Home / Scharf, J. Thomas, ed. History of Westchester County, New York, including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West Farms, which have been annexed to New York City, Vol. I. Philadelphia: L.E. Preston & Co., 1886. / Passage

History of Westchester County, New York, Vol. I

Scharf, J. Thomas, ed. History of Westchester County, New York, including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West Farms, which have been annexed to New York City, Vol. I. Philadelphia: L.E. Preston & Co., 1886. 411 words

^Letter fr</in the Provincial Chugress to the Delegates for the Colony of New York, in the <'ontinentul Congress^ ** In PROVINCIAL Congress, Nkw- " York, June 28th, 1775."

See, also, the Plan of Accommotlution, ailopted in advance and kept in constant readiness for inniicdinfr use, by the same Provincial Congress, "4 ho., P.M., Die Martis,.June 27th, 1775/' (sue poijes 27;i, 274, anf*t ;) Lttter from the Provincitd Congress to the Covuniltve of Richmond county, *"Nt;w- '* York, 2d December, 1775 ; " etc.

In the earlier days of its existence, the Provincial Congress made those arbitrary arrests without any enactment, its own or that of" any other body, which could have afl'ordcd even a sliadow of even revolutionary law, if the enactments of a body in acknowledged rebellion may be regarded as Laws, for such a radical violation of what were said to have been, and of what were, the fundamental principles of the Duties of those in authority and of the Rights of Person and of Property which belonged to thotse who were governed ; but there appear to have been some, among the supporters of the Rebellion, who continued to have doubts concerning the unauthorized and unrestrained right of arrest, even where an opposition to the measures of the Rebellion was openly and unreservedly expressed.

On the eleventh of August, a letter was received by the I'rovincial Congress, from the local Committee at Brookhaven, on Long Island, stating that certain j)ersons, named therein, were counteracting every " measure recommended for redress and grievances, ' "and o|)|)osing the measures of Congresses and Com- " mittees ; and that they declared they would furnish, " and that it is suspected they have furnished, the " men-of-war and cutters with provisions," ^ in the same manner that the Asia and other men-of-war were supplied, w'ith the approval of the Provincial Congress, at that time and sul)se(iueiitly, by those who were more in favor with that body ; and, at the same time, " requesting the Congress to direct such "measures as they shall think proper, to suppress " such conduct." That letter was referred to a Committee of which Benjamin Kissam, of the City of New York, was Chairman. ^ A Report from that Committee was laid before the Congress, on the twentysixth of August ; * and, after consideration of the subject, and apparently without dissent, the following enactment was made on the general subject of the Brookhaven Committee's inquiry :