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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
November 12, 2007
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Monday, November 12, 2007
An Account of the Great Election of 1733 Held on the Village Green at
St. Paul's Church in Eastchester
Recently I posted an item summarizing the early history of St. Paul's
Church in Eastchester. In that posting I included links to a number of
earlier postings regarding the history of the church which, in the 18th
and early 19th centuries, was one of the two principal churches available
to Pelham residents for worship. See Thursday, November 8, 2007:
Brief History of St. Paul's Church in Eastchester Published in 1886.
One of the most notable events ever to occur on the Village Green in front
of St. Paul's Church was the "Great Election of 1733" where the people's
candidate, Lewis Morris, was elected to the provincial Assembly. A
newspaper account of the election published by John Peter Zenger led to a
trial in which he was acquitted of printing and publishing seditious
libels. The trial is considered one of the most important early victories
for freedom of speech in America and an important precursor to inclusion
of the First Amendment among those of the Bill of Rights accepted during
the early years of the United States of America. Below is an account of
the election. Last April 9 I provided a transcription of an October 29,
1733 newspaper article containing Zenger's account of the election.
See Monday, April 9, 2007:
An Account of the Election Victory of Lewis Morris in the So-Called "Great
Election".
"Driven from office by his foes, [Lewis] Morris was now [in 1733] the
favorite champion of the people. He had retired to his estate at
Morrisania. But here he was not permitted to rest; perhaps he was
incapable of it. He threw himself at once into the politics of the time,
and, although old (for he was now over sixty), became a candidate for the
assembly. The story of his election, despite all the efforts of De Lancey
and the court party, is preserved for us in Zenger's journal, almost with
the minuteness of a modern reporter. I shall abridge if for the reader,
since it tells us much of the manners of our ancestors. When Lewis Morris,
in the autumn of 1733, appeared as the candidate of the people for
Westchester, a very remarkable election took place. Few modern politicians
would care to undergo the fatigues and the dangers that awaited the
patriotic voters in 1733. There was fear that the court party might
practise some fraud; fifty electors kept watch all night at East Chester,
where the polling was to take place, until the morning of the election
day. The other electors of Morris's party began to move on Sunday
afternoon so as to be at New Rochelle by midnight; on their way they were
entertained at plentifully covered tables in each house as they passed; at
midnight they met at the home of an active partizan whose house could not
contain them all. A large fire was made in the street, and here they sat
till daylight came, in the damp air of a Westchester morning. At daylight
they were joined by seventy mounted voters from the lower part of the
county, and then the whole body moved to the polling place at East Chester
in the following order: first rode 'two trumpeters and two violins,' the
representatives of a modern band; then came four freeholders, one of whom
carried a banner, on one side of which was inscribed, in golden capitals,
'King George,' on the other, 'Liberty and Law.' Next came the candidate,
Lewis Morris, Esq., late chief justice, then two colors, and at sunrise
they entered the common of East Chester. Three hundred of the principal
freeholders of the county followed Morris on horseback, the largest number
ever known to be assembled since the settlement of the town. Three times
they rode around the green, and then went to the houses of their friends.
About eleven o'clock, perhaps with still more state and show, appeared the
candidate of the opposing party. It was William Forster, Esq., once a
schoolmaster sent over by the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel,
but now clerk of the peace and justice of the Common Pleas by the
appointment of Governor Cosby. It is suggested that he paid a hundred
[Page 233 / Page 234] pistoles for his office. Next him in the procession
were two ensigns borne by two freeholders, and then came James De Lancey,
chief justice, and Frederick Philipse, second judge, baron, etc. They were
followed by one hundred and seventy mounted freeholders, the magnates of
Westchester County. They entered the green on the east side, rode around
it, and as he passed it was notice that De Lancey bowed to Morris and that
the civility was returned. But now one of the Morris party called out, 'No
Pretender,' and "Forster said angrily, 'I will take notice of you.' It was
reported that he was no friend to the Hanoverian family. An hour after
came the high sheriff, finely mounted, with housings and trappings of
scarlet richly laced with silver. The electors gathered on the green; the
great majority was evidently for Morris, but the other side demaned a
poll, and the voting began. It was rudely interrupted when the high
sheriff refused to receive the vote of a Friend or Quaker of large estate
who would not take the usual oath. A fierce wrangle began. Morris and his
friends insisted that an affirmation was sufficient; the sheriff, a
stranger in the county, one of Cosby's instruments, persisted in his
refusal. De Lancey and his friends sustained him, and thirty-seven
Quakers, who were ready to vote for Morris, were excluded by this unjust
decision. Even in England they would have been allowed to vote. Fierce, no
doubt, was the rage of the popular party. One of them called out that
Forster was a Jacobite; Forster denied it. At last the 'late Chief
Justice' was returned by a large majority. He rebuked Forster and the
sheriff for their attempt upon the liberties of the people, and threatened
them with deserved punishment; but when all his followers answered with
loud cheers, he restrained them from violence. De Lancey and his faction,
we may fancy, rode sullenly away. But soon after Morris entered New-York
in triumph, amidst salutes from all the vessels in the harbor. He was met
by a party of the chief merchants and gentlemen of the town. The people
followed him with 'loud acclamations.' He was conducted to the Black Horse
Tavern, where a fine entertainment had been prepared, and where, [Page 234
/ Page 235] amidst the flow of fiery Madeira and steaming punch, it is not
likely that the governor and his followers were spared in the usual
speeches."
Source: Wilson, James Grant, ed., The Memorial History of the City of
New-York From its First Settlement to the Year 1892, Vol. II, pp. 233-35
(NY, NY: New-York History Co., 1892).
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single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:52 AM
Comment
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Posting for November 12, 2007.
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