Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Explain how TWO of the following incidents or activities demonstrated American support for this statement. Stamp Act Congress Boston Tea Party

Isaac Atayero
Mrs. Mary Anne McElroy
Advanced Placement United States History
12/6/11
 “It is inseparably essential to the freedom of a People, and the undoubted Right of Englishmen, that no taxes be imposed on them, but with their own Consent, given personally,or by their representatives.”(Resolutions of the Stamp Act Congress, 1765)
Explain how TWO of the following incidents or activities demonstrated American support for this statement.
Stamp Act Congress
Boston Tea Party
     The colonists in America in 1765 wanted to be viewed and treated as British citizens. It was a well known fact that “English citizens had the right to be taxed only by their elected representatives”(Tindall. 196).However,when the colonies came to the realization that this was not a reality for them, they begin to demand representatives from England. As they become aware of their rights the colonists begin to fight for their rights. The colonists show support the statement by participating in the Stamp Act Congress and the Boston Tea Party. These two events show the colonists demanding representation from their mother country.The protest against the Stamp Act of 1765 brought about the formation of the Stamp Act Congress. The Stamp Act Congress help bring the colonials to the conclusion that only their elected representatives had legal authority to approve their taxes.  By refusing to buy cheaper tea the colonists were denying Parliament the right to tax them. When the colonists finally realized that the British were not getting the message they begin to itch for a revolution.
   The Stamp Act Congress supports the above statement because it urges the colonials to fight for direct representation. The Stamp Act Congress was a meeting of representatives from nine colonies to discuss protesting the Stamp Act of 1765. The Stamp Act Congress supports the above statement because it urges the colonials to fight for direct representation. The Stamp Act Congress was a meeting of representatives from nine colonies to discuss protesting the Stamp Act of 1765. The Stamp Act of 1765 stated that stamps be placed on all legal documents, pamphlets, advertisements and most printed paper. The colonists especially opposed the Stamp Act because it was a direct tax. The Americans did not like the tax because it affected every area of their daily routines in one way or the other. Unlike the taxes before it, the Stamp Act was not a luxury tax. The Stamp Act Congress is in line with the statement because it decided that only representatives selected by the colonists could approve their taxes in Parliament.
   With the “ideological response”(Tindall,195) of the colonists, “The Stamp Act became the chief target of colonial outrage at British arrogance”(Tindall, 196). The colonists’ consistent and relentless series of protests and boycotts sent a strong message to Parliament about their stance on taxation without representation. Parliament’s forceful and violent response was seen as a sign of tyranny in the colonies. The Stamp Act proved that “Grenville excelled at doing the wrong thing”(Tindall,195). With the help of the Stamp Act Congress, people began to become aware that it was necessary for them to be represented in Parliament by someone of their choosing. The statement above concurs with this awareness. The colonists simply wanted taxes “given with their own consent”(Resolutions of the Stamp Act Congress, 1765). The statement reflects the ideals of the Stamp Act Congress. The colonists’ protesting was a way of defending their right as Englishmen . They were telling Parliament that even though they were not landowners or wealthy merchants , they had the right not to have taxes forced upon them.
   This activity inspired patriotism it basically said that any Englishman had the right to have a say in his government regardless of social status. This message was apparently foreign to the British government and caused multiple conflict with the mother country and her colonies. this activity therefore demonstrates American support for the above statement because it is an example of the colonials standing up for their right to be represented.
   The Boston Tea Party supports this statement because it aggressively demands representation in Parliament. The Boston Tea Party was an incident where a group of Bostonians disguised as Mohawk Indians dumped 342 chests of tea into the harbor . The Boston Tea Party was in agreement with this statement because the tax for the tea was given to the colonists without their consent. Although the tax on the tea was cheaper than smuggled tea, it was imposed on the colonists by Parliament. The Americans chose to stick with their rights rather than the tempting and cheap tea. Patriots let the colonies know that the tea was England’s way of tricking the colonist’s to receiving taxes without any representation. The Committees of Correspondence said that the British  were “trying to purchase acquiescence with cheap tea”(Tindall, 206). The colonials saw the cheap tea tax as a clever trap by the British .
    By refusing to pay the cheap tea tax, the Americans told parliament that they were aware of cunning but failed its attempt to tax them without their consent. This incident shows that Americans were serious about wanting representatives for their taxes. Although many patriots had mixed feelings about the incident, it was one of many defining moments for colonial America. The patriots who strongly supported and believed in the Boston Tea Party supported it by saying it sent a firm message to the British about how they felt about being taxed by people who don’t know them . People that they did not know and did not care to. The Americans did not like the idea of being taxed by people that looked down on them and did not see themselves as equals with them. People who saw the colonists simply as means of revenue and items used to claim land. The amorous relationship between the colonists and their mother country was wanning quickly.The colonists were beginning to see England as a mother country who let her colonies govern themselves and refused to treat them as the Englishmen that they were.
   The many protests including the Boston Tea Party were the colonists’ way of rebelling against their mother country who continuously denied them of basic rights that they felt they were entitled to. The Boston Tea Party was controversial because it was violent and aggressive. It was one of many forceful and active colonists performed by the patriots. This demonstration took violating and disrespecting British law to another level. The Boston Tea party is also significant because it was able to push “British officials to the breaking point”(Tindall, 207). The aggressive demonstrations showed England how committed the colonials were about receiving their representative rights. The Boston Tea Party is also important because, like The Stamp Act Congress, it shows the Americans equating their right to be fairly taxed with their liberty. They saw this right as “essential to their freedom”(Resolutions of the Stamp Act Congress, 1765).  Many think the Boston Tea Party was quite radical and uncalled for ; but it can be justified because of what it stands for. this incident demonstrates support for the statement above because because it highlights the colonists’ right not to have taxes without representation. Those who “recoiled at the wanton destruction of property”(Tindall, 207) did so because they thought it “undermined the radicals’ credibility”(Tindall, 207). The statement, like the act, demands the fulfillment of the right to be represented in Parliament.
     Due to the atmosphere of Enlightenment at the time of the Stamp Act and Boston Tea Party, colonists became increasingly aware of their rights. Thanks to the “ideas derived from ...John Locke’s ...Two Treatises on Government”(Tindall,195), colonials began to demand the preservation of “liberty...against royal tyranny”(Tindall, 195). The colonists felt that losing their right to be represented in their government  was the beginning of “monarchical power”(Tindall, 195).The statement  above reflects the feelings and reactions of the colonists at the time of the Stamp Act Congress and the Boston Tea Party. The Americans’ protest were mainly concerning their right to be represented by an elected official in Parliament. The Boston Tea Party and the Stamp Act Congress are two good examples of the colonists standing up for their right to be represented . These incidents demonstrate the colonists support for the above statement . These events are the people’s way of saying it is the “undoubted Right of Englishmen, that no taxes be imposed on them, but with only their own consent”(Resolutions of the Stamp Act Congress, 1765).  These incidents “contributed  something to the collective grievances that rose to a climax in a gigantic failure of Britain statesmanship”(Tindall, 222).  Since the colonists felt that they “had always governed ourselves”(Tindall, 223), they were beginning to resent British rule over them.The colonists strongly protested Britain’s present stand and were ready to fight until the conditions they demanded were met.




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