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" Assemblies can be called as aforesaid, all Persons Inhabiting in or resorting to our Said Colonies may confide in our Royal Protection for the Enjoyment of the Benefit of the Laws of our Realm of England... "
The Statutes at Large: Being a Collection of All the Laws of Virginia, from ... - Page 671
by Virginia, William Waller Hening - 1820
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The Geographical Distribution of the Vote of the Thirteen States on the ...

Orin Grant Libby - 1897 - 634 pages
...aud that in the meantime "all persons inhabiting in or resorting to our said colonies may confide in our Royal Protection for the enjoyment of the benefit of the laws of England." To which end power has been given to the governor and council to establish courts of justice...
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Annual Report of the Illinois State Bar Association

Illinois State Bar Association - 1901 - 780 pages
...be called as aforesaid, all persons inhabiting in, or resorting to, our said colonies may confide in our royal protection for the enjoyment of the benefit...said colonies respectively, to erect and constitute, wttu the advice of our said Councils respectively, courts of judicature and public justice within our...
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Documents Relating to the Constitutional History of Canada

Public Archives of Canada - 1907 - 776 pages
...Governor Murray, sec. 11, p. 135. 'SESSIONAL PAPER No. 18 Royal Protection for the Enjoyment of die Benefit of the Laws of our Realm of England ; for...Judicature and public Justice within our Said Colonies for hearing and determining all Causes, as well Criminal as Civil, according to Law and Equity, and as...
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Sessional Papers - Legislature of the Province of Ontario, Volume 7

Ontario. Legislative Assembly - 1907 - 880 pages
...called as aforesaid, all persons inhabiting in or resorting to our sa-id '•olonies may confide in our royal protection for the enjoyment of the benefit...given power under our Great Seal to the Governors of the said colonies respectively, to erect and constitute, with the advice of our said Councils respectively,...
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Report, Volume 4

Ontario. Dept. of Public Records and Archives, Ontario. Department of Public Records and Archives - 1907 - 534 pages
...be called as aforesaid, all persons inhabiting in or resorting to our said oolonies may confide in our royal protection for the enjoyment of the benefit...of our Realm of "England; for which purpose we have (riven power under our Great Seal to the Governors of the said colonies respectively, to erect and...
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The Tragedy of Quebec: The Expulsion of Its Protestant Farmers

Robert Sellar - 1907 - 144 pages
...treaty, King George issued a proclamation, in which he assured all who went to Quebec "may confide in "our royal protection for the enjoyment of the benefit of the "laws of our realm of England." In instructing its first governor, Murray, how he was to rule the province, the king enjoins him that,...
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Report

1907 - 532 pages
...be called as aforesaid, all persons inhabiting in or resorting to oxir said colonies may confide in our royal protection for the enjoyment of the benefit of the Laws of our Realm of Eiialinul; for which purpose we have criven power under our Great Seal to the Governors of the said...
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Our Struggle for the Fourteenth Colony: Canada, and the American ..., Volume 1

Justin Harvey Smith - 1907 - 678 pages
...flourish of trumpets, that ' all persons inhabiting in or resorting to our said colonies may confide in our Royal Protection for the enjoyment of the benefit of the laws of England,' and another sentence appeared to place the criminal aud the civil law on the same footing...
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Canadian Constitutional Development, Shown by Selected Speeches and ...

Hugh Edward Egerton - 1907 - 504 pages
...could be called, all persons inhabiting in, or resorting to, the said colonies, might confide in the royal protection for the enjoyment of the benefit of the laws of England.' Under this proclamation, thus held out as a solemn act to the people of that country, many...
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Documents Relating to the Constitutional History of Canada

Public Archives of Canada - 1907 - 768 pages
...sixty-three, which graciously promises to all persons inhabiting in, or resorting to, " this province, his royal protection for the enjoyment of the benefit of the laws of the " realm of England, until assemblies should be called therein, they did come and settle " themselves...
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