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. 414 words

W. Livingston, Captjiin in Fanning's King's .\merican Regiment, were not the better exponcuts of the real opinions of that office-seeking family of Livingstons ; and who can doubt, with the roster of subsequent office holding Livingstons before him, that nmch of additional inHueuce, in favor of the Home Government, might have been secured from that family and its adherents, had that Government been as g- nerous in the disposition of offices to members of that peculiarly otfice-.seeking family, as the revolutionary authorities and the subsequent State Government, in New Y'ork, unquestionably « ere ?

& Minutes of the Proceedings dtirintj the recess of the I'rorincial i 'imgrets, "New Y'okk, Friday, Dec. Ist, 1775."

^ Jouniat of the Provincial Congress, "Wednesday moining, December "Cth, 1775."

HISTORY OF WESTCHESTER COUNTY.

only five of the fourteen Counties then present, the Journal of the Provincial Congress bearing testimony to that fact, it will be seen and understood that the record which stated that " the Deputies from a ma- " jority of the Counties appeared," is a false record ; that there was, really, no quorum present, even under the rule and usage of that revolutionary body ; and that, tested by that rule and that usage, even from the convenient standpoint of rebellion, the Congress was not properly constituted and was without due revolutionary authority -- of course, it possessed no other authority, in the slightest degree.^

What was thus called a Provincial Congress, elected Colonel Nathaniel Woodhull, of the County of Suffolk, to be its President ; and John McKesson and Robert Benson, the Secretaries of the former Provincial Congress, were elected Secretaries of that.^ It assembled, day by day, until the twenty-second of December, when it took a recess, leaving a Committee of Safety to discharge some of the duties which it had undertaken to perform.^ That Committee, of which Colonel Pierre Van Cortlundt, of Westchestercounty, was the Chairman, continued in session, until the twelfth of February, 1776, when the Provincial Congress was again assembled ; * and that Congress continued in session, until the sixteenth of March, in that year, when it took another recess, leaving, as before, a Committee of Safety, to discharge some portions of its self-imposed duties, during its absence.* That Committee, of which Joseph Hallett, of the City of New York, was theChairnian, continued in session, uutiUhe 8th of May, 1776, when the Provincial Congress was again assembled -- it is written that " several matters of the utmost importance,