Answered

How did the Navigation Acts impact the thirteen American colonies?
• The colonies could ship exports directly to other countries.
© The colonies could receive imports directly from other countries.
® The colonies made a greater profit on exported goods.
The colonies had to pay heavy taxes on certain imported goods.



Answer :

it directed the flow of goods between England and the colonies. It told colonial merchants that they could not use foreign ships to send their goods, even if it was less expensive. It also told the colonists that they could not ship certain products, like sugar and tobacco, outside England's empire. This led to smuggling because the colonists ignored the laws.

The side that received the best trade terms from Native Americans and the most help in the war would probably win the contest for the control of North America. The French had the advantage. Unlike the British the French more interested in trading furs than taking over Native Americans land. The French had better relations with Native Americans. French trappers and traders often married Native American women and followed their customs. French missionaries converted many Native Americans to Catholicism, but let them maintain their own culture

Although their overall economic impact was minimal, the Navigation Acts imposed burdens on those segments of American colonial society best positioned to foment a rebellion. The groups most negatively affected by the Navigation Acts—colonial manufacturers and merchants; tobacco, rice, and sugar planters; and artisans and mechanics—were all central actors in prerevolutionary anti-British agitation. Merchants were especially active in colonial politics, and they responded to the acts with hostility. The passage of the Navigation Acts thus contributed to rising anti-British sentiment and the eventual outbreak of the American Revolution

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