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How Virginia Accidentally Invented American Politics

Let’s set the scene: it’s July 1619 in Jamestown, Virginia. The summer is brutally hot, the mosquitoes are relentless, and the food situation…well, let’s just say no one is writing rave reviews on Yelp. The colony has been stumbling along for twelve years, ruled mostly by officials sent from England who think they know what’s best, but don’t actually live in the swampy mess of Jamestown.

The Virginia Company, which basically owns the colony like a business investment, realizes something: if they don’t give the settlers a reason to stay alive (and pay taxes), the whole project might collapse. Their solution? Let the colonists have a say in their own laws.

So, Governor Sir George Yeardley calls everyone together. On July 30, 1619, in a little wooden church in Jamestown, 22 elected representatives—called burgesses—shuffled in to join the governor and his council. And just like that, the Virginia General Assembly is born.

What did they talk about? Oh, the usual: setting tobacco prices (their cash crop), figuring out how to trade without starting a war with the neighbors, and making rules about things like laziness and gambling. Imagine your HOA meeting, but with fewer snacks and a lot more survival on the line.

At first, everyone sat in the same room—governor, council, and burgesses together. But by 1643, they realized this wasn’t working. The solution? Copy England’s Parliament and split it into two houses: the House of Burgesses (the elected folks) and the Council of State (the governor’s chosen pals). Congratulations, Virginia—you’ve just invented bicameral politics in America!

Now, let’s be clear: this wasn’t democracy for all. Women, Indigenous people, enslaved Africans (who also first arrived in Virginia in 1619), and poor indentured servants weren’t invited to the table. But the idea that everyday colonists could elect representatives was groundbreaking. It planted the seed that would later grow into the cry of “No taxation without representation!” more than a century down the line.

And so, under the buzzing of mosquitoes in a tiny Jamestown church, America’s oldest legislative body took its first, sweaty steps. The Virginia General Assembly still meets today—thankfully in air-conditioned buildings, not wooden chapels surrounded by swamps.

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