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Proceedings and Acts of the General Assembly, 1766-1768
Volume 61, Preface 15   View pdf image (33K)
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Letter of Transmittal. xv

acting under orders from the Lord Proprietary. Many of these acts were not
new laws but were continuances of old laws about to expire, or acts supple-
mentary to existing laws. Some nine bills which passed the Lower House were
rejected in the upper chamber. Bills thus rejected will usually be found to have
more significance, politically, economically, and socially, as regards future
trends, than those which are readily agreed upon by a body such as the Lower
House and the Upper House representing the vested interests of the Lord
Proprietary.

We owe to no less a personage than Thomas Jefferson the only con-
temporary description, and that an amusing one, which has come down to us,
of a meeting of a pre-Revolutionary Maryland General Assembly. This was
written by Jefferson, when in May, 1766, as a young man of twenty-three, he
for the first time left the bounds of Virginia, and visited Annapolis, Phila-
delphia, and New York. That he held no mean opinion of the House of
Burgesses of his beloved Virginia is shown by what he characteristically said
of it when first elected a burgess some three years later. It was, he declared,
"the most distinguished body of men ever assembled to legislate". It would
indeed have been impossible for another Colonial legislative assembly to mea-
sure up to such a standard, and certainly in his opinion, as will be seen, Mary-
land fell far short of it. Jefferson wrote from Annapolis, on May 25, 1766,
just two days before the May session of this year came to an end, his impression
of the spectacle he had just witnessed. The letter from which this description
of the meeting of the Maryland House was taken was addressed by Jefferson
to a cousin, John Page of Virginia. It will be found reprinted in full in the
Bulletin of the New York Public Library (Vol. II, 1898, page 176-177).

"I will now give you some account of what I have seen in this metropolis.
The assembly happens to be sitting at this time. Their upper and lower house,
as they call them, sit in different houses. I went into the lower, sitting in an
old courthouse, which, judging from it's form and appearance, was built in the
year one. I was surprised on approaching it to hear as great a noise and hubbub
as you will usually observe at a publick meeting of the planters in Virginia.
The first object which struck me after my entrance was the figure of a little
old man dressed but indifferently, with a yellow queue wig on, and mounted
in the judge's chair. This the gentleman who walked with me informed me was
the speaker, a man of a very fair character, but who by the bye has very little
the air of a speaker. At one of the justices' bench stood a man whom in another
place I should from his dress and phis have taken for Goodall the lawyer in
Williamsburgh, reading a bill then before the house with a schoolboy tone and
an abrupt pause at every half dozen words. This I found to be the clerk of the
assembly. The mob (for such was their appearance) sat covered on the jus-
tices' and lawyers' benches, and were divided into little clubs amusing them-
selves in the common chit chat way. I was surprised to see them address the

 

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Proceedings and Acts of the General Assembly, 1766-1768
Volume 61, Preface 15   View pdf image (33K)
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