In his pamphlets, Alexander defended the delegates of the Continental Congress held in Philadelphia. He also argued that Britain had no right to violate the freedom of the colonies. Still, A Westchester Farmer answered him with the publication of the article A View of the Controversy between Great Britain and her Colonies to which Alexander answered …show more content…
As anticipated by the Loyalists, the King and the Parliament didn’t listen to the demands of the revolt. Later, after the Parliament declared the province of Massachusetts in the state of rebellion, shots were fired and the American Revolution began.
The Beginning of a Revolution
After the disaster that is the Boston Tea Party, the British Parliament imposed the Coercive Acts (the Patriots called it the Intolerable Acts), a series of disciplinary laws meant to punish the rebellion. It also passed the Massachusetts Government Act which took away the rights of the local colonists to govern. A military royal governor was appointed by London – General Thomas Gage. He was also in control of the 3,000 British troops positioned within Boston. The Parliament imposed these rulings against Massachusetts (in which Boston is a major British-controlled city) to serve as an example for the other colonies not to start a rebellion against their