Provincial Congress of New Jersey explained

Provincial Congress of New Jersey
House Type:Unicameral Provisional Revolutionary Government
Jurisdiction:Province of New Jersey
Preceded By:British Royal governors
Succeeded By:1st Session of the New Jersey Legislature
Leader1 Type:President
Leader1:Hendrick Fisher
Leader2 Type:Secretary
Leader2:Jonathan Dickinson Sergeant
Leader3 Type:Assistant(s)
Leader3:William Paterson
Frederick Frelinghuysen
Meeting Place:Trenton, New Jersey

The Provincial Congress of New Jersey was a transitional governing body of the Province of New Jersey in the early part of the American Revolution. It first met in 1775 with representatives from all New Jersey's then-thirteen counties, to supersede the Royal Governor. In June 1776, this congress had authorized the preparation of a constitution, which was written within five days, adopted by the Provincial Congress, and accepted by the Continental Congress.

The Constitution of 1776 provided for a bicameral legislature consisting of a General Assembly with three members from each county and a legislative council with one member from each county. All state officials, including the governor, were to be appointed by the Legislature under this constitution. The Vice-President of Council would succeed the Governor, who served as the Council president, if a vacancy occurred in that office.[1] [2] The Provincial Congress ceased to function when the first session of the new Legislature convened on August 27, 1776, under the New Jersey State Constitution it had prepared.[2]

1775 Sessions

The Provincial Congress met in late May, June and August in Trenton. During their sessions in the first week, they elected from their members: Hendrick Fisher as the body's President, Jonathan D. Sergeant as secretary, and William Paterson and Frederick Frelinghuysen as assistants. The members, or deputies of the Congress, were received at its first session on May 23, 1775.[3]

Members of the Provincial Congress

At Independence Hall in Philadelphia in 1776, three Provincial Congress deputies, Abraham Clark, John Hart, and Reverend John Witherspoon, signed the Declaration of Independence, becoming of the nation's 53 Founding Fathers.

