Preview

Forced Founders

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1004 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Forced Founders
Forced Founders In Forced Founders by Woody Holton, Holton argues that Indian and slave rebellions were the primary force in the Independence movement in Virginia. It is commonly believed that the land-owning gentry class prompted the revolution in Virginia. Nevertheless, Holton shows how slaves, American Indians, and debtors may have actually played a much greater part in the Independence movement than popular history suggests. Holton?s contention is that class conflict acted as a powerful catalyst in the revolutionary movement as the wealthy land owners such as George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were forced into joining the revolution on account of controlling the Indian rebellions on the Western front and the slave rebels at home.

The Native American tribes in the Western frontier played a major role in the Virginia revolutionary movement. The elite Virginian gentry?s desire for Western Native American lands rapidly grew in the mid-eighteenth century. The wealthy Virginians made many attempts to attain these lands and the Native Americans resisted hard to defend what their land. Furthermore, the British government was more accommodating to the Natives than the Virginians wished. Parliament was careful not to incense native tribes for fear of a costly war or rebellion. A British official exclaimed that Indian rebellions (specifically Pontiac?s Rebellion) were ?expensive and destructive to his Majesty?s Subjects.? For example, in October 1768, the British imposed the Treaty of Hard Labor, which resulted in the Cherokee Indians retaining land that Virginian Thomas Jefferson had claimed. Two more major British treaties enraged the Virginia land speculators. The treaty of Easton in 1758 decreed all lands west of the Appalachian Mountains to the Indians. This treaty caused problems for many speculators and farming companies. However, the major calamity to the Virginian gentry was the Proclamation of 1763. Although the proclamation did little to stop settlers from

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Woody Holton’s book “Forced Founders” gives a look on how enslaved Africans and Native Americans were compelled toward independence against their will and own interest. Holton’s account of the forced founders are the Virginia gentry: “ In complex ways and without intending to, Indians, merchants and slaves helped drive gentlemen…into the rebellion against Britain”(xvii). This story tells of three primary causes propelling and compelling the Virginia gentry.…

    • 433 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Single men ranging from the ages of 14 to 51 primarily populated the Chesapeake region. This set the social structures from slaves, gold seekers, small plantation owners, and wealthy plantation owners. Many of these emigrants would give up their money, spare clothes, and credit to pay bills, jewelry, all to acquire land. The rich soil of the land made it possible for them to prosper. Their main focus was profit, planting, selling tobacco, and digging gold. The profit filled the English men of the Virginia Company to America with their hearts in hope for gold and their minds set on finding gold and nothing else. These people had their mind set so forth that they saw no need for government regulation of the economy. With all of this being said the Virginia joint stock company was developed to make profit and trade. Their government tried to encourage migration to their region by establishing the head right system where they would give land to those who choose to settle in the region but this did not target everyone. The fight for land led to the Bacons Rebellion, single young men with lost hopes of acquiring land decided to fight for land. They went on their own to acquire land, putting the law into their own hands. This highlighted the need for a regulated government. As a result the House of Burgesses came to make an effort to make the colony more profitable and set a common law so that men can own their own land.…

    • 835 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Woody Holton’s book, “Forced Founder’s,” the traditional idea that the Virginia’s involvement in the revolution was led by the great land owning elite, like George Washington is questioned. Instead, Holton offers the theory that Indians, merchants, slaves, and debtors thrust Virginia into the independence movement, and the gentry’s motives for joining the revolution were those of maintaining power not liberty.…

    • 601 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Gentlemen of the Colonial Assembly, it has come to the attention of the Virginia Assembly that the treatment and of the Native people and destruction of their home has left Europe’s relationship with the Native unsavory. For the greater good of this country it is necessary to take action in repairing that relationship. So much blood shed on both sides over the many differences that define us have caused society in the new world to falter. It is necessary to cast aside the differences that divide the colonies from the Native people in order to strive to create an alliance with the natives and persuade them for peace. The devastation rebellion has caused the colonies to look weak and unable to defend itself. Through the actions of relocation, education and representation, and possible militarization as an extra precaution can the colonies build better relations with the Native people.…

    • 534 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    DBQ #2

    • 872 Words
    • 4 Pages

    During the first half of the 17th century, peace was a prevalent approach between the colonists and the Indians. It had become apparent that after some while of interaction, both the Indian tribe and the colonists had become dependent upon one another for the sustainment of life, not so much the Indians as the colonists. Various American settlements, such as Massachusetts, were regulating laws to sustain peace, in the year of 1647, as mentioned in Document D. The Court orders that all colonists must keep their cattle away from the lands of the Indians, and should keep them from destroying any property which may belong to the Indians. The Court of Massachusetts had also provided a freedom of worship to the Indians, as long as the worship had not taken place on any jurisdiction of the colony. To provide more input about the peaceful relations in the early 17th century between both groups of people, Document B, written in 1622, allows the reader to see another form of perspective from the Virginia Company of London. Document B states that those who had once dined and helped the colony’s people were turned against by the very people who were aided-the colonists had turned against the Indians after the peaceful relations that once occurred.…

    • 872 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As a whole, European settlers and Native Americans were constantly clashing over ‘ownership’ of land, as well as simple quarrelling in general. Between the spread of disease and multiple wars involving the foreigners and natives, the Native American population in the 17th and 18th centuries was on a decline. Additionally, there was a major loss in Native American culture due to the Christianization of the Indians by European missionaries and an increase in trade. European explorers and settlers had a negative impact on American Indians because of the massive loss of life, whether because of war or disease, and a loss of culture amongst the people.…

