In 1765, the British passed the Stamp Act. It taxed all
paper - from official documents to playing cards. People said this showed the British would never give them more rights. There were demonstrations, many of them violent, against the tax all over the colonies. Colonists began to
divide into Loyalists (loyal to Britain) and Patriots.
The local governments of the colonies began to act as a group. They formed militia (see picture) and Patriot groups
(Sons of Liberty) to work secretly against the British.
Representatives from the states met at the Stamp
Act Congress in New York in 1765. In October they
published A Declaration of Rights and Grievances. It
began with an assurance of loyalty to the British king,
then set out the reforms they wanted.