British politics and colonial policy : 1759-1765
Royal instructions and the threat to home rule in the royal colonies
The Twopenny Act dispute in Virginia
Irritants in other royal colonies
The disturbing activities of Archbishop Secker
The British Army in America and the decision to tax the colonies
The Proclamation of 1763 and limitation of westward expansion
Amherst and the Indian uprising of 1763
Failure of the British Army
Enforcement of the White Pine Acts
Enforcement of the Sugar Act of 1733
Parliament taxes the colonies for revenue
The English constitution and colonial taxation
British restrictions on colonial trade and manufacturing
New restrictions on colonial trade and currency
Legislative protests : Massachusetts and Connecticut
Legislative protests : the middle colonies
Legislative protests : the Carolinas, Virginia, and Rhode Island
The protests fail : the Stamp Act is passed
Colonial nullification of the Stamp Act.
British politics and colonial policy, 1759-1765
Royal instructions and the threat to home rule in the royal colonies, 1759
The Twopenny Act dispute in Virginia, 1759-1764
Irritants in other royal colonies, 1761-1764
The disturbing activities of Archbishop Secker, 1760-1765
The British army in America and the decision to tax the colonies, 1763
The Proclamation of 1763 and limitation of westward expansion
Amherst and the Indian uprising of 1763
Failure of the British army, 1763-1764
Enforcement of the White Pine Acts, 1763-1764
Enforcement of the Sugar Act of 1733, 1763-1764
Parliament taxes the colonies for revenue, 1764
The English Constitution and colonial taxation, 1621-1764
British restrictions on colonial trade and manufacturing, 1660-1764
New restrictions on colonial trade and currency, 1764
Legislative protests: Massachusetts, Connecticut, the middle colonies, the Carolinas, Virginia, Rhode Island
The protests fail: the Stamp Act is passed, 1765
Colonial nullification of the Stamp Act, 1765-1766
Appendixes: The Privy Council, Cabinet Council and Cabinet
The Acts of Trade and colonial admiralty courts
Private enrichment from British public funds
Was George III insane in 1765?