament enacted the Quartering Act early in 1765. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Question of the Day


1
Question of the Day
  • Why did colonists challenge British taxes?

2
Chapter 10, Section 3The Road To Revolution
  • ? Pontiac ? Proclamation of 1763 ? Sugar Act
  • ? Quartering Act ? Writs of Assistance ? Stamp
    Act
  • ? Treason ? Repeal ? Boycott
  • Main Idea
  • North Carolinians protested British policies
    after the French and Indian War.
  • Why It Matters Now
  • The colonial protests were the first steps
    toward the American Revolution.

3
Setting the Stage
  • When the Native Americans in the Ohio River
    Valley learned the terms of the Treaty of Paris
    they sought a leader to keep them from loosing
    anymore land to the British.
  • They rallied behind Ottawa Indian Chief Pontiac.
  • Pontiac was described as shrewd, sensible, and
    of few words.

4
A New Proclamation
  • Throughout the summer of 1763, a total of 40
    different Native American groups banded together
    under Pontiac and attacked British settlements.
  • When word of what became known as Pontiacs
    Rebellion reached King George III, he signed the
    Proclamation of 1763 to avoid a costly war with
    the Indians.
  • The Proclamation set the western boundary for
    settlement at the watershed line of the mountains
    and reserving the lands beyond for the Indians.

5
Britains New Colonial Policy
  • After Frances defeat in the French and Indian
    War, Britain was left trying to protect the
    gained territory, maintain peace with the
    Indians, pay off war debts, enforce trade laws,
    and bring the colonies under better control.
  • Since Britain fought the French and Indian War
    for the benefit of the colonies, it was decided
    to shift some of the tax burden to the colonists.

6
Britains New Colonial Policy
  • With so much unrest in the colonies, the British
    decided to keep an army in North America.
  • Approximately 10,000 British soldiers were sent
    to the colonies under the pretense they were to
    protect the colonists from the Spanish.
  • The colonists feared the army would be used to
    enforce unpopular British laws.

7
The Sugar Act
  • The Sugar Act of 1764 was designed to raise money
    for the defense of the colonies by taxing such
    imports as sugar, molasses, coffee, wine, and
    silk.
  • The Sugar Act was to be strictly enforced.
  • King George III gave the royal tax collectors the
    right to search warehouses for smuggled goods.

8
The Quartering Act
  • Parliament enacted the Quartering Act early in
    1765.
  • This law required the colonies to feed and
    shelter the British troops in private homes.
  • Most soldiers found lodging in port cities which
    were the centers of colonial trade.

9
The Effect On North Carolina
  • New England merchants complained about royal tax
    collectors being given writs of assistance, or
    search warrants, to search their business for
    smuggled goods.
  • Since North Carolina had no major ports, the
    Sugar Quartering Acts had more affect on the
    northern colonies.

10
The Stamp Act
  • The Stamp Act, passed by Parliament in March of
    1765 to be effective November 1, 1765, shattered
    the peace in North Carolina.
  • The Stamp Act forced colonists to purchase
    special stamps or stamped paper for legal
    documents, licenses, newspapers, pamphlets,
    almanacs, playing cards, and dice.
  • Britain expected little reaction to the law, but
    from New England to Georgia, colonists protested
    the new tax. No taxation without
    representation became a common cry. Many people
    began to boycott, refuse to buy goods from
    England.

11
The Effect Of The Stamp Act
  • Patrick Henry charged that the Stamp Act
    threatened colonial liberty and was warned he was
    close to committing treason, the betrayal of
    ones country.
  • In June 1765, Massachusetts invited the colonies
    to send delegates to a Stamp Act Congress that
    would meet in October 1765 in New York City.
  • In August 1765, a mob called the Sons of Liberty,
    looted the homes lf the royal governor and
    colonial stamp agent in Boston.

12
Protest In North Carolina
  • Maurice Moore wrote a pamphlet attacking the
    Stamp Act.
  • In October 1765, a group of 500 people came
    together in Wilmington and forced the stamp
    agent, Dr. William Houston to resign.
  • Business and trade came to a halt in November
    1765 when John Ashe and Hugh Waddell would not
    allow the stamps to be off-loaded from ships at
    Brunswick.
  • In February 1766, the British seized two ships at
    Brunswick because their papers had not been
    stamped. A group of protestors called the Sons
    of Liberty won their release.

