Bacon's Rebellion: The Boston Tea Party

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The American colonies had a hard life when first coming from England to the Americas, the Indian attacks and the starvation were just some of the difficulties they encountered. As time went by little by little they had an improvement of life, they lived longer then their European counterpart, which was the only good thing about living in the colonies. When the Triangular trade route was established the English received and finished the raw material, which made them more profitable. This could have been one cause because the colonist worked the field of cotton tobacco that they traded for Molasses and other material, when everything was said and done the English kept the gold and silver, and money. After The French and Indian war the English …show more content…
The British pass a series of laws known as the Intolerable Acts in reprisal of the Boston Tea Party. The colonists started to begin to think for themselves for the first time during the Great Awakening. One great show that the colonists were tired of the King ruling them was during Bacons Rebellion. One main factor that led to the rebellion was the Indian attack. Governor Berkeley denied the retaliation, and Nathanial Bacon thought otherwise. Colonist believed that they should push forward claiming more land but that as well was denied, this and the Indian attack caused the uprising that brought indentured servants and Africans together for the same goal. They didn’t succeed because most of them were hanged, but the rebellion resulted in Governor Berkeley being recalled back to England. One key person that know we see as one of the founding fathers was Thomas Jefferson because in his writings he wrote that people had rights, and those rights as a person were Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness. This was similar to John Locke but he believes that everyone had a right to property. Thomas Jefferson was the writer of the Declaration of Independence, and one of his influences was John