Table of Contents
- 1 Did colonists ignore Navigation Acts?
- 2 Why did the colonists dislike the Navigation Acts?
- 3 Why did the Navigation Acts encourage smuggling?
- 4 How did colonists get around the 1733 Molasses Act?
- 5 Why did England want the colonists to go through England?
- 6 What did the colonist do before mass surveillance?
In general, the colonists obeyed the Trade and Navigation Acts when they benefitted them and they ignored them when they ran contrary to colonial interests. In general, the colonists obeyed the Trade and Navigation Acts when they benefitted them and they ignored them when they ran contrary to colonial interests.
Once under British control, regulations were imposed on the colonies that allowed the colony to produce only raw materials and to trade only with Britain. Many colonists resented the Navigation Acts because they increased regulation and reduced their opportunities for profit, while England profited from colonial work.
How did the colonists get around mercantilism?
How did colonists get around this policy? Mercantilism is when colonies provided raw materials for the mother country. Colonists got around those policies by smuggling goods.
The Navigation Acts encourages smuggling because people didn’t want to pay taxes over items that they had grown. They also wanted to make a profit by selling goods to other parts of the world which the Navigation Acts didn’t allow.
How did colonists get around the 1733 Molasses Act?
The American colonists protested the act, claiming that the British West Indies alone could not produce enough molasses to meet the colonies’ needs. The Molasses Act was among the least effective of the British Navigation Acts, since it was largely circumvented through smuggling.
What was the purpose of the Navigation Acts?
Educators go through a rigorous application process, and every answer they submit is reviewed by our in-house editorial team. The Navigation Acts, or the Acts of Trade and Navigation, were a series of laws passed by the British Parliament over a number of decades that regulated how colonists were legally allowed to trade with other countries.
Why did England want the colonists to go through England?
Instead, England wanted all trade from the colonies to go through England first, allowing the mother country to profit off of all the trade. These laws made many colonists very angry because they curtailed the colonists’ economic opportunities.
What did the colonist do before mass surveillance?
Smuggling before the era of mass surveillance and large police departments was a rather achievable process in which colonists were able to continue their business of illicit trading. Throughout the mid-1700s, the English government attempted to increase trade restrictions and increase enforcement against smuggling.
How did the English Civil War affect the colonies?
With the outbreak of the English Civil War in 1642, the North American colonies’ supply lines to metropolitan Britain were disrupted. This led the colonies to establish trade relations with the Dutch and the French in order to encourage the flow of manufactured goods into North America.