13
New Taxes
  • Stunned by the reaction of the colonists,
    Parliament repealed, officially withdrew, the
    Stamp Act in March of 1766 while simultaneously
    passing the Declaratory Act that proclaimed that
    Parliament had the authority to tax the colonies.
  • In 1767, Parliament passed the Townsend Acts
    which placed duties on imports of wine, tea,
    paper, glass, and lead as they came into the
    colonies.

14
The North Carolina Reaction
  • John Harvey, the speaker of the North Carolina
    Assembly, wrote to King George III a humble,
    dutiful, and loyal address seeking repeal of the
    latest tax laws.
  • The letter contained the phrase famous to
    colonists No taxation without representation.

15
The North Carolina And The Non-Importation
Association
  • On November 2, 1769, Speaker Harvey presented the
    plan for the Non-Importation Association that
    would agree not to import products subject to a
    duty.
  • The North Carolina Assembly adopted the plan
    without a single dissenting vote.

16
The North Carolina And The Non-Importation
Association
  • When Governor Tryon learned of the
    Non-Importation Association, he dissolved the
    Assembly.
  • Of the 74 members of the Assembly, 64 gathered in
    New Bern and took the first action by a colonial
    legislature independent of a governor by adopting
    the Non-Importation Association.

17
Success
  • The Non-Importation Association was a huge
    success.
  • Reeling with the loss of business, British
    merchants demanded that Parliament repeal the
    unpopular laws.
  • In 1770, Parliament bowed to the pressure and
    eliminated all the taxes except the one on tea.

18
The Boston Massacre
  • On the night of March 5, 1770, a group of
    colonists crowded around a British guard at the
    Boston tax office.
  • First they hurled insults at the red-coated
    soldier.
  • Soon, soldiers and townspeople rushed to the
    scene.

19
The Boston Massacre
  • In the confusion that followed, shots rang out.
  • Five colonists were dead, including a formerly
    enslaved African named Crispus Attucks.
  • Led by Samuel Adams, the Patriots, supporters of
    colonial liberty, circulated letters describing
    what they called the Boston Massacre.

20
Boston Tea Party
  • The British East India Company was nearing
    bankruptcy due to the colonial boycotts which
    caused them to have over 17 million pounds of tea
    warehoused.
  • Lord North authorized them to sell direct to the
    consumer tax free. Lord North hoped the citizens
    would purchase the cheaper tea. Instead, they
    protested.
  • On December 16, 1773 patriots disguised as Native
    Americans boarded 3 British ships and dumped
    15,000 pounds of tea into the harbor during what
    later became known as the Boston Tea Party.

21
The Intolerable Acts
  • The Intolerable or Coercive Acts passed by
    Parliament in 1774 as a response to the Boston
    Tea Party shut down Boston Harbor because the
    colonists refused to pay for the damaged tea.
  • General Thomas Gage was appointed governor of
    Massachusetts and placed Boston under martial
    law.
  • In 1774, the colonies once again organized a
    meeting known as the Continental Congress

22
Congresses
  • At a mass meeting in Wilmington in July 1774,
    William Hooper, Cornelius Harnett, and others
    called for a provincial congress independent of
    the governor.
  • Despite the displeasure of Governor Josiah
    Martin, the First Provisional Congress took place
    on August 25, 1774, in New Bern and was attended
    by 71 delegates elected from 30 of the 36
    counties.
  • The Congress condemned Parliaments tax policies,
    approved a general congress and a boycott of
    British goods, and pledged support to Boston.

23
Congresses
  • The First Continental Congress was held in
    September of 1774. 56 delegates from 12 colonies
    (Georgia was not represented) met in Philadelphia
    to draw up a declaration of colonial rights.
  • The Congress agreed to stop all trade with
    Britain and urged each colony to set up
    committees of safety to enforce the boycott.

24
Do you remember?
  • Why did colonists challenge British taxes?
  • How did the people of North Carolina resist the
    Stamp Act and the tax on tea?
  • How did the people of North Carolina support the
    colonial Non-Importation Association and the
    first Continental Congress?
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