Collections of the New Jersey Historical Society, Volume 3The Society, 1849 - Local history |
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Page 14
... trade and traffic by sea and land , and which would occasion great concourse of people . " It was , as we have said , to be a Court of Equity as well as of Com- mon Law . But it was subsequently stripped of its Equity powers . For in ...
... trade and traffic by sea and land , and which would occasion great concourse of people . " It was , as we have said , to be a Court of Equity as well as of Com- mon Law . But it was subsequently stripped of its Equity powers . For in ...
Page 36
... trade , but this upon planting is unprecedented . The plain English of the tragedy is this ; we twice buy this moiety of New Jersey ; first of Lord Berkley , and next of the natives ; and for what ? The better to mortgage ourselves and ...
... trade , but this upon planting is unprecedented . The plain English of the tragedy is this ; we twice buy this moiety of New Jersey ; first of Lord Berkley , and next of the natives ; and for what ? The better to mortgage ourselves and ...
Page 106
... trade . " James Logan speaks of him as a " noted churchman , " but always in terms of respect . In one of his letters , he refers feelingly to his sud- den death , as " another instance how little anxious we ought to be about the ...
... trade . " James Logan speaks of him as a " noted churchman , " but always in terms of respect . In one of his letters , he refers feelingly to his sud- den death , as " another instance how little anxious we ought to be about the ...
Page 149
... Trade , a draft of which , bearing date on the twenty - ninth of March , 1754 , is among the Ruther- furd Collection of Papers . I am indebted to Mr. Whitehead for some interesting extracts from this letter , containing a variety of ...
... Trade , a draft of which , bearing date on the twenty - ninth of March , 1754 , is among the Ruther- furd Collection of Papers . I am indebted to Mr. Whitehead for some interesting extracts from this letter , containing a variety of ...
Page 156
... cellency . This may perhaps account for the dis- paraging terms in which he is spoken of by Robert Hunter Morris , in his letter to the Lords of Trade , before referred to . In 1748 , he was appointed 156 SAMUEL NEVILL .
... cellency . This may perhaps account for the dis- paraging terms in which he is spoken of by Robert Hunter Morris , in his letter to the Lords of Trade , before referred to . In 1748 , he was appointed 156 SAMUEL NEVILL .
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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