Many colonists see the Coercive Acts as …
Years: 1774 - 1774
July
Many colonists see the Coercive Acts as a violation of their constitutional rights, their natural rights, and their colonial charters.
They therefore view the acts as a threat to the liberties of all of British America, not just Massachusetts.
Richard Henry Lee of Virginia, for example, describes the acts as "a most wicked System for destroying the liberty of America".
Thomas Jefferson's A Summary View of the Rights of British Americans, in which he lays out for delegates to the First Continental Congress a set of grievances against the King, especially against his (and Parliament's) response to the Boston Tea Party, is published in 1774.
Previous criticism of the Coercive Acts has focused on legal and constitutional issues, but Jefferson offers the radical notion that the colonists have the natural right to govern themselves.
In this, his first published work, Jefferson argues that Parliament is the legislature of Great Britain only, and has no legislative authority in the colonies.
He holds that allodial title, not feudal title, is held to American lands; thus the people do not owe fees and rents for that land to the British crown.
