153

1802 Official Legal Debtors Prison Obligation Document, Windsor County, Vermont

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles Start Price:120.00 USD Estimated At:240.00 - 320.00 USD
1802 Official Legal Debtors Prison Obligation Document, Windsor County, Vermont
Federal Period
Imprisoned in Vermont Debtor's Prison for Obligation Noah Thomas shall faithfully and absolutely remain with the limits of said Goal Yard... without committing any Escape!
March 2, 1802-Dated, Partly-Printed Official Legal Document, Vermont, Debtor’s Prison Obligation, Windsor County, Vermont, Very Fine.
This well printed, fully executed rarely encountered legal Document, measures about 7" x 12.5", 1 page, folio, a State of Vermont Debtor's Prison financial obligation, wherein Noah Thomas and Stephen Delano are, in part:

"...are holden, and stand firmly bound, and obliged unto William Rice of Woodstock... Keeper in Chief of the Common Goal in said Windsor County, in the sum of Four hundred Dollars, current money of the United States... The condition of the above obligation is such, that whereas the above bounden Noah Thomas is now a prisoner in the Common Goal in Woodstock... by virtue of an Execution, in favor of Jeremiah Fowle of Watertown in the County of Middlesex in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts for the sum of one hundred & fifty Dollars and five Cents... the said Noah Thomas shall faithfully and absolutely remain with the limits of said Goal Yard, and shall not depart therefrom until he be lawfully discharged, without committing any escape before such discharge...".

Signed, “Noah Thomas” and “Stephen Del[ano],” “Brad. Stratton,” and “Charles Ellis Jr.,” Witnessed by: “N. Bayliss” and “Brad. Stratton”. On the verso Signed, “William Rice” (Sheriff) and “J. H. Hubbard”. Standard folds, small right edge tear and chip with one trivial archival tape reinforcement on the reverse centerfold The two bottom corners are deliberately clipped, red wax seals intact, Docket on verso along with Sheriff Rice’s statement that the Creditor was delivered April 3rd, 1802 with his signature below.
JONATHAN HATCH HUBBARD (1768 – 1849) was an American lawyer and politician. He served as a U.S. Representative from Vermont. Hubbard was born in Tolland in the Connecticut Colony. At the age of eleven Hubbard moved with his parents to Claremont, New Hampshire. He was instructed by a private tutor. Hubbard studied law in Charlestown, New Hampshire and was admitted to the bar in 1790. He commenced practice in Windsor, Vermont. Hubbard married Elizabeth Hastings in 1793 and they had one child, Marie E. Hubbard.

Hubbard was elected as a Federalist to the Eleventh Congress and served from March 4, 1809 to March 3, 1811. He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection to the Twelfth Congress in 1810. Hubbard served as justice of the Vermont Supreme Court from 1813 to 1815. After serving as justice, Hubbard resumed the practice of law. Hubbard died on September 20, 1849 in Windsor, Vermont, and is interred at Old South Cemetery in Windsor.