Taxes and Acts
Colonial Reactions
Key Events Timeline
Enlightenment Ideas
Protests and Punishments
100

This 1765 law required colonists to pay a tax on printed materials like newspapers and legal documents.

What is the Stamp Act?

100

Patrick Henry and James Otis argued this principle: “Taxation without ______ is tyranny.”

What is representation?

100

1754, this young Virginian fired the first shots of the French and Indian War.


Ask the first President. 

Who is George Washington?

100

This European intellectual movement emphasized science and reason over tradition.

What is the Enlightenment?

100

Colonists sometimes punished British tax collectors by covering them with this sticky substance

and feathers.

What is tar?

200

Parliament repealed the Stamp Act but quickly passed this law declaring they could make rules

for the colonies “in all cases.”

What is the Declaratory Act?

200

This secret society, started by Sam Adams, protested British taxes—sometimes by tarring and

feathering tax collectors.

Who are the Sons of Liberty?

200

The French and Indian War officially ended with this 1763 treaty.

What is the Treaty of Paris?

200

This English philosopher argued that government was based on a “social contract” between

rulers and the people.

Daily Double

Who is John Locke?

200

The Quartering Act of 1765 required colonists to do this for British soldiers.

What is provide food and shelter?


Will accept at least one answer. "EVERYTHING GOES"

300

These acts of 1767 placed taxes on everyday items like paint, glass, lead, and tea.


Answer: What are the Townshend Acts?

300

Groups that spread news of British actions and helped organize boycotts were called these.

What are Committees of Correspondence?

300

The law passed in 1763 that forbade colonists from settling west of the Appalachian Mountains.

What is the Proclamation Line of 1763?

300

Enlightenment thinkers did not believe kings and queens got their power directly from this source.

What is God?

300

This Boston silversmith engraved a famous image of the Boston Massacre that spread

anti-British feelings.

Who is Paul Revere?

400

This 1773 law lowered the cost of tea but kept a tax, angering colonists and leading to protest.

What is the Tea Act?

400

In December 1773, colonists disguised as Native Americans boarded ships and dumped 342

chests of this product into Boston Harbor.

Daily Double

What is tea?

400

On March 5, 1770, this violent event in Boston fueled anti-British propaganda.


Daily Double

What is the Boston Massacre?

400

Colonists believed if rulers violated rights, the people had the right to do this.


Ask a friend.

What is overthrow the government?

400

Colonists used these secret agreements to spread anti-British information.


Ask a friend!

What are committees of correspondence?

500

After the Boston Tea Party, Britain punished the colonies with these harsh measures. Colonists

called them the “Intolerable Acts.”

What are the Coercive Acts?

500

Colonists used this term to describe the killing of five colonists by British soldiers on March 5,

1770.

What is the Boston Massacre?

500

In 1774, Britain closed Boston Harbor until colonists paid for the destroyed tea. This was part of

these acts.


Ask a friend.

What are the Intolerable Acts?

500

Colonists drew inspiration from this 1215 English document that protected rights and limited royal

power.

What is the Magna Carta?

500

Parliament passed this act to punish Massachusetts by suspending its legislature.

What is part of the Intolerable Acts?

M
e
n
u