69 |
109. |
Bacon's followers surrender upon articles, |
69 |
110. |
The agents compound with the proprietors, |
69 |
111. |
A new charter to Virginia, |
70 |
112. |
Soldiers arrive from England, |
70 |
113. |
The dissolution by Bacon's rebellion, |
70 |
114. |
Commissioners arrive in Virginia, and Sir William Berkeley returns to England, |
71 |
115. |
Herbert Jeffreys, esq., governor, concludes peace with Indians, |
71 |
116. |
Sir Henry Chicheley, deputy governor, builds forts against Indians, |
71 |
|
The assembly prohibited the importation of tobacco, |
72 |
117. |
Lord Colepepper, governor, |
72 |
118. |
Lord Colepepper's first assembly, |
72 |
|
He passes several obliging acts to the country, |
72 |
119. |
He doubles the governor's salary, |
72 |
120. |
He imposes the perquisite of ship money, |
73 |
121. |
He, by proclamation, raises the value of Spanish coins, and lowers it again, |
73 |
122. |
Sir Henry Chicheley, deputy governor, |
74 |
|
The plant cutting, |
74 |
123. |
Lord Colepepper's second assembly, |
75 |
|
He takes away appeals to the assembly, |
75 |
124. |
His advantage thereby in the propriety of the Northern Neck, |
76 |
125. |
He retrenches the new methods of court proceedings, |
77 |
126. |
He dismantled the forts on the heads of rivers, and appointed rangers in their stead, |
77 |
127. |
Secretary Spencer, president, |
77 |
128. |
Lord Effingham, governor, |
77 |
|
Some of his extraordinary methods of getting money, |
77 |
|
Complaints against him, |
78 |
129. |
Duty on liquors first raised, |
78 |
130. |
Court of Chancery by Lord Effingham, |
78 |
131. |
Colonel Bacon, president, |
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