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AP®︎/College US History
Course: AP®︎/College US History > Unit 2
Lesson 2: Regions of British colonies- Early English settlements - Jamestown
- Jamestown - John Smith and Pocahontas
- Jamestown - the impact of tobacco
- Jamestown - life and labor in the Chesapeake
- Jamestown - Bacon's Rebellion
- Puritan New England: Plymouth
- Puritan New England: Massachusetts Bay
- Society and religion in the New England colonies
- The Middle colonies
- The West Indies and the Southern colonies
- Regions of British colonies
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Jamestown - Bacon's Rebellion
The video explores early labor systems in Virginia, focusing on white indentured servitude and the shift to African slavery around 1700. It highlights the role of Bacon's Rebellion in this transition, and the impact of tobacco cultivation on land scarcity and Native American relations.
Want to join the conversation?
- AtKim is talking about how the life expectancy was low and that the landowners were making a lot of money. But if many people were dying how did the landowners outlive the indentured servants? 2:06(13 votes)
- That's a really good question! I think it was because the living/working conditions of the indentured servants were much worse than the living conditions of the rich landowners. The servants were not treated too well and were [harshly] forced to work very, very hard (at least I'm guessing that's what it was like, I don't know for sure so make sure not to trust me); while the landowners were living lavish lifestyles.
Hope that helps :D(25 votes)
- If the planters are granted 50 additional acres for every additional indentured servant they bring over, who is agreeing to give them additional land? Is it the crown? Or Lord De La Warr?(9 votes)
- Consider that colonization at that time was not carried out by the crown, but by private corporations which stole the land from the original inhabitants because they considered it empty from humans.(6 votes)
- At, Kim says that the planters actually benefitted from the deals because a lot of indentured servants would die during their servitude. But how about the planters themselves. Were they not subjects to diseases carried by mosquitos in Virginia? 1:49(7 votes)
- That's an interesting question! The planters may have been susceptible to many of the diseases there. Many of them might have even died, but I suspect that they might have brought medicines for themselves.
Also if the planter had a son, he could pass on the legacy to him. So the planter wouldn't lose his property to a stranger.
Hope this answered your question :)(4 votes)
- Who were the native Americans living in between the Appalachian mountains and the coast?(6 votes)
- The Powhatans, which were an Algonquian tribe.(1 vote)
- what was the result of the rebellion?(2 votes)
- It resulted the old governor, William Berkley to be returned to power after Bacon died, he punished some of the rebels by hanging them, and then he was recalled back to England. In the 1680s, indentured servitude basically got less and less popular, and slavery started being used more often. Also, there was a general desire by the English Crown to control the colonies more. I suggest for more information about Bacon's Rebellion, or more about the colonial period, I suggest searching and watching on YouTube "Crash Course U.S. History Episode 4". If you just want the part about Bacon's Rebellion, I suggest watching fromto 5:13. If you want, you watch the whole video if you want to learn more about Colonial America. If you search it, just click the first one on your screen. 6:17
Hope this was helpful!(7 votes)
- Why wouldn't Berkeley help Bacon fight against the Native Americans?(4 votes)
- Governor Berkeley wouldn't fight against the Native Americans because he wanted to avoid a war. After the wars of extinction with the Powhatans, the House of Burgesses, as well as Berkeley, did not want to risk more violence.(0 votes)
- He died from dysentery. Which is a disease infection of the intestines resulting in severe diarrhea with the presence of blood and mucus in the feces.(1 vote)
- What's the difference between Indentured servitude, and the Headright system?(3 votes)
- Indentured servitude is the system in which one person agrees to serve another for a set period of time with the promise of benefits at the end.
The headright system was the system which gave plantation owners more land for every indentured servant's travelling cost they paid.
