The Molasses Act was a law issued by the British Parliament to restrict trade in the North American colonies. Molasses is made when sugarcane is boiled and made into sugar crystals, and is a secondary product made from the sugarcane industry. The extra part of the sugarcane after distillation is molasses, which was used as a sweetener, was used as an ingredient for rum, and many other purposes. (Revolutionary War and Beyond) Molasses was the most critical sweetener, because it was cheaper than refined sugar. This act was put into place because the colonies were getting cheaper molasses from the French, because French planters had to sell molasses for less money. This was because the French had a law that didn 't allow them to export rum or
In the book, he considers the Molasses Act of 1733, which had placed a tariff on the gas on the foreign molasses and turned out to be both necessary and ill conceived. In the end, it discusses the Boston
The French and Indian war sunk Great Britain into deep debt, so they decided to put tax on items that the colonies often used or needed, which of course the colonists refused to pay. “no taxation without representation” was the colonists chant, they did not want to pay the taxes unless the elected representatives had a right to pass taxes if wanted and if the laws passed by their own governmental body. The British were being unfair towards the colonists so the colonists did not do the task given to them easily but brutally. Molasses were a big part of the triangular trade and was very highly taxed which resulted in most people smuggling in the molasses. In 1764 Greenville asked parliament to raise taxes on molasses.
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.
These acts were put into place in order to obtain the money to protect the colonists. “This revenue is … for maintaining these colonies requires a large revenue to support it. [Document F]” The Sugar Act was the first of the taxes imposed on to the colonists in order to increase revenue for the British. The Sugar Act of 1764 was a tax on sugar and molasses imported into the colonies which impacted the manufacture of rum in New England. The Stamp Act of 1765 was designed to raise revenue from the American Colonies by a tax in the form of a stamp required on all newspapers and legal or commercial documents.
The Sugar Act put a tax on sugar and rum imported from other countries besides Britain. While many colonists did not have an issue with the Sugar Act, the colonists in Boston did. Boston drank a lot of rum, which meant they wanted to buy the cheapest, but still enjoyable, rum they could. Britain did not want the colonies to drink French rum because they did not want the French to make profit from the colonies. When the British began enforcing the tax on rum, a small percentage of colonists in Boston were angry due to the lack of representation in
Trading with France took place before the war, and “war did not automatically interrupt commercial relations between belligerents” (2). However, “the Flour Act of 1757, a wartime statute that prohibited
First, the Sugar Act was mainly about controlling the trade of rum. Rum was a profitable product, and rum was made from molasses. The molasses was imported into the colonies in large amounts from large plantation owners in the British West Indies and used for rum. Great Britain was providing cheap labor from Africa and making them work in the sugarcane plantations in the West Indies. From there, the West Indies sent the molasses to the colonies in America.
After America’s Declaration of Independence asserted in 1776, were radical notions for those who had grown up in a society that was ruled but a king and that enthusiastically embraced the idea of aristocracy. “The first step in Grenville’s new program was the Revenue Act (1764), popularly known as the Sugar Act” (Keene, Page 98). But, this Act violated two longheld beliefs. Also, required colonists to purchase special stamps for everything from newspapers to playing cards.
The sugar act started in 1764. “April,5 1764... A new law passed called the Sugar and Molasses Act. Colonial merchants...were required to pay tax of six-pence…” All molasses was imported. Most of the colonist tried to buy french molasses and sugar at a cheaper price.
OCtober 7, 1763 Proclamation Line of 1763 The Proclamation Line of 1763 was declared to create peace between colonists and Indians. Also, to keep the colonists restricted for easier taxation. Only licensed traders were allowed to trade in the west or deal with Indians. April 5, 1764 Sugar Act The Sugar Act was taken taxation on sugar and molasses was reduced. The Act was made to halt trade between many people.
Parliament had to pay for the war, even though the British won. They protected the colonists with a permanent army in North America from Indian attacks. In order to help pay for the taxes of war, they passed the Sugar Act in 1764. This act placed taxes on molasses and sugar imported by the colonists. British troops stepped up the search for smuggled good and smugglers were treated
The Sugar Interest wanted to be positive the colonists were not buying anyone else ’s rum except for English rum, so the Act places customs duties on non-British sugar and prohibited any rum that was not British. Most colonists actually did not mind this and thought it was constitutional, except for Boston who grew to be quite angry especially since smugglers had a harder time of making a living now. Next, comes the Stamp Act, which was a miniscule tax on just about everything made of paper. Some colonies already had their own type of Stamp Act imposed, so the extra tax made most colonists very angry especially because it was an internal tax; therefore, it is unconstitutional.
The colonist started thinking they had no repression in parliament. The commits of correspondence improved commutation among their colonies. In this disagreement with their mother country England, this lead to taxation without repreasation. The British didn’t think that the sugar act wasn’t bringing in enough money for them. Their solution to that problem is creating another act that the colonist has to pay tax on.
The Iron Act was a law passed by British parliament that encouraged the colonies to produce more Pig Iron (crude Iron shaped like a block) and Iron smaller Bars, and have them sent to Britain, tax-free. But the act also forbade the producing of finished iron goods. The British also wanted to restrict the growth of of Iron goods made in the colonies, and ban the export of Iron goods from the colonies to anywhere else but Britain. The colonists were angry, because they couldn 't get as much of a profit as they were before the act. To challenge this act, the colonists boycotted British goods, and smuggled finished iron goods out of the colonies to other counties.
Britain needed a way to fix this. They came up with the Sugar Act, a set of taxes to help Britain raise money. Taxes were not a new thing for the colonists, but these new taxes caused big issues. The Sugar Act was suggested by Prime Minister George Greenville.