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Precept and Grand Jury List, Court of General Sessions, 1747
Ulster County Ss George the Second by the Grace of God of Great Britain France And Ireland King Defender of the faith To our Sherif of our Said County of Ulster Greetings we Command You that You Cause to Come before our Justices assigned th keep our peace in the Said County at Kingston in our Said County on the third Tuesday in September next twenty four honest And Lawfull men of the Said County to hear and Do those things which on our behalf Shall then and there be injoyned them, And have you then and there this precept Wittness Abraham Gaasbeek Chambers Esquire At Kingston aforesaid the Seventh day of May in the Twentyeth Year of our Reign Anno Domini 1747 - P: Cur John Crook Clerk of the peace
Note: This document has two parts. The top part, called a precept, orders the sheriff to assemble a list of "twenty four honest and lawful men" to serve as grand jurors in the Court of General Sessions. The bottom part, endorsed by the Sheriff, lists the names, residences and occupations of the group called to jury duty. The most common occupation is farmer. Other occupations reveal the craft-based occupations of the colonial economy, including Bruer (brewer), wever (weaver), black smith, millar (miller), joynor (joiner), and schipper (shipper).
From Janet Wells Greene et al., From Forge to Fast Food: A History of Child Labor in New York State, Volume I: Colonial Times through the Civil War (Troy, NY: Council for Citizenship Education, Russell Sage College, for the New York Labor Legacy Project, 1995). |