Hope this helps.(0 votes)
- Atwhat does that word mean? incensed? 10:10(0 votes)
- It means "very angry." So Nathaniel Bacon was very angry at Governor Berkely.(7 votes)
- At, why does Kim say it's a good thing that there was a high mortality rates? It doesn't make sense to me. 1:50(1 vote)
- This is a bit late, but she means that the high mortality rate was good for the planters, not in general. It was "good" for the planters because indentured servants dying before their terms were up meant that the planters didn't need to pay them/give them land, tools, clothes, etc. They could just import more indentured servants from Europe, who would most likely face the same consequences as the previous servants had.
Hope this helped! :)(2 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] So in the last
video we were talking about the system of labor in
the Chesapeake area, surrounding the Chesapeake Bay, in the early English colonies in America. And one thing that seemed
a little bit strange there was that even though the first
ship with enslaved Africans arrived in Virginia in 1619, slavery wasn't actually
the dominant form of labor in Virginia until much
later, in the late 1600s. In fact, the vast majority
of laborers in Virginia were in fact white indentured servants. And these indentured servants
would come from England, and the planter that
they proposed to work for would pay their passage
across the Atlantic. And in exchange the servant would agree to work for that planter for a period of three to seven years. And this is an example of what one of these indentures
might have looked like. It's in old-timey writing,
so it's a little hard to see, but here you can see
that there's three years is the amount of time
that this person promises. This is from Pennsylvania. Kinda gives you a good sense
of how someone would say, "Alright I'm gonna work for
this person for this long, "in exchange for my passage, "and it's a contract." And this was a pretty
good deal for planters because for every person that they brought over from England, they got another 50 acres of land, meaning that if you had
the money to bring over quite a few servants, you could expand your
landholdings very fast. And the other good thing about this, at least in terms of the planters was that these indentured servants had a pretty high rate of death. It was not healthy to live in
this swampy area of Virginia. So quite frequently, planters
didn't actually have to make good on their promise to set these indentured servants up with some land of their
own, some tools to work it, because they didn't survive
through their indenture. So if this system of indentured servitude, and the headright system
that gave planters more land for bringing over more servants, was working out so well for them, why did African slavery become the dominant form of labor in Virginia, starting about 1700? Now when we think about
tobacco cultivation, and later, cotton cultivation, in the American south
before the Civil War, what we think of is
enslaved African laborers. And indeed, by the year 1700, about 15% of the population
living in Virginia was enslaved Africans, going from just a handful at
the beginning of the century. So what caused this incredible transition in not only labor, but also racism, to happen in early America? Well there's one major
event that historians tend to point to as a turning
point in American slavery. And that is the rebellion led
by Nathaniel Bacon in 1676. So let's talk a little
bit more about that. So to understand Bacon's rebellion, we have to backtrack a little bit, and talk about the
development of political power and tobacco in Virginia. So in 1619, the Virginia
Company established the first government in Virginia. It was called the House of Burgesses. And this is really important
because it is, in effect, the first at least
semi-democratic form of government in the new world. In a way, it's kind of like a parliament that was set up for Virginia so that they could debate local issues. And it's going to be
the House of Burgesses and its later House of Delegates that ends up leading the charge
for the American Revolution more than a century later than this. But as we think about the
way that political power was distributed in Virginia, you can guess who might have a lot of say in the House of Burgesses, and these are the tobacco planters. So the government of Virginia, although it is a democracy
of these land-owning men, is still got most of the
power at the very top. 'Cause as we talked
about in the last video, the power system in Virginia looked like a handful of planters at the top, a very small number of free white farmers who had their own land, but
nothing like the gigantic tracts of tobacco plantations
that the planters had, then a whole lot of white
indentured servants, who have very little political power, since they are at basically
the mercy of the planters. And then, just a tiny
handful of black slaves. And in this time period,
white indentured servants and black slaves, black free
people, also a tiny number, didn't have that much difference when it came to political rights. In fact, white indentured
servants frequently complained that they felt that slaves
were treated better than them. Which may have been the case,
