ORDINANCES OF THE CORPORATION OF GEORGETOWN. WITH AN APPENDIX, CONTAINING THE LAW FOR LAYING OUT THE TOWN, THE ORIGINAL AND SUPPLEMENTARY CHARTERS, THE ACT OF CESSION, AND SUCH OTHER LAWS OF MARYLAND AS RELATE IMMEDIATELY TO THE TOWN; AND SUNDRY ACTS OF CONGRESS RELATING TO THE TOWN, AND DISTRICT GENERALLY - Rare Book Insider
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[Georgetown]

ORDINANCES OF THE CORPORATION OF GEORGETOWN. WITH AN APPENDIX, CONTAINING THE LAW FOR LAYING OUT THE TOWN, THE ORIGINAL AND SUPPLEMENTARY CHARTERS, THE ACT OF CESSION, AND SUCH OTHER LAWS OF MARYLAND AS RELATE IMMEDIATELY TO THE TOWN; AND SUNDRY ACTS OF CONGRESS RELATING TO THE TOWN, AND DISTRICT GENERALLY

Printed by James C. Dunn, Georgetown, D.C.: 1821
  • $375
Contemporary calf [front cover nearly detached]. [2], 126, 64, xiv, [1], [1 blank] pp. Blank upper margin of title page excised. Lower right corners of first few leaves stained. Good+. An errata is at page [2]. The Laws - - from Appeals, Appointments, and Apprentices, to Wells, Wharfs, and Wood Corders - - also include numerous provisions for the regulation of "Servants and Slaves." The Appendix reproduces the Maryland laws for "laying out and erecting a town on Potomac river," which would become Georgetown, and its later additions in Montgomery County; the Act to incorporate and survey it; Acts relinquishing the territory of Columbia to the federal government; and laws of the United States pertaining to the District of Columbia. Bryan 73-74. Sabin 27004. AI 5436 [5].
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BY THE HONORABLE JAMES KENT, ESQUIRE CHANCELLOR OF THE STATE OF NEW-YORK: TO ALL TO WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME OR MAY CONCERN: KNOW YE, THAT [JAMES TALLMADGE JUNIOR] HAVING BEEN DULY EXAMINED AND REGULARLY ADMITTED AS A [COUNSELLOR] IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF NEW-YORK, IN THE TERM OF [JUNE] IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD ONE THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED AND [FOURTEEN] I DO HEREBY AUTHORIZE AND LICENSE THE SAID [JAMES TALLMADGE JUNIOR] TO APPEAR IN THE SAID COURT, AND THERE TO PRACTICE AS A [COUNSELLOR] ACCORDING TO THE RULES AND CUSTOMS OF THE SAID COURT, AND THE LAWS OF THIS STATE. GIVEN UNDER MY HAND AND THE SEAL OF THE SAID COURT, AT [NEW YORK] THE [ELEVENTH] DAY OF [JULY] IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD ONE THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED AND [FOURTEEN] [signed in ink manuscript] JAMES KENT

Kent, James 7" x 10-3/4". Printed certificate on thick paper, the New York State seal at the bottom left corner. Printed in typescript with several fonts, completed in ink manuscript [as noted by the brackets]and signed in ink by James Kent. Text surrounded by an ornamental rectangular border. Acknowledgment in ink manuscript on verso, dated and signed by Isaac L. Kip, Assistant Registrar. Very Good. James Kent [1763-1847] the son of Moss Kent, a lawyer, is considered one of the great jurists of any era. Admitted to the New York Bar in 1785, he was a State Assemblyman, the first professor of law in Columbia College, Governor Jay's appointee as Master in Chancery; New York's Chief Justice; and a member of the 1821 State Constitutional Convention, where he unsuccessfully opposed raising the property qualification for Negroes. His four-volume COMMENTARIES ON AMERICAN LAW is a foundation of American jurisprudence. Tallmadge became a Congressman and author of the Tallmadge Amendment, which would have prohibited Slavery in the contemplated State of Missouri.
  • $375