The American Nation A History of the United States, Combined Volume (14th Edition)

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

America in the British EmpireAmerica in the British Empire 3


CONTENTS


■A 1789 engraving of the Boston Tea Party by W. D. Cooper. The colonists
dressed as Indians.

81

Colonial fury was partly due to a change in how

London assessed and collected taxes. During the first half


of the eighteenth century, most taxes were set by colo-


nial assemblies and based on landholdings. But after


1763 the British government in London imposed new


taxes on trade. When ships entered American ports, cap-


tains were required to pay taxes before the “enumer-


ated” (taxable) cargos could be moved from the docks.


Whenever Americans bought a bag of nails or a tin of


tea, they were making indirect tax payments to London.


Tax cheats avoided customs officials by smuggling goods


into remote coves at night. But rather than evade the


“intolerable” tax burden, colonists increasingly decided
to eliminate it altogether.
Resistance to taxation was but one of the sources of
turmoil in mid-eighteenth-century America. The taxes
themselves had been necessitated by war, always a desta-
bilizing force in human affairs. Some people, too, experi-
enced a “great awakening” in religious faith; others
looked to the European Enlightenment and its enshrine-
ment of reason and science. Traditional ideas and institu-
tions were being scrutinized more closely. By the 1760s
and 1770s, irritation over taxes was symptomatic of a
more profound societal unease.■

■The British Colonial System
■Mercantilism
■The Navigation Acts
■The Effects of Mercantilism
■The Great Awakening
■The Rise and Fall of
Jonathan Edwards
■The Enlightenment in America
■Colonial Scientific
Achievements
■Repercussions of Distant Wars
■The Great War for the Empire
■Britain Victorious: The Peace
of Paris
■Burdens of an Expanded
Empire
■Tightening Imperial Controls

■The Sugar Act
■American Colonists
Demand Rights
■The Stamp Act: The Pot Set
to Boiling
■Rioters or Rebels?
■The Declaratory Act
■The Townshend Duties
■The Boston Massacre
■The Boiling Pot Spills Over
■The Tea Act Crisis
■From Resistance to Revolution
■American Lives:
Eunice Williams/
Gannenstenhawi
■Debating the Past:
Do Artists Depict Historical
Subjects Accurately?

HeartheAudio Chapter 3 at http://www.myhistorylab.com
Free download pdf