Nathaniel Bacon

American colonist
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Quick Facts
Born:
January 2, 1647, Suffolk, England
Died:
October 1676, Virginia [U.S.] (aged 29)

Nathaniel Bacon (born January 2, 1647, Suffolk, England—died October 1676, Virginia [U.S.]) was a Virginia planter and leader of Bacon’s Rebellion (1676), the first popular revolt in England’s North American colonies.

A kinsman of the famous Sir Francis Bacon, Nathaniel Bacon graduated from the University of Cambridge, toured the continent, and studied law at Gray’s Inn. Until shortly before his arrival in Virginia in 1674, Bacon was destined to the life of a country squire. His marriage to Elizabeth, daughter of Sir Edward Duke of Suffolk, was violently opposed by her father. Her disinheritance and the involvement of Bacon in a rather unsavory deal to defraud a neighbour of his inheritance contributed to Bacon’s decision to migrate to North America.

Financed by his father, Bacon acquired two estates along the James River in Virginia—a main plantation 40 miles (65 km) above Jamestown and an outer plantation at the present site of Richmond. By virtue of his social position and financial means, his kinship by marriage to Gov. William Berkeley, and the wealth and influence of his cousin Nathaniel Bacon, Sr., he was appointed to the governor’s council in less than one year after his arrival in the colony.

Berkeley and Bacon’s cordial relationship was short-lived. In part their differences seem to have been a result of personality conflicts between two ambitious and strong-minded men—an irascible, opinionated, aging, cautious, and avaricious governor and his youthful, ambitious, impetuous, and demagogic cousin by marriage. The initial dispute arose over the Indian policy espoused by Berkeley.

Bacon endorsed a policy of removing all Indians in the interest of unlimited territorial expansion and as a revenge for earlier Native American attacks on the frontier settlements. Berkeley, influenced by fear of a general Indian war, a sense of justice, a concern for trade with Native Americans, and a desire to avoid the costs of a major conflict, advocated a policy of caution.

In defiance of Berkeley, in 1676 Bacon organized an expedition against the Indians. At the start the governor branded Bacon a rebel, but he was soon forced by public pressure to give Bacon a commission. Later Berkeley again denounced Bacon’s activities as rebellious and launched several military expeditions against Bacon and the 60 or so colonists who had followed him in retaliatory raids on the Native Americans. Bacon managed to seize control of the government for a time and called a reform assembly to repeal low tobacco price scales and high taxes.

At the height of his power in late 1676, however, Bacon died of fever, and the rebellion collapsed soon afterward. Because he exploited the colonial grievances that stemmed in part from the arbitrary, self-perpetuating, and privilege-seeking nature of Berkeley’s government, Bacon sometimes has been pictured by some historians as a democratic reformer and forerunner of the American Revolution.

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