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Objective: To examine the causes and effects of the Intolerable Acts.

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Presentation on theme: "Objective: To examine the causes and effects of the Intolerable Acts."— Presentation transcript:

1 Objective: To examine the causes and effects of the Intolerable Acts.

2 What I find to be intolerable!

3 British Response to the Boston Tea Party
In order to punish the colonists of Massachusetts for the Boston Tea Party, King George III had a series of laws passed in 1774 called the Coercive Acts. The Coercive Acts were despised by the people of Massachusetts, who referred to the laws as the Intolerable Acts.

4 The Intolerable Acts 1) The port of Boston was closed until the colonists paid for the destroyed tea. 2) The royal governor could ban town meetings. 3) British officials accused of crimes would stand trial in Britain instead of in Massachusetts. 4) A new Quartering Act was passed allowing British troops to be quartered in unoccupied colonial buildings and homes.

5 The Bostonians in Distress. (London, November 19, 1774)
As a consequence of the Boston Tea Party, Parliament enacted the "Intolerable Acts," one of which closed the port of Boston. In this print the artist symbolized the closing of the port by placing the Bostonians in a cage suspended from the Liberty Tree.

6 The Bostonians in Distress. (London, November 19, 1774)
The three men in the small boat attempting to feed the hungry men in the cage represent the other American colonies that sent supplies to aid the citizens of Boston during the crisis. The fish have been placed on the ends of poles that are then thrust through the bars of the cage. British soldiers on the shore with cannons, and warships in the harbor symbolize the continued blockade.

7 The Bostonians in Distress. (London, November 19, 1774)
A patriot viewer might see the print as a representation of the "poor Bostonians," caged and starving because of Great Britain's unfair policies and restrictions. A loyalist viewer might see the print as depicting a "we've got them now" attitude, showing colonists boxed in by their own illegal actions and paying the appropriate consequences for defying the authority of the Crown.

8 Chaplain Jacob Duché leading the first prayer in the First Continental Congress at Carpenter's Hall, Philadelphia, September 1774

9 Colonial Response to the Intolerable Acts
In response to the Intolerable Acts, delegates from 12 of the colonies met at the First Continental Congress. The First Continental Congress decided to… …boycott all British goods and stop exporting goods to Britain until the Intolerable Acts were repealed. …urge each colony to set up its own militia. Brainpop: Causes of the American Revolution


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