Causes Of American Revolution Essay, Research Paper
Causes of the Revolutionary War
The haphazard and disorganized British rule of the American
colonies in the
decade prior to the outbreak led to the Revolutionary War. The
mismanagement
of the colonies, the taxation policies that violated the colonist
right’s, the
distractions of foreign wars and politics in England and
mercantilist policies that
benefited the English to a much greater degree then the colonists
all show the
British incompetence in their rule over the colonies. These
policies and
distractions were some of the causes of the Revolutionary War.
The interests of England within the colonies were self-centered.
The English
were exploiting were trying to govern the colonies by using the
mercantilist
system. Mercantilism is when the state directs all the economic
activities within
it’s borders(Blum 31). England was not attempting to make any
changes that
would help the colonists. They limited the colonies commerce to
internal trade
only(Miller 9). The English were exploiting the colonies by
demanding that the
colonies import more from England then they exported to the
colonies. They
were importing raw materials from the colonies and making them into
exportable
goods in England. They would then ship these goods to foreign
markets all
around the world including the colonies(America Online ).
Throughout the
seventeenth century the English saw America as a place to get
materials they
didn’t have at home and a market to sell finished products at after
the goods had
been manufactured. This was detrimental to the colonies because it
prevented
them from manufacturing any of the raw materials they produced and
made them
more dependent upon England.
In addition to the unrest caused by their mercantilist policies,
domestic political
issues distracted them from the activities of the colonies.
Throughout the sixteen
hundreds, Great Britain was more involved in solving the
Constitutional issue of
who was to have more power in English government, the king or
parliament.
When this complex issue was finally resolved in the Glorious
Revolution of 1688,
England turned its attention back to the colonies and found that
colonists had
developed their own identity as American.
There was no central office in England to control what was
happening in the
colonies. The executive authority in England was divided among
several
ministers and commissioners that did not act quickly or in unison.
Also, the
Board of Trade, the branch of government that knew more about the
colonies
than any other governing body in England, did not have the power to
make
decisions or to enforce decrees. Due to the distractions from the
complex
constitutional issues and ineffective governmental organization the
colonists felt
further separated from England(Blum 51).
The political scene in England was laced with corruption. Officers
of the
government sent to the colonies were often bribe-taking politicians
that were not
smart enough to hold government positions in England. After
Grenville and
Townshend the most incompetent was Lord North, who became Prime
Minister
in 1770 after the death of Charles Townshend. “North was the kind
of politician
George had been looking for —-a plodding, dogged, industrious man,
neither a
fool nor a genius, much like the king himself. For the next twelve
years, despite
the opposition of abler men, he remained at the head of the
government(Blum
104).” Corruption and incompetence among governing politicians
often made
their rule over the colonies ineffective.
In the years leading up to the final decade before the American
Revolution, the
relationship between Great Britain and her colonies in North
America continued
to deteriorate. Relations began to worsen with the great victory
over the French
and Indians in the Seven Years War. Unwelcome British troops had
remained in
the colonies. Debts from this war caused the Prime Minister at the
time, Lord
Grenville, to enforce Mercantilism in an effort to get the
colonists to pay their
share of the national debt that had doubled since 1754(Blum
95).
England passed many Acts that were ill conceived and had long term
effects on
the relationship between England and the colonies. The most
controversial of
these were direct taxes. The last time Parliament had tried a
direct tax was as
recent as 1765, when Lord Grenville enacted the Stamp Act which
forced the
colonists to pay for stamps on printed documents, the Stamp
Act(Higginbotham
34).
The Americans had felt the taxes of Lord Grenville were “a
deliberate aim to
disinherit the colonists by denying them the rights of the
English(Blum 96).” The
first of these acts were the Townshend Acts. The Townshend Acts
were passed
in 1767 and placed new taxes on paper, paints, tea, lead and,
glass. The new
taxes would be used to pay for British officials in the American
service. These
acts infuriated the colonists because they believed that Parliament
had the right
to put taxes on the trade of the colonies but could not place taxes
directly on the
colonists to raise revenue(America Online).
The spokesperson of the colonies, John Dickinson, wrote in his
“Letters of a
Pennsylvania Farmer,” on the issue of direct taxes. He
distinguished between
taxes that were imposed to regulate trade and those that were
intended solely to
raise revenue. If the tax was used to promote commerce it was
justifiable, but if
the tax was used only to gain revenue it was not viewed as a
legitimate
tax(America Online). The colonists believed that this new tax was
not legitimate
and therefore there was strong opposition to it throughout the
colonies.
By 1766 England backed off in their efforts to tax their colonies.
Following a year
of opposition from the colonists England revoked the Stamp Act and
the first
Quartering Act, but they still passed the Declaratory Act (History
Place). In 1766
the Declaratory Act was passed. It was passed the same day that the
Stamp Act
was repealed. The Declaratory Act gave the English government total
power to
pass laws to govern the colonies. The British claimed that the
colonies had
always been and should always be subject to the British crown(Blum
99).”
In 1773 the Tea Act was passed. The Tea Act not only put a three
penny per
pound tax on tea but it also gave the British East India Company a
near
monopoly because it allowed the company to sell directly to the
colonial agents
avoiding any middlemen. In Boston the colonists held a town meeting
to try to
get their Tea Agents to resign. The Tea Agents would not resign and
a few
months later angered Bostonians dressed as Indians boarded three
tea ships
and dumped it all into Boston Harbor(Blum 106).
In 1774 the intolerable Acts were passed. They were passed as a way
to
reprimand the Bostonians for the Boston Tea Party. This didn’t go
over well in
Boston because both the innocent and the guilty were being
punished
equally(America Online). There were five acts within the
Intolerable Acts. The
Massachusetts Government Act, a new Quartering Act, the
Administration of
Justice Act the Quebec Act and the closing of the port of Boston.
The
Massachusetts Government Act said that the Governor’s council had
to be
appointed by the King and limited town meetings to one per year.
The new
Quartering Act, “authorized the quartering of troops within a town
(instead of in
the barracks provided by the colony) whenever their commanding
officers
thought it desirable.” The Administration of Justice Act stated
that, “any
government or customs officer indicted for murder could be tried in
England,
beyond the control of local juries.” The Quebec Act was not
intended to be used
as a punishment of the colonists, rather to extend the boundaries
of the province
of Quebec to the Ohio River and give the Roman Catholics in that
province
religious liberty and the double protection of French and English
law. But the
Quebec Act actually angered the colonists because the colonists
living in
Quebec were getting rights that the Americans felt were being taken
away from
them(Blum 106).
During these years of ineffective rule, the causes of the
Revolutionary War
emerged. Laws and policies enacted were self-serving, causing the
colonists to
vigorously resist and try to avoid British authority. The colonists
moves toward
religious and commercial self-determination were overlooked while
England
dealt with the Seven years war and a domestic political crisis. All
these factors
highlighted the differences and miscalculations of the British and
were the
beginnings of the Revolutionary War.
Blum, John M. The National Experience. Fort Worth: Hartcourt Brace
College
Publishers, 1993.
Higginbotham, Don. The War of American Independence. New York:
The
Macmillan Company, 1971.
Miller, John C. Origins of the American Revolution. London: Oxford
University
Press, 1943.
America Online, Research and Learn, History, American History,
Revolutionary
War Forum, Rev War Archives, Part 1.
Prelude to Revolution 1763 to 1775.” The History Place.
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