Contributor: Meghan Vestal. Lesson ID: 12237
Often, when citizens protest against mistreatment, some governments make the situation worse by becoming more oppressive. When Great Britain did that, the American colonists responded with fire power!
How do you think the British government responded to 342 chests of tea being dumped into the Boston Harbor?
Image by W.D. Cooper from "The History of America" published in London by E. Newbury in 1789, via Wikimedia Commons, is in the public domain.
As you can imagine, the British did not respond kindly to the Boston Tea Party. In 1774, Parliament began issuing the Coercive Acts. The Coercive Acts were a series of laws that were much worse than anything else they had ever issued in the colonies and showed Parliament’s complete control over the colonies. These laws were so hated by the colonists that they referred to them as the "Intolerable Acts." There were four main laws that made up the Coercive Acts:
As you see, many of the Coercive Acts were directed at Massachusetts, but they still had a major impact on all of the colonies. Many historians agree that the Coercive Acts sent the colonists to their boiling point. Many felt the British had exerted their power too far. They also did not think it was fair that all the colonists were being so harshly punished when only a few had participated in the Boston Tea Party.
For the months following the Coercive Acts, tension continued to mount between the colonists and the British. Fighting between colonists and British soldiers became more frequent. Within less than a year after the final Coercive Act was issued, shots were fired at Lexington and Concord, signaling the start of the Revolutionary War.
To continue learning about the Coercive Acts, watch the following video from Reading Through History. As you watch History Brief: The Intolerable Acts, write down any interesting facts or information you hear. You will be able to use your notes during an activity in the Got It? section:
Discuss your responses with your teacher or parent.
Then, move on to the Got It? section to review what you have learned about the Coercive Acts by taking a quiz.