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June 2, Intolerable Acts

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On June 2, 1774, the Quartering Acts were passed by British Parliament, part of a package of punitive acts devised as a response to colonial unrest. The acts did not have the desired effect; they did not quell resistence. Instead, they became known as the “Intolerable Acts,” and helped fuel the fires of secession, leading to the American Revolution.

Also on June 2: The Sack of Rome begins, and the Vandals bequeath their name to hooligans of the future (455 AD); President Grover Cleveland marries his ward, Frances Folsom, while in office (1886); the Bhutan Broadcasting Service brings TV to the Himalayan kingdom (1999).

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