The Quebec Act of 1774 was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain (citation 14 Geo. III c. 83) setting out procedures of governance in the area of Quebec.
After the Seven Years' War, a victorious Great Britain achieved a peace agreement through the Treaty of Paris (1763). Under the terms of the treaty, the Kingdom of France chose to keep the islands of Guadeloupe for its valuable sugar crops instead of the strip of land France controlled along North America's St. Lawrence River known as Canada. After the conquest, the British had renamed this province Quebec, after its capital.
With unrest growing in the colonies to the south, which would one day grow into the American Revolution, the British were worried that the French Canadians might also support the growing rebellion. In order to secure the allegiance of the approximately 70,000 French Canadians to the British crown, first Governor James Murray and later Governor Guy Carleton promoted the need for action. There was a need to compromise between the conflicting demands of the new subjects and that of the newly arrived British subjects. This eventually resulted in the Quebec Act of 1774.
There were several American colonist concerns with the provisions of the act. For one, it guaranteed that residents of the Ohio Country were free to profess the religion of the Roman Catholic church. Settlers from Virginia and other colonies were already entering that area. Land development companies had already been formed to drive out the Indians and exploit the territory. Many of the leaders of the American Revolution, such as George Washington and Daniel Boone, were wealthy land speculators who had much to gain by establishing a new government that would not be bound by British treaties with the Indians, such as the Proclamation of 1763, that recognized Indian rights to these lands *. Further, the colonies were still engaged in or had just finished their own struggles with an established church, and now, from their point of view, they had to deal with another, one of their most feared. The lack of understanding between the two groups would later lead to a virulent hatred of Catholics and the burning of numerous Catholic churches in the region by the colonists.
The act confirmed the Indian territory to the west of the Appalachians that had been established by the Royal Proclamation of 1763. This showed American colonists that Parliament still sought to cut off their plans for western expansion.
1774 in law | Canada and the United States | Legal history of Canada | History of Catholicism in Quebec | History of Quebec | History of United States expansionism | Laws leading to the American Revolution | Acts of the Parliament of Great Britain
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