Examples of Governor William Berkeley in the following topics:
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- Bacon's Rebellion was an uprising in Virginia in 1676 against the colonial Governor's friendly policies toward Native Americans.
- About a thousand Virginians rose (including former indentured servants, poor whites, and poor blacks) because they resented Virginia Governor William Berkeley's friendly policies towards the Native Americans.
- Outnumbered, Berkeley retreated across the river.
- Governor Berkeley returned to power.
- Nathaniel Bacon led an uprising against Virginia Governor William Berkeley in 1676.
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- Sir William Berkeley, the governor of Virginia from 1642–1652 and 1660–1677, tried to push for diversification in the economic activities of the colony.
- Governor Berkeley was a royal insider from an early age, and his governorship reflected the royal interests of Charles I and Charles II.
- Berkeley successfully established autocratic authority over the colony.
- To protect this power, Berkeley refused new legislative elections for 14 years.
- Subsequently, Berkeley managed to eliminate the remaining rebels.
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- Rhode Island was formed as an English colony by Roger Williams and others fleeing prosecution from Puritans.
- When dissenters, including Puritan minister Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson, challenged Governor Winthrop in Massachusetts Bay in the 1630s, they were banished.
- In Massachusetts, Governor Winthrop noted her death as the righteous judgment of God against a heretic.
- The colonists refused to have a governor, instead setting up an elected "president" and council.
- He granted the request with the Royal Charter of 1663, giving the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations an elected governor and legislature.
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- In 1686, Sir Edmund Andros, the former governor of New York, was appointed as Dominion governor.
- Some of the officers, also supporters of the governor, abused the colonial militia they commanded.
- The resulting Province of Massachusetts Bay, whose charter was issued in 1691 and began operating in 1692 under governor Sir William Phips, combined the territories of both colonies, along with the islands south of Cape Cod (Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket, and the Elizabeth Islands) that had been part of New York.
- Darley, William L.
- Nicholson was deposed as lieutenant governor of the Dominion of New England when news of the Glorious Revolution reached North America.
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- They arrested dominion officials as a protest against the rule of Sir Edmund Andros, the governor of the Dominion of New England.
- Andros, commissioned governor of New England in 1686, had earned the enmity of the local populace by enforcing the restrictive Navigation Acts, denying the validity of existing land titles, restricting town meetings, and appointing unpopular regular officers to lead colonial militia, among other actions that were part of an attempt to bring the colonies under the closer control of the crown.
- Royal authority was not restored until 1691, when English troops and a new governor were sent to New York.
- Darley, William L.
- British Governor Andros was arrested by rebels in Boston in 1689.
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- In 1612, the governor of Virginia sentenced to death a person that denied the Trinity under Virginia's Laws Divine, Moral and Martial, which also outlawed blasphemy, speaking badly of ministers and royalty, and "disgraceful words."
- John Peter Zenger, a New York newspaper editor, began to voice opposition to several policies implemented by the newly appointed colonial governor, William Cosby.
- Supported by members of the popular party, Zenger's New-York Weekly Journal continued to publish critical attacks on the royal governor.
- Cosby was attacked by Zenger's paper for his actions while governor of New York.
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- Heathcock (Berkeley) and is drawn in brackets.
- Heathcock (Berkeley), in which all four possible aldol diastereomers were selectively prepared from the reaction of (S)-4-trimethylsiloxy-5,5-dimethyl-3-hexanone with an assortment of aldehydes, as summarized in the first diagram below.
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- The colonial government, established in 1682 by Penn's Frame of Government, consisted of an appointed governor, the proprietor, a Provincial Council, and a larger General Assembly.
- In 1701, it gained a separate assembly from the three upper counties but continued to have the same governor as the rest of Pennsylvania.
- William Penn had asked for and later received the lands of Delaware from the Duke of York.
- Benjamin West's painting (in 1771) of William Penn's 1682 treaty with the Lenni Lenape.
- William Penn, holding paper, standing and facing King Charles II, in the King's breakfast chamber at Whitehall.
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- John Peter Zenger, a New York newspaper editor, publicly opposed several policies implemented by the newly-appointed colonial governor William Cosby.
- Supported by members of the popular party, Zenger's New-York Weekly Journal published articles criticizing the royal governor.
- has never been made an express Crime. – I know not what Reason is if sapping and betraying the Liberties of a People be not Treason. – almost all over the Earth, the People for one Injury they do their Governor, receive Ten Thousand from them.
- Cosby was attacked by Zenger's paper for his actions while governor of New York
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- Vollhardt (Berkeley) has shown that dicarbonylcyclopentadienylcobalt provides a safer and more selective catalyst for this very useful synthesis (reaction # 2 ).