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The Road to Revolution. 6-2: Colonial Resistance Grows. The Townshend Acts Are Passed. Crispus Attucks –. escaped slave who was killed in the Boston Massacre Townshend Acts – indirect taxes on paper, lead, glass, paint, and tea. The Townshend Acts Are Passed. indirect taxes –.
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The Road to Revolution 6-2: Colonial Resistance Grows
The Townshend Acts Are Passed Crispus Attucks – • escaped slave whowas killed in the Boston Massacre • Townshend Acts – • indirect taxes on paper, lead, glass, paint, and tea
The Townshend Acts Are Passed indirect taxes – • tax collected on goods before they entered the colonies direct taxes – • tax collected on goods within the colonies
The Townshend Acts Are Passed writs of assistance– • search warrant that allowed government officials to search homes and warehouses for smuggled goods
The Townshend Acts Are Passed • The British government was determined to tax the colonists and stop smuggling. • Charles Townshend tried to use indirect taxes in an attempt to anger the colonists less. Summary –
The Reasons for Protest John Dickinson – • author of Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania, essays that argued that Parliament had no right to tax the colonies John Locke – • Enlightenment philosopher whose ideas provided the foundation for the colonist’s arguments against taxation
The Reasons for Protest Summary – • Colonists continue to argue against taxation by Parliament, seeing little difference between direct and indirect taxation.
Tools of Protest • Bostonian most effective at organizing opposition to British rule Samuel Adams – Summary – • As protests became increasingly violent — or threatened to become more violent — the British government sent more troops to America to maintain order ... particularly in Boston.
The Bloody Massacre Paul Revere The Boston Massacre
The Boston Massacre Boston Massacre – • clash between British troops and colonists in which 5 colonists were killed • John Adams – • lawyer who defended the soldiers tried for the “Massacre”
The Boston Massacre Summary – • The presence of British troops among a hostile population in Boston led to bloody confrontation. While the soldiers were freed for acting in self-defense, the Boston Massacre became a symbol of British tyranny.
The Tea Act Committees of Correspondence – • organized by Sam Adams • purpose was to communicate with similar groups elsewhere and to coordinate efforts to oppose British policies • became a network of colonial communication that Britain could not control
Tea grown in India is shipped to Britain before being sent on to America Britain America India Before the Townshend Acts The Tea Act Cost of tea - £60 a chest
Tea grown in India is shipped to Britain, where it is taxed before being sent on to America Britain America India After the Townshend Acts The Tea Act Cost of tea - £70 a chest Tea Act – • repealed all of the Townshend Acts exceptthe tax on tea
Indian tea is shipped directly to America; taxes are collected before leaving India Britain America India After the Tea Act The Tea Act Cost of tea - £50 a chest Tea Act – • repealed all of the Townshend Acts exceptthe tax on tea • tea could be shipped directly to America
The Tea Act Summary – • Parliament repealed the Townshend Acts because the boycotts were so effective that the British economy was hurting. • Parliament kept the tax on tea to show that they would still exercise the right to tax the colonies. Still, the price of tea went down. • The colonists continued to organize to protest British taxation.
The Burning of the Peggy Stewart Francis Blackwell Mayer The Tea Act
The Boston Tea Party Boston Tea Party – • incident when “Indians” attacked Boston and dumped 342 chests of tea into the harbor in protest of taxation
The Boston Tea Party Summary – • Colonists reacted to taxation by vandalizing property, which further angered the British government, making them even more determined to control the unruly colonists.