How Did The Stamp Act Contribute To The American Revolution

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The American Revolution was a response led by the colonies to the idea that they were being exploited by the British government. They argued against taxation without representation and British tyranny. They decided to fight for their rights and equality, and ended up fighting for Independence.
In 1763 the end of the French and Indian wars, marked a new victory for the British, but with this victory came also a great debt. The war had been very expensive, and the British believed that the colonies should bear more of the burden, so they decided to implement new taxes. In 1764 the Sugar Act was implemented. The objective of this law was to raise revenue in the american colonies by implementing constraint on colonial commerce and lowering the tax on imported molasses from 6 to 3 pence per gallon. Still, the revenue from the sugar act was not enough to settle the British debt, therefore on 1765 they passed the Stamp Act. The Stamp Act “required all valid legal documents, as well as newspapers, playing cards, and various other papers, to bear a government-issued stamp, for which there was a charge” . The Stamp Act was the first internal tax enforced on the colonies. Before the Stamp Act was due to go into effect, protests had already started against it, and colonists assembled to boycott the Stamp Act.
The main issue the colonists
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The Sons of Liberty took advantage of this opportunity and began challenging the remaining troops. Ultimately civilians started targeting soldiers frequently. On march 5th 1770, these encounters culminated in The Boston Massacre. A group of bostonians had assambled in front of the customs house and assaulted the guards with snowballs and rocks. Captain Thomas Preston ordered his trops to push the crowd back, but a musket discharged and the other officers started shooting the