Author Topic: What was the reason for Bacon's Rebellion?  (Read 917 times)

My teacher said not to Google it, she didn't say to not ask the blockland forums.

Bacon's Rebellion was an uprising in 1676 in the Virginia Colony in North America, led by a 29-year-old planter, Nathaniel Bacon.
It was the first rebellion in the American colonies in which discontented frontiersmen took part; a similar uprising in Maryland would take place later that year. About a thousand Virginians (including former indentured servants, poor whites and poor blacks) rose up in arms against the rule of Virginia Governor William Berkeley. Berkeley had recently refused to retaliate for a series of Indian attacks on frontier settlements. This prompted some to take matters into their own hands, attacking Native Americans, chasing Berkeley from Jamestown, Virginia, and ultimately torching the capital. Modern historians have suggested it may in fact have been a power play by Bacon against Berkeley and his favoritism towards certain members of court. Bacon's financial backers included men of wealth from outside Berkeley's circle of influence.[1]
The alliance between former indentured servants and Africans disturbed the ruling class, who responded by hardening the racial caste of slavery.[2][3][1] While the farmers did not succeed in their goal of driving Native Americans from Virginia, the rebellion did result in Berkeley being recalled to England.

Bacon's Rebellion is when hundreds of Pigs took to the streets with picket signs and banners that said Meat Eaters were bad and must be removed from the earth.

Huge amounts of conflict. They had to call in the Marines.

yeah but the Blockland Forums is gonna google it you dummy


thus making the information from google

yeah but the Blockland Forums is gonna google it you dummy


thus making the information from google
LOOPHOLES

My teacher said not to Google it
If your teacher told you to do this for any other reason than just for fun, your teacher is dumb.

LOOPHOLES
He could have used Yahoo. Or Bing. Or DuckDuckGo. Or Ask. Or Wikipedia.

I still don't see why your teachers don't let you Google info.
That's just handicapped. Most school computers I see run off of the Google search engine or Google Chrome.

Go onto wikipedia: Whenever there is a mistake/troll, it is usually fixed within 5 minutes. So if something on the page looks funny just refresh it and it will bew fine.

The longest-lasting error on wikipedia only lasted a week.

And google isn't that bad, as long as you can check that the website has a credible source.



The longest-lasting error on wikipedia only lasted a week
[citation needed]

When I was like 6, I added my picture to some actor's wiki page and it stayed like that for weeks.

Wikipedia has gotten better since you were six. :/

Wikipedia has gotten better since you were six. :/
Where did he mention a time-period?

Well, his first line was present tense, and since we're living in the present, I'm not seeing the relevance of something that happened eight years ago. I suppose he misspoke, but you seem to be implying that Wikipedia is still unreliable. If I'm inferring something you didn't mean, I apologize.