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TITLE:
Providence Plantations Patent
DATE:
14 March 1643
AUTHORITY:
King Charles I by ordinance of the
Lords and Commons / Parliament
COMMENT:
In progress.
DOCUMENT: WHEREAS by an Ordinance of the Lords and Commons, now assembled in
Parliament, bearing Date the Second Day of November, Anno Domini 1643, Robert
Earl of Warwick, is constituted, and ordained Governor in Chief, and Lord High
Admiral of all those Islands and other Plantations inhabited or planted by, or
belonging to any His Majesty the King of England's subjects, (or which hereafter
may be inhabited and planted by, or belonging to them,) within the Bounds, and
upon the Coasts of America. And whereas the said Lords have thought fit, and
thereby ordained, that Philip Earl of Pembroke, Edward Earl of Manchester,
William Viscount Say and Seal, Philip Lord Wharton, John Lord:Rolle, Members of
the House of Peers. Sir Gilbert Gerrard, Baronet, Sir Arthur Haslerig, Baronet,
Sir Henry Vane, jun. Knight, Sir Benjamin Rudyard, Knight, John Pim, Oliver
Cromwell, Dennis Bond, Miles Corbet, Cornelius Holland, Samuel Vassal, John
Rolle, and William Spurstow, Esqrs, Members of the House of Commons, should be
Commissioners, to join in Aid and Assistance with the said Earl. And whereas for
the better Government and Defence, it is thereby ordained, that the aforesaid
Governor and Commissioners, or the greater Number of them, shall have Power and
Authority from Time to Time to nominate, appoint, and constitute all such
subordinate Governors, Counsellors, Commanders, Officers, and Agents, as they
shall judge to be best affected, and most fit and serviceable for the said
Islands and Plantations; and to provide for, order and dispose all Things, which
they shall, from Time to Time, find most advantageous for the said Plantations;
and for the better Security of the Owners and Inhabitants thereof, to assign,
ratify, and confirm, so much of their afore-mentioned Authority and Power, and
in such Manner, and to such Persons as they shall judge to be fit for the better
governing and preserving of the said Plantations and Islands, from open
Violences and Private Disturbances and Distractions. And whereas there is a
Tract of Land in the Continent of America aforesaid, called by the Name of the
Narraganset-Bay; bordering Northward and Northeast on the Patent of the
Massachusetts, East and Southeast on Plymouth Patent, South on the Ocean, and on
the West and Northwest by the Indians called Nahigganneucks, alias Narragansets;
the whole Tract extending about Twenty-five English Miles unto the Pequot River
and Country.
And whereas divers well affected and industrious English Inhabitants, of the
Towns of Providence, Portsmouth, and Newport in the tract aforesaid, have
adventured to make a nearer neighborhood and Society with the great Body of the
Narragansets, which may in time by the blessing of God upon their Endeavours,
lay a sure foundation of Happiness to all America. And have also purchased, and
are purchasing of and amongst the said Natives, some other Places, which may be
convenient both for Plantations, and also for building of Ships Supply of Pipe
Staves and other Merchandize. And whereas the said English, have represented
their Desire to the said Earl, and Commissioners, to have their hopeful
beginnings approved and confirmed, by granting unto them a free Charter of Civil
Incorporation and Government; that they may order and govern their Plantation in
such a Manner as to maintain Justice and peace, both among themselves, and
towards all Men with whom they shall have to do. In due Consideration of the
said Premises, the said Robert Earl of Warwick, Governor in Chief, and Lord High
Admiral of the said Plantations, and the greater Number of the said
Commissioners, whose Names and Seals are here under-written and subjoined, out
of a Desire to encour age the good Beginnings of the said Planters, Do, by the
Authority of the aforesaid Ordinance of the Lords and Commons, give, grant' and
confirm, to the aforesaid Inhabitants of the Towns of Providence, Portsmouth,
and Newport, a free and absolute Charter of Incorporation, to be known by the
Name of the Incorporation of Pi evidence Plantations, in the Narraganset-Bay, in
New-England.-Together with full Power and Authority to rule themselves, and such
others as shall hereafter inhabit within any Part of the said Tract of land, by
such a Form of Civil Government, as by voluntary consent of all, or the greater
Part of them, they shall find most suitable to their Estate and Condition; and,
for that End, to make and ordain such Civil Laws and Constitutions, and to
inflict such punishments upon Transgressors, and for Execution thereof, so to
place, and displace Officers of Justice, as they, or the greater Part of them,
shall by free Consent agree unto. Provided nevertheless, that the said Laws,
Constitutions, and Punishments, for the Civil Government of the said
Plantations, be conformable to the Laws of England, so far as the Nature and
Constitution of the place will admit. And always reserving to the said Earl, and
Commissioners, and their successors, Power and Authority for to dispose the
general Government of that, as it stands in Relation to the rest of the
Plantations in America as they shall conceive from Time to Time, Inost conducing
to the general Good of the said Plantations, the Honour of his Majesty, and the
Service of the State. And the said Earl and Commissioners, do further authorize,
that the aforesaid Inhabitants, for the better transacting of their public
Affairs to make and use a public Seal as the known Seal of
Providence-Plantations, in the Narraganset-Bay, in New-England. In Testimony
whereof, the said Robert Earl of Warwick, and Commissioners, have hereunto set
their Hands and Seals, the Fourteenth Day of March, in the Nineteenth Year of
the Reign of our Sovereign-Lord King Charles, and in the Year of our Lord God,
1643.
ROBERT WARWICK,
PHILIP PEMBROKE,
SAY and SEAL,
P. WHARTON,
ARTHUR HASEERIG,
COR. HOLLAND,
H. VANE,
SAM VASSAL,
JOHN ROME,
MILES CORBET
W. SPURSTOW.
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