because they were worth more. Remember they were worth
hundreds of pounds, whereas white indentured servants cost just a couple of pounds
to come over, frequently died, so they were less of an
investment than slaves. The other important factor here is just what it takes to grow tobacco. Tobacco is a labor-intensive
crop, we know, but it's also kind of a
crop that is extremely hard on the soil. It depletes the soil fast. Which means that there is a
constant need for new soil. And when you're coming from the coast, here's our Atlantic Ocean over here, and this is Virginia, and our Jamestown colony
along the River James, more and more planters, as they come over, remember we have this headright system, we have a system that says
that if indentured servants finish out the terms of their indenture, they get land of their own, means there is constant pressure
to add more and more land so you can farm more and more tobacco. And you start going farther
and farther into the interior. So what does this mean? It means that land becomes
relatively scarce pretty fast. And it also means that as white settlers continue to move west toward
the Appalachian mountains, which are over here, I hope you enjoy this beautiful map, it's certainly a work of art, they are running up against
more and more anger and conflict with Native Americans who are living in between the coast and
the Appalachian mountains. And now it's definitely in the interest of the House of Burgesses, the
government here at Jamestown, to make sure that there
is as little conflict with Native Americans as possible. Remember we had these wars of
extinction with the Powhatans. That wasn't a fun time for anyone. And so the House of Burgesses, which is now somewhat responsible
to the King of England, since he acquired it
from the Virginia Company as a royal colony in 1624, they have a relatively friendly attitude toward the Native Americans. They're hoping to avoid conflict. And so their governor, Governor William Berkeley, spelled Berkeley but pronounced
Barkley, I don't know why. He refuses to take on
another war of extinction against the Native Americans, which makes a lot of white
servants and white freeman pretty angry. It's the late 1600s now, and more and more of
these indentured servants are living to finish out
their terms of indenture. They have now built up some
immunity to these diseases that have killed so many
other people in Virginia. And they're finding it
really hard to make a living because the planters don't want to give quite so many rights, quite so many perks, to people who live out their indentures. Remember this was a good deal for planters when these white servants
never actually survived to make good on the promises of land. And now that they are, planters
don't want to extend them things like a promise of land, because land is already scarce. So when servants are
finishing up their indentures, they're finding it
difficult to make a living. They often have to continue to work for the planter they
had been indentured to for very small wages, they don't have land of their own, they can't get started. And this is a world composed
almost entirely of men, so they can't even find women to marry. And I think if there's
anything we've learned from U.S. history, it's that you never want a whole lot of unemployed,
angry, young men hanging about, because young men with a
lot of time on their hands get up to trouble. And one young man in particular was this fellow here, Nathaniel Bacon, who was incensed at
Governor Berkeley's refusal to take a harsher stance against the Native Americans on the west, where all of these white farmers wished that they could settle. And so he gets up a militia, full of young white men, and also African American men, to actually go after the Native Americans. So this is a biracial raid
force for Native Americans, and they raid Native American villages, and kill many Native
Americans living in the area, and Governor Berkeley wants them to stop. And instead of stopping,
they marched to Jamestown, the capital of Virginia,
and set it on fire. So this is a group of landless white men, landless African American men, who have rebelled against the government of Virginia. These are my flames,
the House of Burgesses. They run Berkeley out of town. And it's hard to know where
this would have ended, because Nathaniel Bacon himself died. And he died of illness, like many other Virginians
in this time period, so the rebellion kind of petered
out without his leadership. But clearly this was a really scary moment for the House of Burgesses, and for the leaders and
planters in Virginia. And they started to think, alright well maybe this
indentured servitude thing isn't working out so well, because once these indentures are up, we've got this whole set
of landless free whites who technically have the
rights of Englishmen, but we have little work for them, we have little land for them, and it's going to end up
with constant rebellion. So maybe we should think about
a different source of labor. One that will never get its freedom. And it just so happened that there were many such laborers for sale on the coast of west Africa. And we'll talk more about
that in the next video.