STAMP ACT CONGRESS

The 'Stamp Act Congress' was a meeting in New York City in October 1765 of delegates from the American Colonies that discussed and acted upon the recently passed Stamp Act. The meetings adopted a ''Declaration of Rights and Grievances'' and wrote letters or petitions to the King and both houses of Parliament. This Congress is viewed by some as the first American action in or as a precursor to the American Revolution.
Representatives from 9 of the 13 colonies came to this congress. They wrote letters to the British Parliament and directly to the king complaining about the Stamp Act tax.

Contents
The Declaration
Representatives

The Declaration


The Declaration of Rights raised fourteen points of colonial protest. In addition to the specifics of the Stamp Act taxes, it asserted that

★ Only the colonial assemblies had a right to tax the colonies.

Trial by jury was a right, and the use of Admiralty Courts was abusive.

★ Colonists possessed all the rights of Englishmen.

★ Without voting rights, Parliaments could not represent the colonists.

Representatives



Massachusetts - James Otis, Oliver Partridge, and Timothy Ruggles

Connecticut - Eliphalet Dyer, David Rowland, and William Johnson

Rhode Island - Metcalf Bowler and Henry Ward

New York - William Bayard, John Cruger, Leonard Lispinard, Robert Livingston, and Philip Livingston

New Jersey - Joseph Gordon, Hendrick Fisher, and Robert Ogden

Pennsylvania - George Bryan, John Dickinson, and John Morton

Delaware - Thomas McKean and Caesar Rodney

Maryland - William Murdock, Edward Tilghman, Thomas Ringgold

South Carolina - Christopher Gadsden, Thomas Lynch, and John Rutledge


John Cotton served as secretary

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