The Sugar Act
The Stamp Act
The Quartering Act
The Townshend & Tea Acts
The Intolerable Act & Reactions
100

What year was the Sugar Act passed?

1764

100

What did colonists have to buy for newspapers, licenses, and playing cards?

A special stamp or seal

100

What year was the Quartering Act passed?

1765

100

What items did the Townshend Acts tax?

Glass, tea, paper, and lead

100

What year were the Intolerable Acts passed?

1774

200

What goods were taxed under the Sugar Act?

Sugar, molasses, and other imports

200

What was Britain taxing under the Stamp Act?

Printed materials such as newspapers, legal papers, and cards

200

What did the law require colonists to do?

House and feed British soldiers

200

How did the Daughters of Liberty protest the Townshend Acts?

They made their own clothes and goods

200

Why did Britain create the Intolerable Acts?

To punish the colonies for the Boston Tea Party

300

Why did Britain create the Sugar Act?

To help pay off war debt from the French and Indian War

300

What phrase became popular as a protest against the Stamp Act?

“No taxation without representation!”

300

Why did colonists feel unsafe about the Quartering Act?

They believed soldiers were there to control them, not protect them

300

What did the Tea Act give the East India Company control over?

All tea sales in the colonies

300

Name one punishment included in the Intolerable Acts.

Closing Boston Harbor or removing self-government

400

Why were colonists angry about the Sugar Act?

It raised prices and they had no voice or representation in Parliament

400

What did that phrase mean?

Colonists shouldn’t be taxed without having representatives in Parliament

400

Why did colonists think this Act was unfair?

They had to give up property without their consent

400

What famous protest followed the Tea Act?

The Boston Tea Party

400

How did these Acts affect colonial unity?

They angered colonies and encouraged them to unite against Britain

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