BOOM!,BOOM!,BOOM! Someone is at the door, I wonder who it could be? Three 1-soldiers 6-barge into the 4-house. They 3-immediately make themselves at home. The smell of alcohol swells in the air, they are drunk. They demand 2-food and the 1-family can’t deny because they are the 5-kings soldiers. What was the 2-Quartering Act and how did it lead to the 2-Revolutionary War? In 3-1765 1-Parliament passed the 2-intolerable acts. With in this act was the Quartering Act. The Quartering Act was a 2-law that out lined that If the soldiers 2-barracks were 5-overcrowded the 1-american 1-colonist had to 2-provide 2-housing, food, and 2-water. The colonist did not take to kindly to this law as summarized by 5-1-Benjamin Franklin who gave examples
The parliament virtually regulated all of the colony trades so the money that was generated by them stays in the hands of the English by eliminating their ability to trade with other countries, but Britain. The Quartering Act forced the colonists to house British troops and provide them with food without expense. The colonists revolted and once they established independence, the Third Amendment of the Constitution clearly forbids the housing troops of any kind into the homes of owners without their consent. The colonists also frequently had their privacy violated whenever general warrants were issued, which allowed officials to search private properties without needing to provide specific details as to when, how, and why their searching in the first place. The Fourth Amendment fixed this by prohibiting unreasonable searches and seizures, and required officials to provide probable cause when requesting a warrant from a judge.
The Royal Proclamation Act was established October 7, 1763. It was issued to make sure colonists settling in America would not go west of the Appalachian Mountains, where indians would most likely attack them. The colonists did not like this very much because they had just won a ton of land west of the Appalachian mountains that they now could not travel into. They reacted by disregarding the proclamation without thought of any punishments.
Out of rage due to the chaos of taxed tea, Boston rebels disguised themselves as Indians and dumped the British tea into the Boston harbor. King George III out of spite and anger forced parliament to set up the intolerable act which shut down the boston harbor because the colonists refused to pay for the damage done and set up the quartering act which forced colonists to house soldiers in barracks provided by
The fourth law strengthened the 1765 Quartering Act. The colonists were furious with these laws. The First Continental Congress demanded the repeal of the Intolerable acts and declared that the colonies had a right to tax
Another grievance was the difficulties in the colonies with British Soldiers. The soldiers sent from Britain had unfair advantages concerning laws, and the British government protected the from Colonial Law. The soldiers did not have to follow the laws the colonists did, the military was allowed to create their own laws. The Administration of Justice Act stated the colonists could not try soldiers in a court of law. The Quartering Act required colonists to allow soldiers to sleep and eat in their homes.
These acts taxed simple living necessities at that time such as glass, lead or paint. The colonists were outraged at these taxes. It was very hard to develop a community when the colonists couldn't get the basic materials for surviving. Many people would smuggle these materials to avoid losing the money. There were also many riots due to the anger of the colonists.
In 1760, when George III became the King of England, his one mission was to get rid of the war debt with the help of the colonists. (137) This angered the colonists because they felt as if their rights have been taken away from them. This caused the colonial men and women to come together and fight for their rights. They formed the Sons and Daughters of Liberty groups, in order to get their rights back.
By 1932, Americans had reversed the approval and disapproval making the disapproval rating had gone higher. Americans disapproved the prohibition because the criminality and murder went up, business’ were going down and it was impossible to enforce no alcohol. The rate of criminals went up leading to more murders when the Prohibition was enforced. Many criminals such as gangsters, racketeers, bootleggers, and dope sellers got “helped” out by prohibition. Especially in the Great Depression, were alcohol was even more wanted.
Furthermore, the British argued that the colonists had no right to protest the quartering of British soldiers. According to document nine, the soldiers were to be quartered in residences since there was not enough room in the barracks and the soldiers were stationed in Boston in order to preserve peace. Nonetheless, the citizens of the colonies were forced to house and provide food and other services for the soldiers without their consent, and they were not compensated for
The second riot, August 26, 1765, unlike the first one, can easily be described as an actual riot escalated by a drunken mob mentality. This riot was sparked by the apprehension of suspected smugglers (Hutchinson, P. 18). The colonist, or more accurately the rioters, used the apprehension of these merchants to openly attack the lieutenant governor, Thomas Hutchinson. These attacks came after a mob had started a bonfire, while heavily drinking (Hutchinson, P. 19). The second riot cannot be attributed to British taxation without representation, in a description given by Governor Francis Bernard to the Lords of Trade he explains that the riots were "becoming a war of plunder… [attempting to] take away the distinction between poor and rich" (Bernard,
Jefferson is referring to the Quartering Acts that the king imposed upon the colonists. This is a grievance because the Quartering Acts were a direct offense on the colonist’s natural rights. The colonists were forced to house the soldiers without their consent which is Britan controlling them. This also angered colonists because they were forced into providing resources for soldiers who they did not consent to house. Which, like the other grievance, reveals that the King can still do whatever he wants with the colonists which violates the idea of individual rights.
On May 5, 1770, a street fight between the British soldiers and the Boston colonists erupted which later became known as the Boston Massacre. The events of the Boston Massacre occured after the French and Indian war, when the British were in great debt. This caused them to pass many acts like the Sugar Act and the Stamp Act, which taxed colonists when they bought or imported certain goods. The Sugar Act set duties on sugar and molasses imported by colonists, while the Stamp Act required colonists to pay for an official stamp when buying paper items. The Quartering Act of 1768 was also later passed which forced colonists to house British soldiers in their own homes.
The Quartering Act of 1765 is a great decision by the British. This act requires the colonies to house British soldiers and take care of them. The Quartering Act was forced after the French and Indian War. 10,000 troops were sent to the colonies. These soldiers were sent to the colonies because there was no room in the fort to keep all of these British soldiers.
On the other hand the British deprived the colonists of even the most basic of rights. The American Revolution was more about Civil Liberties because there are three main arguments that support it: Taxation without Representation, the Quartering Act, and the Intolerable (Coercive) Acts. These actions that the British did justified the colonists’ revolution. First of all, one civil liberty that was exempt from the colonists reaches was taxation without representation.
In March 24, 1775 the quartering act was passed, which was the act that stated all the British will have to have a place to stay even if it was a person’s home. This clearly was a bad idea. Complaints were made, but England simply ignored them. They may have not been intending to make the colonists upset; however, they made the colonists beyond upset.