The Intolerable Acts were British laws passed by the parliament in Great Britain during the year of 1774. The Boston Massacre, which occurred on March 5th, 1770, and the Boston Tea Party, which happened on December 16th 1773, were both major events that led to the Intolerable Acts. King George III and many British people were angry at the Boston Colonists. To punish the colonies and the colonists, the British Parliament began working on the Intolerable Acts. There were 5 laws in total, and each law punished the colonists in a different way. Each law had to be passed and they were all passed on different days. All of the laws made the colonists angry, but some were worse than others such as the Boston Port Act. This law was the very first
As you can see Great Britain was not happy about the Boston Tea Party, and created strict punishments in the Intolerable Acts. Soon after English Parliament declared the Intolerable Acts Massachusetts was in a rebellious state.
The Intolerable Acts, otherwise known as the “Coercive” Acts, caused the most unrest among the colonies and led to the American Revolution during the 1700’s. In 1733, Parliament passed the Tea Act. This made it so that colonists could only buy tea from the British East Indies Company. Even though the Tea Act lowered the price of tea, the colonists thought of it as another restriction of their freedom. A group of opposers, dressed as American Indians, threw three-hundred forty chests of tea into the Boston Harbor. The British were enraged and passed the Intolerable Acts. This gave the British all control over Massachusetts and forced colonists to pay back the money for the tea they ruined. Although the Coercive Acts only applied to Massachusetts,
Though many laws were passed taxing the colonists, America had no say in the British Parliament. Patrick Henry’s speech embodies this argument when he says “We have no representatives in the British Parliament…… The Stamp Act is against the law. We must not obey it” (Doc. 1). This act of defiance caught the colonists’ attention and made them feel that perhaps they could change the laws after all. Another act of defiance against the British was the Boston Tea Party. The Boston Tea Party was a riot against the British that involved colonists dumping tons of tea from British ships into the sea. Britain then passed a law that said that the Boston Harbor would be closed until the colonists paid for the tea. This angered the colonists even more, and eventually led to the Revolution. As you can see, many rebellious deeds inspired the colonists and helped them confront the British.
There were five acts that made up the Intolerable acts. The first was the Boston Port Act. The port of Boston was closed off to any form of trade. This was to make sure that there were no other good that could be purchased other than the British goods. The next act was the Massachusetts Government Act. This changed the government in the colonies. It made it so that you can not elect people for government. The king chose 12 to 36 representatives that he felt should be in a position of government. Another act that was passed was the Quartering Act. It stated that everyone needed to house and quater any British soldiers that were in the colonies. The next act was The Administration of Justice Act. This stated that all British officials were exempt from any criminal punishment, as long as their actions did not go against the kings rules for them. The last act that was passed was the Quebec Act. It was their way of explaining what happened when they tried to get Canada under British rule. The British expected the colonists to break apart and become un-unified. What happened was the colonists because the most unified that they had ever been. The defiance of the colonists against the British was one of the first times that the colonies came together, and were united as a
Many things might have contributed to the colonist’s revolution against the British. The Boston Tea Party may have been the breaking point for Lord North and King George. What happened was the Sons of Liberty dressed as Mohawk indians and boarded the tea ships to toss the crates of tea into the sea. King George was not happy about the situation and passed a series of laws which the colonists referred to as “The Intolerable Acts.”
The colonists didn’t want to be told what tea they could buy. All of that is what drove a group called the Sons of Liberty’s members to dress like Native Americans on December 16, 1773, and they went on three ships that came to Boston Harbor to import Tea, and they threw 342 boxes of Tea overboard. When the Tea Act had passed, it pressed that there were no new taxes on the American colonies. But after all of that happened, parliament got angered about the Boston Tea Party as well as other destruction of British property. So, in response, they created the Intolerable Acts the year after.
