Nathaniel Bacon and a group of five-hundred militiamen marched toward a quiet peaceful Native American settlement. These Native Americans were the Pamunkey people, allies to the colonist of Jamestown. Bacon and his men soon reached the the opening to the village and began to open fire. Bacon 's Rebellion began in 1676 in the colony of Jamestown. This rebellion was a revolt lead by a young Englishman named Nathaniel Bacon against Governor Sir William Berkeley. At the time many citizens in Jamestown where in fear of the Native Americans due to recent misunderstood battle between the tribes and the colonist. The yeomen farmers outraged by the rise in tax, dropping prices of tobacco and the fact that they weren 't receiving any protection …show more content…
Bacon and many angered farmers and colonist made two successful attacks on friendly Native Americans tribes. These two attacks lead to fighting and hysteria in the colony, yet the causes of Bacon’s rebellion had escalated for over a year before the actual attacks even began.
The events leading up to Bacon 's rebellion really began in 1674 when a wealthy English aristocrat named Nathaniel Bacon 's arrived with his wife in the colony of Jamestown. Soon after his arrival Bacon purchased the Curles Neck tobacco Plantation in Henrico (located about 30 miles upriver on the north bank of the James River) and began harvesting Tobacco. Bacon and other yeomen farmers were frequently in conflict with the Native Americans and after some time demanded that the Native Americans
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Although Bacon 's rebellion was a brutal time in U.S. history with the murder of innocent Native Americans it did leave an important impact on U.S history. Bacon 's Rebellion was the first rebellion in the colonies and it displayed to colonist they did not always have to abide by English rule. All though this rebellion did not create a perfect outcome it gave colonist courage to stand up for what they believed in, and this courage later lead to the Revolutionary War, which made us the United States the country it is today. Some could argue that without Bacon’s Rebellion we might still be an English colony to