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Bacon's Rebellion, 1676
Bacon's Rebellion, 1676
Bacon's Rebellion, 1676
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Bacon's Rebellion, 1676

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Bacon's Rebellion, 1676

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    Bacon's Rebellion, 1676 - Thomas Jefferson Wertenbaker

    The Project Gutenberg eBook of Bacon's Rebellion, 1676, by Thomas Jefferson Wertenbaker

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    Title: Bacon's Rebellion, 1676

    Author: Thomas Jefferson Wertenbaker

    Release Date: February 6, 2009 [eBook #28010]

    Language: English

    Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

    ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BACON'S REBELLION, 1676***

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    BACON'S REBELLION, 1676

    By

    Thomas J. Wertenbaker

    Edwards Professor of American History, Emeritus

    Princeton University

    Virginia 350th Anniversary Celebration Corporation

    Williamsburg, Virginia

    1957


    COPYRIGHT©, 1957 BY

    VIRGINIA 350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION

    CORPORATION, WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA

    Second Printing, 1959

    Third Printing, 1964

    Jamestown 350th Anniversary

    Historical Booklet, Number 8


    From Wertenbaker, Thomas Jefferson, Torchbearer of the Revolution

    Map of Virginia at the time of Bacon's Rebellion


    BACON'S REBELLION, 1676

    The months just preceding the year 1676 were marked in Virginia by ominous signs of disaster. A great comet streamed through the sky like a horsetail, and it was well known that that meant pestilence or war. Then came tens of thousands of pigeons, stretching across the sky as far as the eye could see. They were followed by vast swarms of what seem to have been cicadas, which rose out of the ground, ate the fresh leaves of the trees, and then disappeared. So those who believed in omens were not surprised when the year was marked by the greatest catastrophe in the history of the colony.

    But to understand what happened it is necessary to go back thirty-five years to the appointment by Charles I of Sir William Berkeley as Governor of Virginia. No doubt the King considered this an especial act of grace to the colony, for Berkeley was a member of the Privy Chamber, and as such lived in the royal palace. It was this, perhaps, which fired him with an intense loyalty for the House of Stuart which endured to the day of his death. To dispute the omnipotence of the king was in his eyes the darkest of crimes. A Master of Arts at Oxford, a writer of some merit, polished in manner, he seemed out of place in the forests of Virginia. Perhaps it was his passion to rule which brought him to the colony, perhaps it was cupidity, for he accumulated there a fortune of considerable size.

    He had been in Virginia but a few months when word reached him of the outbreak of the Civil War in England. He must have been horrified that anyone should dare to take up arms against the sacred person of the King, and he sought permission to return to England to defend him. So, in the summer of 1644, when Charles was bearing down on the Parliamentary forces under Essex in Cornwall, Berkeley was with him. And he looked on with deep satisfaction as Sir Richard Grenville ransacked Lord Roberts' house at Lanhydrock, eight miles north of Fowey, and made off with silver plate worth £2000.

    It was probably soon after this that word came of the terrible Indian massacre of April 18, 1644, for Berkeley was back in Virginia on June 7, 1645. Placing himself at the head of the forces which had been bringing fire and destruction to the Indian villages, he soon forced the savages to seek refuge in the woods and swamps. After he had captured their aged chief Opechancanough, they sued for peace.

    Upon receiving news of the execution of Charles I, Sir William proclaimed Charles II King. And when, in 1652, a Parliamentary fleet sailed up the James to reduce the colony, he summoned the militia and prepared for a stubborn resistance. It was only when his Council pointed out the folly of defying the might of Britain that he reluctantly agreed to surrender. But his soul was filled with bitterness. So, with the restoration of Charles II to the throne, when once more he was governor of Virginia, he was determined to permit no more of representative government than his commission and instructions made necessary.

    This he did by corrupting the Burgesses and continuing them by prorogations for many years. He took on himself the sole nominating of all civil and military officers, picking out such persons as he thought would further his designs. Collectors', sheriffs', justices' places were handed out to the Burgesses with a lavish hand. The list of Burgesses in the so-called Long Assembly sounds like a military roll call, for of the thirty members in 1666, six were colonels of militia, two lieutenant-colonels, one a major, and fourteen captains. Philip Alexander Bruce states that a large proportion of the justices were also members of the House of Burgesses. In this way he gained upon and obliged the men of parts and estates in the Burgesses, and made them subservient to his will. He has so fortified his power over us as of himself without respect to our laws to do what so ever he pleased, it was said.

    Sir William further bound his favorites to him by granting them great tracts of the best land. Some take up 2,000 acres, some 3,000, and others 10,000, and many more have taken up 30,000. They cultivated only a fraction or perhaps not any of these great tracts, merely putting up a hog house to save the lapse. So when newcomers looked around for land, they were faced with the alternative of becoming tenants or of taking up remote barren lands on the frontiers.

    The poor planters complained bitterly of the great sums voted by the Assembly for their own salaries, those of certain officers, and for various other expenses. In 1675 the Speaker of the House received 15,000 pounds of tobacco, the clerk 15,000. The total cost of this session was 539,390 pounds of tobacco, that of the session of February, 1676, 616,652 pounds. When the salary of collectors was added the total was 1,601,046 pounds, or perhaps an average of 150 pounds for every family.

    The people were convinced that the heavy taxes served no other purpose than to enrich Berkeley's favorites. Consider their sudden advancement, said Bacon. See what sponges have sucked up the public wealth, and whether it hath not been privately contrived away by unworthy favorites, by vile juggling parasites, whose tottering fortunes have been repaired and supported. And it was obvious that Berkeley himself had taken care to get the largest share of the plunder. At the outbreak of Bacon's Rebellion he owned the plantation at Green Spring, five houses in Jamestown, four hundred cattle, several hundred sheep, sixty horses, near £1,000 worth of wheat, barley, oates, and corn, and some valuable plate.

    Part of this fortune came to him through a monopoly of the beaver trade with the Indians. He seems to have cashed

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