British tax acts during the 1760s and 1770s

By faybel
  • Sugar Act

    Sugar Act
    It passed the first law specifically aimed at raising colonial money for the Crown.
  • Currency Act

    Currency Act
    This act prohibited American colonies from issuing their own currency, angering many American colonists.
  • Stamp Act

    Stamp Act
    Parliament's first direct tax on the American colonies. This act was enacted to raise money for Britain. It taxed newspapers, almanacs, pamphlets, broadsides, legal documents, dice, and playing cards.
  • Quartering Act

    Quartering Act
    The British angered American colonists with the Quartering Act, which required the colonies to provide barracks and supplies to British troops.
  • Declaratory Act

    Declaratory Act
    It stated that Parliament could make laws binding the American colonies " in all cases whatsoever ".
  • Repeal of the Stamp Act

    Repeal of the Stamp Act
    The act was repealed, and the colonies abandoned their ban on imported British goods.
  • Townshend Acts

    Townshend Acts
    To help pay the expenses involved in governing the American colonies, which initiated taxes on glass, lead, paint, paper, and tea.
  • Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania to the Inhabitants of the British Colonies

    Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania to the Inhabitants of the British Colonies
    John Dickinson declared that Parliament could not tax the colonies, called the Townshend Acts unconstitutional, and denounced the suspension of the New York Assembly as a threat to colonial liberties.
  • Massachusetts Circular Letter

    Massachusetts Circular Letter
    A statement, approved by the Massachusetts House of Representatives, which attacked Parliament's persistence in taxing the colonies without proper representation, and which called for unified resistance by all the colonies.
  • Tea Act

    Tea Act
    It reduced the tax on imported British tea, this act gave British merchants an unfair advantage in selling their tea in America.