Collections of the New Jersey Historical Society, Volume 3The Society, 1849 - Local history |
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Page 53
... Morris was dismissed from being of the Council by my Lord , but that it was more than my Lord had power to do . " Such was Lord Cornbury's notion of sedition . That the words spoken were true , was probably deemed an aggravation of the ...
... Morris was dismissed from being of the Council by my Lord , but that it was more than my Lord had power to do . " Such was Lord Cornbury's notion of sedition . That the words spoken were true , was probably deemed an aggravation of the ...
Page 61
... Morris , who had been ex- pelled by the Governor for his refractory conduct . And certainly , a more pliant and submissive coun- cillor than Mompesson , Lord Cornbury could not have desired . All who are at all familiar with the history ...
... Morris , who had been ex- pelled by the Governor for his refractory conduct . And certainly , a more pliant and submissive coun- cillor than Mompesson , Lord Cornbury could not have desired . All who are at all familiar with the history ...
Page 62
... Morris , who after his expulsion from the Council , had been returned as a member of Assembly ; and it was certainly couched in no very courtly style , nor expressed in very measured terms . Various were the counts in this indictment ...
... Morris , who after his expulsion from the Council , had been returned as a member of Assembly ; and it was certainly couched in no very courtly style , nor expressed in very measured terms . Various were the counts in this indictment ...
Page 68
... Morris - men known neither to have good principles , nor good morals - who have ventured to accuse a Governor of such crimes , without any proof to make out their accusation ; but they are capable of any thing but good . " " I was going ...
... Morris - men known neither to have good principles , nor good morals - who have ventured to accuse a Governor of such crimes , without any proof to make out their accusation ; but they are capable of any thing but good . " " I was going ...
Page 69
... Morris , and Samuel Jenings a Quaker - men notoriously known to be uneasy under all govern- ment - men never known to be consistent with themselves - men to whom all the factions and con- fusions in the Government of New Jersey and ...
... Morris , and Samuel Jenings a Quaker - men notoriously known to be uneasy under all govern- ment - men never known to be consistent with themselves - men to whom all the factions and con- fusions in the Government of New Jersey and ...
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Common terms and phrases
Act of Parliament administration Amboy Attorney Bench Bergen Burlington Cape-May Causes charge Chief Justice Colonies Commission Commissioners for Trade Constable Constitution Cornbury's Coun Council County Courts Court of Chancery Court of Common Court of Judicature Court of Sessions Court-house Daniel Coxe Declaration Defendant East Elizabethtown England Execution Forty Shillings fourth Monday fourth Tuesday Freehold Government Governor Hunter Grand Jury Grants and Concessions held hereby further Ordain House Impowered Indictment Inhabitants James Kinsey Jeremiah Basse Judges Judgment land lawyers Lewis Morris Lord Cornbury Loving Subjects Mompesson Morris New-York Newark Ordain and Direct Peace Penn Pennsylvania Perth-Amboy Pinhorne Proprietors Province of New-Jersey Province of Nova-Cęsarea publick Quakers Reign respective County Robert Hunter Morris says second Monday second Tuesday Smith's N. J. Supreme Court thereof third Monday third Tuesday thought fit Thursday next ensuing tion Trade and Plantations vince West Jersey Whereas William York