    • 630 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Instead of becoming havens for the English poor and unemployed, or models of interracial harmony, the southern colonies of seventeenth-century North America were weakened by disease, wracked by recurring conflicts with Native Americans, and disrupted by profit-hungry planters’ exploitation of poor whites and blacks alike. Many of the tragedies of Spanish colonization and England’s conquest of Ireland were repeated in the American South and the British Caribbean. Just as the English established their first outpost on Chesapeake Bay with a set of goals and strategies in mind, so too the native Indians of that region pursued their own aims and interests. They had recently been consolidated by the weroance (or chief), Powhatan, into a powerful confederacy. Powhatan used the English newcomers to advance his own longstanding objectives. Although he considered the colonists a nuisance, Powhatan welcomed trade goods and English weapons as a means to consolidate his political authority and to fend off challenges from the Piedmont tribes. The future of the English settlers, plagued by disease, starvation, and leadership struggles, did not seem secure. Powhatan could have destroyed them, but chose not to do so. Around the time of his death, the colonists’ efforts at tobacco farming began to take off, which eventually would have disastrous implications for Powhatan’s people. In the following decades, bloody wars broke out between the Indians and settlers, but the Virginia settlement began to stabilize; by 1650, it could claim some 15,000 colonists. Increasing demand for labor in the tobacco fields and a decrease in indentured servants caused a greater reliance of the enslavement of Indians and the importation of African slaves.…

    • 1433 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Woody Holton. Forced Founders: Indians, Debtors, Slaves and the Making of the American Revolution in Virginia. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1999.…

    • 1483 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hollitz Chapter 1

    • 689 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Although often viewed as inferior, savage and helpless, many historians are starting to discover the intelligence and wisdom the Indians had and shared with the colonists that came to America so long ago. As the settlers slowly began to create a new world on the already inhabited North America, they were plagued with starvation due to a severe drought in the area. Due to the dry lands and the settlers expectations to “rely on Indians for food and tribute,” (Norton 17) they were disappointed to find that the Indians were not so keen to handing out food and help to the strangers that have just come onto their land and begun to settle in such a time of severe weather and starvation. As time goes on, both the Indians and the Englishmen realize they both have what the other needs; tools from the white men and crops, land and knowledge from the Indians. As a result, the chief of Tsenacomoco, Powhatan, and colonist, Captain John Smith on an ideally peaceful, mutualistic relationship to ensure the survival of both civilizations. This agreement will leave the groups in cahoots for 100 of years leading to some disastrous scenarios and betrayals.…

    • 689 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Colonial Values

    • 988 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Not only did they show that befriending the Indians would prove to be valuable but also very deadly. The social plurality also had a factor in how the Indians responded to the colonies, whether they were welcoming, or hostile. These colonies showed the good and the bad of treating people who were native to the lands. Pennsylvania for example the people were very friendly towards the Indians that were occupying the lands. This kindliness and love created a bond between the Penn’s and the Indians that was not found in many colonies (Richard Townsend). Virginia was different. Although the governor of Virginia was friendly to the Indians, the Indians still attacked the people of the colony. The colonists, lead by Nathaniel Bacon, wanted the governor to attack the Indians and take vengeance for what had happened to the slain colonists. Berkley, the governor, did not attack, so the colonists took matters into their own hands and chased the governor out of town and attacked the Indians brutally (pg 68). This event was important for the educational value because it showed that rulers needed to listen to the people and act for the people to keep them under control and in the rulers favor. The social plurality in Virginia was that the Indians did not want the colonists there, so they attacked the colonists trying to rid them of lands only to create an uprising that killed many people. This shows that not all the…

    • 988 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Although the Revolution positively affected the lives of women and African Americans, there were negative consequences for Native Americans. Because the Proclamation Line was no longer valid, white settlers rushed into Native American territory. The flood of settlers induced conflicts with groups like the Cherokee and the Shawnee. Since many Native Americans had joined sides with the British in the Revolution, America claimed that the Native Americans had lost all their rights. Because of this, Native Americans were considered a “conquered” nation. The Native Americans didn’t have a representative at the Treaty of Paris and felt that they were not part of the ‘surrender’ agreement.…

    • 279 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    I want to investigate how Settler-Colonial Theory applies to both the Dawes Allotment Act of 1887 and the Native Lands Act of 1913, and how the theory can be used to explain the similarities of the consequences for the native populations despite the numerous differences in geography, native populations, governing nations, and attitudes between the colonizers and the colonized. Furthermore, I want to explore how native identities formulated native reactions to these acts, and if native identities were in any way shaped by the settler-colonial aspects of these acts. My specific research questions are further delineated…

    • 2062 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    War for Independence

    • 1119 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The thirteen colonies moved from peaceful resistance to outright war against the British government’s “reform” programs of new taxes and regulations during the period of (1764-1783). These new programs had a significant impact on the people of the colonies, and caused a great uproar. Protests broke out, and eventually the American Revolution came into the picture. I will explain some of the reasons colonists rebelled against the new reform programs, the roles African Americans played during the American Revolution, how the patriots achieved the unity needed to wage the War for Independence, and the impact the American Revolution had on the Native Americans.…

    • 1119 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Virginia and the end of the French and Indian war in 1763, a nation was being set up on…

    • 731 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    MY ASS

    • 2623 Words
    • 11 Pages

    One source of long-term conflict was the tension between the considerable freedom and self-government the colonists enjoyed in the American wilderness and their participation in the British Empire’s mercantile system. While British mercantilism actually provided economic benefits to the colonies along with certain liabilities, its limits on freedom and patronizing goal of keeping America in a state of perpetual economic adolescence stirred growing resentment.…

    • 2623 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Better Essays