The Virginia House of Burgesses was formed initially as part of a series of government reforms at Jamestown colony. Owned by the Virginia Company[?] of London, England, the Jamestown colony only had around 1,000 colonists by 1619, so the Virginia Company made changes that the company hoped would make the colony more profitable. The Virginia Company established English Common Law, encouraged private investment from Jamestown settlers which allowed them to own their own land rather than simply being sharecroppers, and the creation of a legislative body similar to the British Parliament that would meet once annually.
Prompted by the Virginia Company, colonial governor George Yeardley[?] helped facilitate elections of representatives, or burgesses, to this new legislative body that would come from eleven Virginia boroughs adjacent to the James River, along with eleven additional burgesses.
The first meeting of the House of Burgesses occurred on July 30, 1619 at Jamestown, Virginia. The House of Burgesses became the first legislative body in the New World and would later be the foundation for later self-government in the American Colonies and, eventually, the United States of America.
The Virginia House of Burgesses became the House of Delegates in 1776, which still operates today along with the Virginia State Senate to make up the legislative branch of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
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