'Quartering Act' is the name of at least two
acts of the
Parliament of Great Britain.
Act of 1765
This first Act (citation 5 Geo. III c. 33) occurred on
24 March 1765, and provided that
Great Britain would house its soldiers in America first in barracks and public houses, as by the
Mutiny Act of 1765, but if its soldiers outnumbered the housing available, would quarter them "in inns, livery stables, ale houses, victuallinghouses, and the houses of sellers of
wine and houses of persons selling of
rum,
brandy,
strong water,
cyder or
metheglin", and if numbers required in "uninhabited houses, outhouses, barns, or other buildings", requiring any inhabitants (or in their absence, public officials) to provide them with food and
alcohol, and providing for
fire, candles,
vinegar,
salt, bedding, and utensils for the soldiers "without paying any thing for the same".
Act of 1774
On
June 2,
1774, Parliament passed a group of laws entitled the Coercive Acts (the colonists called them the
Intolerable Acts) designed to restore imperial control over the American colonies. All the Coercive Acts dealt specifically with the
Province of Massachusetts Bay, except one, a new Quartering Act, which applied to all
thirteen colonies. This Quartering Act extended the provisions of the earlier legislation; it required that troops be housed not only in commercial and empty buildings but in occupied dwellings as well. The law was bitterly protested, symbolizing as it did to the colonists the potential dangers and abuses of standing armies. It said that they had to pay for the basic needs of the soldiers as well, which were bedding, cooking utensils, clothing, and a few others.
Modern relevance
Both Acts led directly to the
Third Amendment to the United States Constitution, which expressly prohibited the
military from peacetime quartering of troops without consent of the owner of the house. A product of their times, the relevance of the Acts and the Third Amendment has greatly declined since the era of the American Revolution, having been the subject of one case in 200+ years (
Engblom v. Carey).
External links
★
Text of the Act of 1765
★
Text of the Act of 1774