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v. 1. The Tidewater period, 1607-1710
v. 2. Westward expansion and prelude to Revolution, 1710-1763.

Vol. 1. Beginnings
The Charter of 1609 and the Starving Time
The "joviall weed"
The beginning of representative government
Maids and a massacre
The decline of the Virginia Company
Virginia becomes a Royal Colony
New frontiers and a mutiny
Royal Colony and Commonwealth, 1642-1660
Virginia under Commonwealth and Protectorate
Fifteen years of trouble
Explorations and tribulations
Indian war : the background of rebellion
Bacon's Rebellion : the June assembly of 1676
Bacon's Rebellion : civil war
Aftermath of rebellion
Governor Culpeper : tyranny continued
Lord Howard of Effingham
The Glorious Revolution of 1688
Sir Edmund Andros
The new capital at Middle Plantation
Huguenots and pirates
The recall of Nicholson
Governor Edward Nott
Vol. 2. Alexander Spotswood
Land grants and the Tobacco Law of 1713
Spotswood's Indian policy
Spotswood breaks with the Assembly
Spotswood opens the door to the West
Politicians and pirates
Spotswood and the Church
Spotswood : Virginia gentleman
Williamsburg : an incorporated city
Hugh Drysdale and Robert Carter
Governor William Gooch
Thirteen years of problems and progress
Westward expansion in the Rappahannock and Potomac basins
Westward expansion in the James and Roanoke river basins
Expansion beyond the Alleghenies
The coming of the Presbyterians
Robert Dinwiddie : background to war
The pistole fee controversy
The undeclared war with the French and Indians
Washington's first battle
Braddock's defeat on the Monongahela
Terror on the frontier
British reverses in America
Francis Fauquier and the end of the war
The Cherokee war in the south
The Proclamation of 1763 and financial problems
The Parsons' Cause : the clergy and the Commissary
The Parsons' Cause : the College and the Visitors
The Two-Penny Act, the clergy, and the Committee of Correspondence
The Parsons' Cause, the Committee of Correspondence, and the Constitution
Virginia in 1763.

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