History, asked by AK12902, 1 year ago

In 1765, which group of American colonists protested “taxation without representation” by sending a protest to the British king? A. Stamp Act Congress B. minutemen C. New Albany patriots D. New England Confederation

Answers

Answered by wajahatkincsem
6
The Stamp Act of 1765 (short title Duties in American Colonies Act 1765; 5 George III, c. 12) was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain that forced an immediate expense on the states of British America and required that many written words in the provinces be delivered on stamped paper created in London, conveying a decorated income stamp. Pieces of literature included authoritative records, magazines, playing cards, daily papers, and numerous different sorts of paper utilized all through the provinces. Like past assessments, the stamp charge must be paid in legitimate British cash, not in frontier paper cash. The reason for the expense was to help pay for troops positioned in North America after the British triumph in the Seven Years' War and its North American performance center of the French and Indian War.
Answered by writersparadise
5

The answer to the question is A) Stamp Act Congress.


This group featured representatives belonging to the British Colonies based in North America. The Stamp Act Congress comprised 27 representatives from nine out of 13 colonies. The protest was the first colonial action taken against a British action. It evoked as a response to the Stamp Act that emphasized on using specially stamped paper to print documents for any business that was done in the colonies.
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