The Stamp Act
The Brtish Land In Boaston


In January of 1767, during the consideration of the
House of Commons of the estimated cost of maintaining the British
army in the colonies for the current year, George Grenville moved
"That the troops to be kept up in America shou'd be Paid
by the Colonies respectively for whose defence & benefit they
were Employ'd."
Charles Townshend, Chancellor of the Exchequer stated that he
too "approved of our taxing the Colonies so as to provide
for their own safety and preservation," and "by which
the Colonies should be taxed conformable to their abilities, in
a manner that should be least burdomsome and most efficacious."
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The Townshend Acts, British legislation intended to raise
revenue, tighten customs enforcement, and assert imperial authority
in America, were sponsored by Chancellor of the Exchequer Charles
Townshend, (right - 1725-67) and enacted on June 29, 1767. The
key statute levied import duties on glass, lead, paint, paper,
and tea. Its purpose was to provide salaries for some colonial
officials so that the provincial assemblies could not coerce
them by withholding wages. |
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Other bills authorized blank search warrants called Writs
of Assistance, created three additional vice-admiralty courts,
which operated without juries, established a Board of Customs
Commissioners headquartered in Boston, and suspended the New York
assembly for not complying with the Quartering Act of 1765. Parliament
also passed the New York Restraining Act, which, in effect, suspended
the provincial legislature until it provided his Majesty's
troops . . . with all such necessaries as required by British
law.

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Americans protested the Townshend duties, as
they had the earlier Stamp Act, with
constitutional petitions, boycotts, and violence to even include
"tar and feathering" (left). They now rejected all
forms of parliamentary taxation, whether external duties on imports
or internal taxes like the stamp levies. After colonists
began to boycott British goods, Parliament altered the revenue
measure on March 5, 1770. Duties on all items except tea
were repealed. The tea tax was retained
because it was the most lucrative and to show Americans that
Parliament still had the right to tax them. |
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(See Bibliography Below)
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©
Picture Credit: The Scottish National Portrait Gallery
(top); unknown (bottom).
Authors: Larry R. Gerlach; Robert J. Chaffin, Wisconsin
State University; Ronald W. McGranahan, contributing.
Bibliography: Jensen, Merrill, The Founding of a Nation
(1968); Namier, Lewis B., and Brooks, John, Charles Townshend
(1964); Knollenberg, Bernhard, Growth of the American Revolution,
1766-1775 (1975).
© Copyright "The American Revoulution Homepage" - Ronald
W. McGranahan 1998 - 99 All Rights Reserved
The Stamp Act
The Brtish Land In Boaston