Oppression1680
Virginia Act Prohibiting Negro Assemblies
Virginia enacted legislation in 1680 prohibiting enslaved people from carrying weapons, leaving their master's plantation without written permission, or gathering in groups. Violations were punishable by whipping. The law was a direct response to the cross-racial solidarity visible in Bacon's Rebellion and established the template of pass systems and assembly prohibitions that would govern Black movement in the South for nearly two centuries.