New Jersey As a Royal Province 1738 to 1776 volume 1

Cover New Jersey As a Royal Province 1738 to 1776 volume 1
New Jersey As a Royal Province 1738 to 1776 volume 1
Edgar Jacob Fisher
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, vol. Xvii, p. 244. ^ Ibid. , p. 252.
167] LEGISLATIVE HISTORY 167 provincial troops, and to provide garrisons for the British regulars. Hardy's administration was characterized by the assembly as " disinterested, Candid and benevolent. " It will be remembered that he was removed by the royal authorities owing to a disagreement relative to the tenure of judges.^ It was almost three months to a day after his arrival in the colony when the newly-appointed royal governor, Will- iam Franklin, met
...the legislature. The happy and glorious end of the long war against the French afforded a splendid opportunity, he told them, for giving " earnest attention to the Arts of Peace. " ^ The necessary general legislation was recommended to the attention of the council and assembly, as was also the conspicuous unanimity which had charac- terized the legislative sessions of the recent past. The reply of the houses was marked by the usual flattering plati- tudes.
There were in general two chief reasons for the unanimity that had existed between the branches of the legislature in New Jersey during the five or six years preceding Franklin's accession.


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