2.What does Morgan argue about the effects of Bacon’s Rebellion on the plantation elite’s understanding of the utility of indentured versus enslaved labor?

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The correct answer to this open question is the following.

What historian Edward Morgan argued about the effects of Bacon’s Rebellion on the plantation elite’s understanding of the utility of indentured versus enslaved labor, was that he considered the revolt a kind of transition from American colonial time to the beginning of slavery in the Southern plantations.

In 1975, Edward Morgan wrote the book "American Slavery, American Freedom: The Ordeal of Colonial Virginia." In his work, Morgan refers to the many conflicts lived between the wealthy southern plantation owners and indentured servants.  

In 1676, in the colony of Virginia, Bacon's Rebellion was a revolt initiated by the people of Virginia, led by Nathaniel Bacon. These people protested against William Berkeley, the governor.

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