While under King George’s tyrant rule, the colonists petitioned many grievances such as the unwarranted Quartering and Intolerable Acts. The Quartering Act, required that “officers and soldiers are so quartered…shall be received and furnished with diet, and small beer…”(Document 9) To the colonists, this was an unreasonable act since they were being forced to provide for soldiers and receive no compensation in return. To them, there was absolutely no reason to maintain the British Army in the colonies. Another unjust set of acts placed by Parliament were the Intolerable Acts. Established following the Boston Tea Party, the Intolerable Acts were completely unconstitutional as it deprived colonists of basic rights.As a result of these acts, Boston Harbor was closed down, limiting the colonists’
The Intolerable Acts was another long-term cause of the revolution. It was a punishment for the Boston Tea Party. These Acts comprised of four laws. Among them were that British officials were to be tried in British courts, a ban on the meetings in Massachusetts town and closure of the Boston
In response to the events of the Boston Tea Party, the British parliament passed a series of laws called the Intolerable (Coercive) Acts in 1774. These Acts were: the ‘Boston Port Act’, closing down all trade of Massachusetts; the ‘Massachusetts Government Act’, Massachusetts was no longer allowed to govern themselves; the ‘Administration of Justice Act’, any person charged with murder while trying to enforce the law would be tried in England; and the ‘Quartering Act’, allowing British troops to be housed in
With anger and hatred growing in the colonists, no one expected the following event to occur, the Boston Massacre. In early colonial times, people wanted freedom and they fought for it hard. They put everything on the line, even their lives. When the colonists thought they didn't get what they deserved, they took to the streets to protest, but this time it ended up in a bloody occurrence. Most people believe that the event started with British soldiers firing into the mob, which ended up wounding many and killing five people. This raised anger and eventually led to a famous trial where John Adams took a brave patriotic stance; he defended the soldiers who took 5 of the colonist's lives. Below is a timeline event of what happened during these times, which illustrates the many reasons why the colonies were upset with England.
The Intolerable Acts Impact Imagine being a parent of a rebellious child, and this child causes trouble, so you give him what you think is a fair punishment, but instead of correcting him, this blows this situation out of proportions and chaos erupts between parent and child. The rebellious child did not appreciate the rules that the strict parent was giving him, so he took action and caused an uproar. The parent that was previously mentioned is clearly being England while the rebellious child is Colonial America. The British thought the Intolerable Acts were a fair punishment for actions committed by the colonists like the Boston Tea Party. Once the Intolerable Acts were imposed, the rules got a negative response from the colonists and became
31. The Intolerable Acts are the following: Closed port of Boston, restructured the massive government, allowed the loyal governor to transfer arrested British officials to England, authorized the army to quarter troops wherever they were needed. This acts made the relationship with Britain even worse, but it helped to bring the colonies together to support Boston.
The Intolerable Acts 1774 was the event that caused the most unrest. The Intolerable Acts was a result for the British reactions to the colonist rebellious acts. When the Boston Tea Party happened, the British created the act for Massachusetts to start stamping out the rebellious acts and their spirit. The colonists didn’t agree with the growing taxes. Although the act was only applied in Massachusetts, the other colonies rallied to protest this act. The other colonies believed that if the British were to continue then the colonies would lose their liberties as well.
The settlers were furious with the laws that the British were giving them, because they were limiting the power the colonist had. The Proclamation of 1763 made a line saying that they couldn’t past the Appalachian Mountains so the settlers can be protected from the savages they called Indians, but they were really trying to protect the Indians from the settlers. Just so the British can profit from the trade of fur. Which started the fuel of anger the settlers had toward the British. The Stamp Act gave Great Britain money by taxing the settlers on paper items without their consent. The Coercive Act made sure to punish the colonist for what they did at the Boston Tea Party and hoped to isolate Boston and New England from the other colonies.
In 1770 there was an event where Lobsterbacks shot and killed American colonist in a mob with bayonets, this event is known as The Boston Massacre. In March of 1774 the Coercive or Intolerable Acts where placed on the colonies by Britain. The idea of the Coercive Acts for the colonies was to enrage the colonist after they had dumped all the tea into the harbor during the Boston Tea party. The act was placed on all legal documents and papers.