| November 1, 1765
 In the face of widespread opposition in the American colonies,
 Parliament enacts the Stamp Act, a taxation measure designed to raise
 revenue for British military operations in America.
 
 Defense of the American colonies in the French and Indian War
 (1754-63) and Pontiac's Rebellion (1763-64) were costly affairs for
 Great Britain, and Prime Minister George Grenville hoped to recover
 some of these costs by taxing the colonists. In 1764, the Sugar Act
 was enacted, putting a high duty on refined sugar. Although resented,
 the Sugar Act tax was hidden in the cost of import duties, and most
 colonists accepted it. The Stamp Act, however, was a direct tax on the
 colonists and led to an uproar in America over an issue that was to be
 a major cause of the Revolution: taxation without representation.
 
 Passed without debate by Parliament in March 1765, the Stamp Act was
 designed to force colonists to use special stamped paper in the
 printing of newspapers, pamphlets, almanacs, and playing cards, and to
 have a stamp embossed on all commercial and legal papers. The stamp
 itself displayed an image of a Tudor rose framed by the word "America"
 and the Latin phrase Honi soit qui mal y pense--"Shame to him who
 thinks evil of it."
 
 Outrage was immediate. Massachusetts politician Samuel Adams organized
 the secret Sons of Liberty organization to plan protests against the
 measure, and the Virginia legislature and other colonial assemblies
 passed resolutions opposing the act. In October, nine colonies sent
 representatives to New York to attend a Stamp Act Congress, where
 resolutions of "rights and grievances" were framed and sent to
 Parliament and King George III. Despite this opposition, the Stamp Act
 was enacted on November 1, 1765.
 
 The colonists greeted the arrival of the stamps with violence and
 economic retaliation. A general boycott of British goods began, and
 the Sons of Liberty staged attacks on the customhouses and homes of
 tax collectors in Boston. After months of protest and economic
 turmoil, and an appeal by Benjamin Franklin before the British House
 of Commons, Parliament voted to repeal the Stamp Act in March 1766.
 However, the same day, Parliament passed the Declaratory Acts,
 asserting that the British government had free and total legislative
 power over the colonies.
 
 Parliament would again attempt to force unpopular taxation measures on
 the American colonies in the late 1760s, leading to a steady
 deterioration in British-American relations that culminated in the
 outbreak of the American Revolution in 1775.
 
 
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