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Seeds of Revolution

15

be no taxation without representation. The principle that the colo-

nists possessed the same rights as people born in England had been

vindicated. Or so it seemed.

Few colonists either heard about, or recognized the significance of, an

act Parliament passed on the same day it repealed the Stamp Act. The

Declaratory Act stated that the king and Parliament had “full power and

authority to make laws and statutes . . . to bind the colonies and people

of

America

. . . in all cases whatsoever.”

The Townshend Acts

In June 1767, Parliament passed a series of measures devised by Charles

Townshend. He was Britain’s top minister for financial matters.

The centerpiece of the so-called Townshend Acts was the Revenue Act

of 1767. It imposed new import duties on glass, lead, paint, paper, and

tea brought into the colonies.

Another law, the Commissioners of Customs Act, was designed to put

teeth into British efforts to collect the Townshend duties. It created a

customs board for the American colonies. Headquartered in Boston, the

board had sweeping authority to enforce customs regulations.

The Vice-Admiralty Court Act was neither conceived by Charles Town-

shend nor passed by Parliament. Yet it became an important tool for

upholding the Townshend duties. Put forward by British Treasury offi-

cials and approved by King George in July 1768, the law set up special

courts to try colonists accused of smuggling or other customs violations.

In these courts, there were no jury trials. Judges appointed by the Crown

decided all cases. And the judges received cash bonuses each time they

found a defendant guilty.

Townshend didn’t anticipate much colonial opposition to his program.

Like other British officials, he believed the Stamp Act had riled colonists

so much because it would have imposed a tax inside the colonies. The

new taxes, by contrast, were in the form of import duties.