Declaration of Rights and Grievances

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Script error: No such module "For". In response to the Stamp and Tea Acts, the Declaration of Rights and Grievances was a document written by the Stamp Act Congress and passed on October 19, 1765.[1] American colonists opposed the acts because they were passed without the consideration of the colonists' opinion, violating their belief that there should be "no taxation without Representation". The Declaration of Rights raised fourteen points of colonial protest but was not directed exclusively at the Stamp Act 1765, which required that documents, newspapers, and playing cards be printed on special stamped and taxed paper. In addition to the specific protests of the Stamp Act taxes, it made the assertions which follow:

See also

References

  • The American Journey Brief 3rd Edition, Published by Prentice Hall

External links

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  1. C.A. Weslager, The Stamp Act Congress, with an Exact Copy of the Complete Journal (University of Delaware Press, 1976), 142.