1 / 12

Unspeakable Acts The Road to Revolution

Unspeakable Acts The Road to Revolution. Passed in 1763 Prohibited governors from granting land beyond the headwaters of rivers flowing into the Atlantic bans colonists from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains. The Proclamation of 1763.

ulani
Télécharger la présentation

Unspeakable Acts The Road to Revolution

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unspeakable ActsThe Road to Revolution

  2. Passed in 1763 • Prohibited governors from granting land beyond the headwaters of rivers flowing into the Atlantic • bans colonists from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains The Proclamation of 1763

  3. Colonists: Can't expand West. Restricts their ability to self-govern. Restricts trade to the West. Restricts land availability. Protected from Native attacks. • Native Americans: Their lands protected from encroaching colonists. Protects people from unnecessary attacks by colonists. • African Americans: Kept from being separated further from families. • Women: Kept from braving the wilderness. Potential Effects and reactions Some colonists move West despite the law. Some colonists feel they should be able to expand and see the law as a threatening interference by the crown

  4. Stamp Act(1765, repealed 1766) What it Did: • Printed documents (deeds, newspapers, marriage licenses, etc.) issued only on special stamped paper purchased from stamp distributors

  5. Potential effects • Colonists: • Questions self-taxing. • Inconvenient. • Threatened liberty. • Reached into the lives of ordinary people, not just merchants and businesses. • Increased fear of unemployment and poverty. • Women: Taxed everyday items women may have bought.

  6. reactions • Riots in cities • Collectors forced to resign • Stamp Act Congress (October 1765) • Virginia Resolves: "Give me liberty or give me death!" • Boycott British goods

  7. Quartering act (1765) What It Did Potential Effects Colonists: Financial responsibility for troops. Must provide space. Possibly make sacrifices of the family for the sake of the soldier. Native Americans: Greater military presence. African Americans: Subject to demands of soldiers in addition to masters. Women: Must work to support another member of the household. • Colonists must supply British troops with housing, other items (candles, firewood, etc.)

  8. reactions • Protest in assemblies • New York Assembly punished for failure to comply, 1767

  9. Coercive acts (intolerable acts, 1774) What It Did Potential Effects Colonists: Restricted self-government. Imposed troops on families. Restricts business and travel. Undermined colonial authority to try officials in their own courts. • Closes port of Boston • Restructures Massachusetts government • Restricts town meetings • Troops quartered in Boston • British officials accused of crimes sent to England or Canada for trial

  10. reactions • Boycott of British goods • First Continental Congress convenes (September 1774)

  11. Prohibitory act (1775) What It Did Potential Effects Colonists: Blocked from trade. Ships seized. Native Americans: Drawn closer to possibility of another war in their backyard. African Americans: Urged to take up arms against masters. Women: Husbands out of work if they worked on ships seized. Livelihood threatened. • Declares British intention to coerce Americans into submission • Embargo on American goods • Americans ships seized

  12. reactions • Drives Continental Congress closer to decision for independence

More Related