1 / 19

NC Rebellions

NC Rebellions. Rebellions/Conflict. Bacon’s Rebellion Culpepper Rebellion Cary Rebellion Tuscarora War. Colonial Government and Rebellion. Few could vote Only men White, 21 years old Property owners (50 acres). 1. Bacon’s Rebellion. 1676 in the Virginia Colony

winola
Download Presentation

NC Rebellions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NC Rebellions

  2. Rebellions/Conflict • Bacon’s Rebellion • Culpepper Rebellion • Cary Rebellion • Tuscarora War

  3. Colonial Government and Rebellion • Few could vote • Only men • White, 21 years old • Property owners (50 acres)

  4. 1. Bacon’s Rebellion • 1676 in the Virginia Colony • Nathaniel Bacon – Planter from England • Angry with Governor Berkeley

  5. Bacon’s Rebellion • 1676: Greed in Virginia for rich farmlands pushes settlers into conflict with natives • Settlers desire to move onto treaty-protected lands • 29 year-old Nathaniel Bacon petitions gov’t to approve war with natives

  6. Bacon’s Rebellion • Unhappy about low tobacco prices, limits on voting rights, rule by an aristocratic minority, and lack of protection from the Native Americans

  7. Bacon’s Rebellion • Governor refuses, Bacon attacks anyway • Eventually, Bacon sees the Gov’t as a obstacle • Bacon wages war on the gov’t and burns down the capital (Jamestown) • Bacon dies of dysentery, rebellion eventually fades out • Largely unsuccessful, but Berkeley (governor) did step down

  8. 2. Culpeper’s Rebellion • 1677 – rebellion against the Navigation Acts • Monopolized colonial trade for England (only English merchants and ships to England) • Tariffs/Export Taxes placed on colonial products • Tobacco was usually shipped to Boston and other goods to the West Indies

  9. 3. Cary’s Rebellion • The Vestry Act and Test Act • Designed to ensure Anglican rule • Vestry Act – new tax used to build Anglican Churches • Test Act – elected officials must swear on bible to uphold Anglican faith

  10. Quakers, Lutherans, and Catholics • All offended and angered • Quakers protest by petitioning Lord Proprietors • Thomas Cary (Governor) is fired, Edward Hyde replaced him • Attempts to enforce acts

  11. Cary’s Rebellion • Cary supported Quakers and religious dissenters • Hoped to get his job back • Elections held (1708), Cary wins! • 1708-1711 – Cary allows Quakers to hold office without swearing

  12. Thomas Cary

  13. English Response • Cary replaced with Hyde • Cary sailed on Pamlico, fired on Hyde’s home • Caused major disruption in Carolina, represented a diminished role for Quakers in state politics

  14. 4. Tuscarora • Native American territory to west • Used as slaves by colonists • Population decline from 120,000 to 16,000 in a century • New technology = guns, glass beads, clothing, alcohol, etc..

  15. Buildup to War • 1711 – New Bern settled in Tuscarora territory • John Lawson, Christoph von Graffenreid and an African slave leave on expedition into Tuscarora territory • Captured, Lawson killed – others were released later

  16. The Tuscarora War • Tuscarora decide to try to push Europeans out of Carolina • Grievances: • Kidnapping and enslaving their people • Alcohol • Cheated during trade • Poor treatment by Europeans

  17. The Tuscarora War • Native Americans attack Bath County • Plan to destroy all plantation • Hundreds killed (even children) • Women and children taken as slaves • Dead left for dogs and vultures

  18. Results • NC calls for aid from South Carolina and Virginia • 1713 – South Carolina responds with Catawba and Yamassee Indians • Tuscarora defeated at Ft. Neoheroka • 1000 were killed/enslaved, forced out of NC to NY

More Related