In 1764, with Britain under a massive debt from the Seven Years War and with increased costs of maintaining its new colonies, the Grenville Ministry passes the Sugar Act to raise revenue from the colonists. The Act itself actually cuts tariff rates, but also institutes enforcement measures to ensure the colonists cannot evade the taxes as easily as they did in the past. Parliament also passes the Quartering Act, to make colonies pay for the quartering of British Regulars within their borders, whether they are there to protect the colonists or to enforce tariff and trade laws.
For more text, pictures, maps, and sources, please visit my site at AmRevPodcast.Blogspot.com.
ARP292 Dog Days Campaign
ARP291 New Dorlach and Johnstown
ARP290 Grand Reconnaissance
ARP289 Green Spring
ARP288 Raid on Monticello
ARP287 Fort Ninety-Six
ARP286 Sumter’s Law
ARP285 Hobkirk Hill
ARP284 Pensacola
ARP283 Petersburg
ARP282 Lafayette in Virginia
ARP281 Ratifying the Articles of Confederation
AR-SP22 John Paul Jones by Shipwrecks and Seadogs
ARP280 Guilford Courthouse
AR-SP21 France and the Revolution, with Grey History
ARP279 Race to the Dan
ARP278 Arnold Raids Richmond
AR-SP20 Why didn’t Canada Join the Revolution?
ARP277 Battle of Cowpens
ARP276 Mutiny in the Continental Army
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