Name of Deputy or DelegateCountyMay–June 1775 (Trenton)[4] August 1775 (Trenton)[5] October 1775 (Trenton)[6] January–March 1776 (New Brunswick)[7] June–August 1776 (Burlington)[8]
Bergen X X - - -
John Demarest Bergen X X X X X
Hendrick Kuyper Bergen X X - - -
Abraham Van Buskirk Bergen X X N[9] X X
Edo Merselius Bergen X X - - -
Jacobus Post Bergen - - X X X
Jacob Quackenbush Bergen - - - - X
Daniel Isaac Brown Bergen - - - - X
Burlington X X - - -
Isaac Pearson Burlington X X X X -
Colin Campbell Burlington X X - - -
Joseph Read Burlington X - - - -
Peter Tallman Burlington - - - - X
Thomas Reynolds Burlington - - - - X
Thomas Fennimore Burlington - - - - X
Charles Read Burlington - - - - X
Caleb Shreve Burlington - - - - X
John Pope Burlington X X X X -
Samuel How Burlington - - X X -
John Wood Burlington - - X N -
Joseph Newbold Burlington - - X X -
Jesse Hand Cape-May X - X N X
Elijah Hughs Cape-May - X N[10] X X
Cape-May - - - - X
Joseph Savage Cape-May - - - - X
Hugh Hathorn Cape-May - - - - X
Samuel Fithian Cumberland X X - - -
Cumberland X X - - -
Thomas Ewing Cumberland X X - - -
Theophilius Elmer Cumberland - - X X X
Jonathan Ayars Cumberland - - X X X
Ephraim Harris Cumberland - - - - X
John Buck Cumberland - - - - X
Jonathan Bowen Cumberland - - - - X
Henry Garritse Essex X X - - -
Michael Vreeland Essex X X - - -
Robert Drummond Essex X X X X X
John Berry Essex X - - - -
William P. Smith Essex X - - - -
John Stiles Essex X - - - -
John Chetwood Essex X X - - -
Essex X - X X X
Essex X X - - -
Essex - - - - X
Isaac Ogden Essex X X - - -
Essex X X - - -
Betheul Pierson Essex X X - - -
Caleb Camp Essex X X X X X
Samuel Potter Essex - - X X -
Lewis Ogden Essex - - X X X
John Cooper Gloucester X - X N X
Elijah Clark Gloucester X X X N X
John Sparks Gloucester X X - - X
Joseph Hugg Gloucester - X - - X
Joseph Ellis Gloucester - X X X X
Thomas Clark Gloucester - - X N -
Richard Somers Gloucester - - X N -
Hunterdon X X X X X
John Mehelm Hunterdon X X X X X
Hunterdon X X X X X
John Stout Hunterdon X X - - -
Jasper Smith Hunterdon X X - - -
Thomas Lowry Hunterdon X X - - -
Hunterdon X X X X -
Daniel Hunt Hunterdon X X - - -
Ralph Hart Hunterdon X X - - -
Jacob Jennings Hunterdon X - - - -
Richard Stevens Hunterdon X X - - -
John Stevens, Jr. Hunterdon X X - - -
Thomas Stout Hunterdon X X - - -
Thomas Jones Hunterdon X X - - -
John Basset Hunterdon X - - - -
Abraham Bonnell Hunterdon - X - - -
Joseph Beavers Hunterdon - X - - -
Augustine Stevenson Hunterdon - - X N -
Hunterdon - - - - X
John Allen Hunterdon - - - - X
John Combs Middlesex - - - - X
Moses Bloomfield Middlesex - - - - X
Nathaniel Heard Middlesex X X - - -
William Smith Middlesex X X - - -
John Dunn Middlesex X X - - X
John Lloyd Middlesex X X - - -
Azariah Dunham Middlesex X X X X -
John Schurman Middlesex X X - - -
John Wetherill Middlesex X X - X X
David Williamson Middlesex X - - - -
Jonathan Baldwin Middlesex X X - - -
Jonathan Deare Middlesex X X - - -
Lucas Schenck Middlesex - X - - -
John Dennis Middlesex - - X X -
Edward Taylor Monmouth X X X X X
Joseph Saltar Monmouth X - - - -
Robert Montgomery Monmouth X X - - -
John Holmes Monmouth X X X X X
Josiah Holmes Monmouth - - - - X
James Mott Monmouth - - - - X
John Covenhoven Monmouth X X X X X
Daniel Hendrickson Monmouth X X - - -
Nicholas Van Brunt Monmouth X - - - -
William Winds Morris X X X N -
William De Hart Morris X X X N -
William Woodhull Morris - - - - X
Jacob GreenMorris - - - - X
Jonathan Stiles Morris X X - - -
David Thompson Morris - X - - -
Peter Dickerson Morris X - - - -
Morris X X X X X
Ellis Cook Morris X X X X X
Jacob Drake Morris X X X X X
Salem - - - - X
Whitten Crips Salem - - - - X
Andrew Sinnickson Salem X - - - X
Robert Johnson Salem X - - - -
Salem X - - - X
Jacob Scoggin Salem X X - - -
James James Salem X X - - -
John Holmes Salem - X X X X
Benjamin Holmes Salem - X X X -
Edward Keasby Salem - - X X -
John Carey Salem - - X X -
Ephraim Lloyd Salem - X - - -
Grant Gibbon Salem - - N N -
Somerset X X X X -
Nathaniel Eyers Somerset - X - - -
John Roy Somerset X - - - -
Somerset X X - - -
Abraham Van Neste Somerset X X - - -
Enos Kelsey Somerset X X - - -
Somerset
Middlesex
X X - - X
Cornelius Van Muliner Somerset - - X N -
Ruloffe Van Dyke Somerset - - X X -
Somerset - - - - X
Somerset - - - - X
James Linn Somerset - - - - X
Somerset X X - - X
Somerset X X - - X
Archibald Stewart Sussex X - - - -
Edward Dumont Sussex X X - - -
Sussex X X X N -
Ephraim Martin Sussex X - X X X
John Budd Scott Sussex - X - - -
Sussex - - - - X
Sussex - - - - X
Sussex - - - - X
Sussex - X X X -
Hugh Hughes Sussex - X - - -
William Norcross Sussex - X - - -
Thomas Potts Sussex - - X N X
Sussex - - X X -

See also

References

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The New Jersey Constitution of 1776. December 17, 2006 . See also: New Jersey Legislature#Before the Legislature and the Constitution of 1776.
  2. Web site: New Jersey Legislature, Historical Information. August 12, 2009. See also: New Jersey Legislature#Before the Legislature and the Constitution of 1776.
  3. State of New Jersey. Extracts from the Journal of Proceedings of the Provincial Congress of New Jersey, held at Trenton in the Months of May, June and August 1775. Burlington, New Jersey: Issac Collins. (1775) Woodbury, New Jersey: Joseph Sailer (1835) : 3-5.
  4. "List of Deputies who attended in May and June" in Minutes of the Provincial Congress and the Council of Safety of the State of New Jersey (Trenton: Naar, Day & Naar, 1879), 169–170.
  5. "List of Deputies who attended the Session in the Month of August" in Minutes of the Provincial Congress and the Council of Safety of the State of New Jersey (Trenton: Naar, Day & Naar, 1879), 183–184.
  6. "List of Deputies who attended this Session" (October 1775) in Minutes of the Provincial Congress and the Council of Safety of the State of New Jersey (Trenton: Naar, Day & Naar, 1879), 197.
  7. "A List of the Deputies Returned to Serve in Congress" (31 January - 2 March 1776) in Minutes of the Provincial Congress and the Council of Safety of the State of New Jersey (Trenton: Naar, Day & Naar, 1879), 325–326.
  8. "Name of the Deputies" (10 June - 21 August 1776) in Minutes of the Provincial Congress and the Council of Safety of the State of New Jersey (Trenton: Naar, Day & Naar, 1879), 445–446.
  9. supra, 198–99
  10. Supra 198–199