The
beginnings of American self government was present due to necessity and desire
combined. The colonists considered themselves English and drew many ideas from
what they already knew, including the English Bill of Rights and the Magna
Carta.
The
logistics of governing a people from across the Atlantic Ocean is not easy by
any means. Letters took months to arrive at the New World. Plus, the nobles and
king often had little idea of how life in the colonies was. This lack of
understanding and delay in communications made self-government necessary. One
of the earliest legislative councils set up was the House of Burgesses. The men
of the colony elected the men on the council.
The
philosopher John Locke, a popular writer at the time, heavily influenced these
colonists. The educated men of Jamestown had read the liberal Locke and many
were taken by his ideas of individualism and self-government for a happy life.
Two
documents from an earlier time in England were very influential on the
colonists. As English citizens they were of the opinion, despite geographical
location, that the writings applied to them. The Magna Carta was a contract
that made the King follow certain rules pertaining to the treatment of his
subjects. It gave them rather more control in the government by way of representatives.
The English Bill of Rights was a more personal document in the way it directed
the individual people of England. It bestowed undeniable rights to
common everyday people. The goal of this was to make sure nobles and future monarchs
couldn’t abuse their power on people less influential.
The people
of the early colonies found ways to establish a powerbase and a way of doing
things that benefitted them, rather than England as a whole. They gained their ideas from the previous free
thinkers and events in their own history.
Okay. Good info.
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