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Gulliver's Travels is a classic tale of adventure with a dash of what-the-heck-is-happening thrown in for good measure.
Meet Charles Darnay, the nobleman who spends more time on trial and in prison than attending balls and drinking expensive wine. Don't feel too bad...
House of Burgesses 4751 Views
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Description:
Formed by the Virginia Company, the House of Burgesses was formed to govern the colonies. Over the years, it transformed into the government we have today. Aw, growth.
Transcript
- 00:07
House of Burgesses
- 00:09
Any time you start a venture or organize a group, you have to institute some rules.
- 00:18
Otherwise, your brand spanking new treehouse can quickly devolve into a treehouse of horrors.
- 00:30
It goes without saying -- but we'll say it anyway --
- 00:35
that if you're going to start your own country...
Full Transcript
- 00:37
... you're going to want to have rules up the wazoo.
- 00:41
And you're going to need a governing body to enforce and uphold those rules.
- 00:47
Because not too many nations have had success with the "free-for-all" approach.
- 00:53
Once American colonists realized they'd need one of those government thing-a-ma-bobs...
- 00:59
... the House of Burgesses was formed.
- 01:03
It was established by a company called The Virginia Company...
- 01:05
...that had previously been involved with establishing settlements in the New World.
- 01:12
These guys had their hands in everything.
- 01:16
The Virginia Company also came up with the "headright" system,
- 01:20
which was not an early GPS prototype.
- 01:24
The headright system offered those considering a move to the New World
- 01:27
50 acres of land if they took the leap.
- 01:31
Way to wave that carrot in front of their noses.
- 01:35
Most of the funding for the House of Burgesses
- 01:37
came from wealthy capitalists...
- 01:39
...who hoped to double their net worth by investing in New World settlements and goods.
- 01:47
The burgess was the name given to the elected representatives from each town...
- 01:52
...but those representatives were usually members of the gentry --
- 01:57
-- the wealthy investors who had a ton of influence.
- 02:03
For the most part, the towns were comprised of lower-class farmers....
- 02:08
...although some of their co-workers were even lower-class.
- 02:16
The House adapted a form of government called English Common Law...
- 02:20
... in which representatives were chosen from the large settlements or plantations.
- 02:27
The House of Burgesses was the first government system of its kind in North America...
- 02:33
... if you don't count the Indians.
- 02:35
Why not? No one else did.
- 02:38
Anyway, the three parties that met to decide all things important were the Governor --
- 02:43
who was crown appointed, the Councilmen, and the Burgess.
- 02:50
You could only vote if you were a white male over the age of 17.
- 02:54
But we're sure that law was totally arbitrary. They probably spun a wheel or something.
- 03:02
So the colonists' new system was certainly different from back in merry old England,
- 03:07
but it wasn't actually that different.
- 03:09
Yeah, England had the whole royalty thing going,
- 03:12
but their government was actually separate from the constitutional monarchy.
- 03:23
The early American government's ideals were
- 03:25
reflected in the formation of its founding documents.
- 03:28
The House didn't last long though.
- 03:32
It supported rebellion against the Monarchy back in the mother land;
- 03:42
Even with their own government, the colonists were still living in what was technically
- 03:45
a colony of England... ...and for some reason, England wasn't too
- 03:49
keen on all the "uprising" talk.
- 03:55
The House of Burgesses may have died, but its famous alumni lived on...
- 04:00
...among them are many of our founding fathers.
- 04:05
Sadly, most of them are no longer around to attend the reunion.
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