History of Westchester County, New York, Vol. I
This secretly acting, inquisitorial body, of which John Jay was made the Chairman, held secret sessions(m the fifteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, twentyfirst, twenty-second, twenty-third, twenty-fourth, twenty-fifth, twenty-sixth, twenty-seventh, and twenty-ninth of June,"* beyond which period we do not i>ropose, at this time, to follow it; and on the following day, when the Provincial Congress itself was disbanded and fled, every member of this mighty Committee, with the single exception of Gouverneur Morris, had, also, left the City." Besides receiving an anonymous information that Williiim Sutton, of Mamaroneck, had been heard to say " that, in ca.se "Independency was declared by the Continental Con- "gre.'ss, there were three Colonels in the Service who ■' would join the Alinisterial Party ; " and the issueof Summonses to Frederic Philipse, of Yonkers, Richard i\[orris, of Scarsdale, and Samuel Merritt, of the ISTanor of Cortlandt, to appear and answer before the Committee, on the third of July ; the issue of similar Summonses to Solomon Fowler, of Eastchester, Nathaniel Underbill, of Westchester, and James Horton, Junior, and William Sutton, both of Mamaroneck, to appear and answer, on the fourth of July ; the issue of similar Summonses to Peter Come and Doctor Peter Ilnggeford, both of Westchester county, to appear and answer, on the fifth of July ; and the issue of similar Summonses to William Barker, Joshua Purdy, and Absalom Gedney, all of Westchestercounty, to appear and answer, on the sixth of July," the Committee appears to have done nothing which particularly concerne<l We.stchester-county, during the period now under consideration ; and, for the present, its doings are dismissed.'^ It may not be