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Moving - Accomac, Virginia
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Enjoy our brief history of the Accomac,
VA area.
A Brief History of Accomac Virginia
By general consent, the most important
event in the history of the Colony of Virginia prior to the
American Revolution was the rebellion ]ed by Nathaniel
Bacon, Jr., against Sir William Berkeley, the Royal Governor
of the Colony. It was the first armed resistance offered by
Americans to the constituted authorities of the mother
country, and interest in the movement is still further
enhanced by the fact that it occurred just one hundred years
before the adoption of the Declaration of Independence.
The ideas prevailing at that time among
the English people were not very favorable to the heroic
enterprise of the dauntless young rebel and his
liberty-loving followers; yet the doctrine of the divine
right of kings, so prevalent in the days of James the First,
had received a rude shock in the execution of Charles the
First, and in the iron rule of Cromwell and the Roundheads.
Bacon's Rebellion occurred in Virginia at a time when the
reaction against Puritanism was at its height, and when the
withering invective and merciless ridicule heaped upon the
Puritans by Samuel Butler in Hudibras was in the mouth of
every cavalier in America as well as in England. The great
principle had, however, been boldly proclaimed and
successfully established that the English people would not
again submit to the arbitrary and tyrannical rulers, and
that the divine right to rule is inherent not in kings, but
in the people.
Bacon's Rebellion was not an attempt to
establish a new or independent form of government. It was an
armed opposition to the policy of Sir William Berkeley, his
Sacred Majesty's Governor and CaptainGeneral of Virginia,
having for its object the redress of certain pressing
grievances under which the people of the Colony were then
suffering. The Indian massacres on the frontiers and the
governor's persistent refusal to take measures to punish the
savages fanned into the flame of rebellion the discontent
felt by the colonists in consequence of the oppressive
navigation laws, by which England had created for herself a
monopoly of the trade in all the Anglo-American colonies.
With these two causes of discontent removed, the Rebellion
of 1676 would have found but few adherents in any section of
Virginia. There was one part of the Colony, which by reason
of its remote and isolated situation and its peculiar
geographical conditions suffered but little annoyance from
the navigation laws and was entirely free from Indian
incursions and massacres. This was the Eastern Shore of
Virginia, frequently called by the old chroniclers "The
Kingdom of Accomack." The purpose of this paper is to show
by extracts from the early records of Accomac county court
the part played by the people of that county in Bacon's
Rebellion.
Our Virginia historians, following the
highly-colored contemporaneous account of the Rebellion
contained in the famous "T. M." manuscript,1 have without
exception misconceived and mis-stated the attitude of the
Eastern Shore in this stirring episode of our colonial
history. It is known that Sir William Berkeley, during the
short period of the Rebellion, was twice driven from
Jamestown, then the seat of government in the Colony, and
forced to take shelter among his friends in Accomac, which
he considered the last refuge of the loyal cause in
Virginia. All the historians of Virginia agree in stating
that Sir William Berkeley on arriving in Accomac, found all
the people disaffected towards him except a few fellows of
the baser sort, 'longshoremen and adventurers, whom a desire
for plunder drew to follow the fortunes of the impetuous old
governor; and even Mr. George Bancroft, evidently following
our Virginia authorities, informs us in his monumental work
that "Sir William Berkeley collected in Accomac a crowd of
base and cowardly followers, allured by the passion for
plundering, promising freedom to the servants and slaves of
the insurgents if they would rally to his banner" (Vide
Bancroft's Hist., Vol. I, p.465). An examination of the
records of Accomac county court, covering the periods of
Bacon's Rebellion, and the subsequent year will controvert
the foregoing view and convince any unbiased mind that the
people of Accomac received the Royal Governor with open
arms, and hazarded their lives and fortunes for the success
of his cause.
From these ancient records we learn that
when the news of the Rebellion reached Accomac, steps were
taken to increase the military forces of the county, and
commissaries were commissioned and sent out to collect
supplies for maintaining the governor's troops. The men
engaged in these operations were among the best, wealthiest
and most influential in the Colony, and the readiness with
which the people responded to their demands shows how loyal
the people of the Eastern Shore were to their governor, who,
in their eyes at least, was more sinned against than
sinning. With the exception of the orders for the raising of
troops and the impressment of provisions, no mention is made
of the Rebellion in the records that cover the period of
hostilities. As Sir William Berkeley was present in Accomac
the greater part of the time, he evidently took affairs into
his own hands, and adopted such measures as he deemed best
adapted to insure his own safety and the ultimate triumph of
his fortunes. Hence we find that during the Rebellion the
court records of Accomac are scanty. Of the proceedings of
Sir William Berkeley and his council while on the Eastern
Shore no record has been preserved, and it is not probable
that any was made. As soon, however, as the Rebellion
collapsed by reason of Bacon's untimely and mysterious
death, and the civil courts resumed their duties, the old
county records of Accomac teem with entries that fix the
attitude of the Accomackians in the great struggle and
attest the services rendered by them to the royal cause.

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