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1803 Manuscript Document Payment Roster with 60 Justices Listed and 54 Signing!

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles Start Price:260.00 USD Estimated At:400.00 - 600.00 USD
1803 Manuscript Document Payment Roster with 60 Justices Listed and 54 Signing!
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Federal Period
1803 Federal Period Judges Payment Roster York, Maine
1803-Dated, Manuscript Document Payment Roster with 60 Justices listed and having 54 Signing for their pay, Maine, Massive 30.75” x 12.5” in Size, Fine.
1803-Dated Manuscript Document, measures a massive 30.75” x 12.5”, 1 page, York (Maine which was part of Massachusetts at this point). Handwritten on laid period paper, having scattered old reinforcement tape repairs to reverse of document with show-through, with some edge splits, and fold pinholes. Being a list of travel and attendance payments received by the various Justices in Maine (then part of Massachusetts). A very large and displayable, rare official roster with 60 Justices listed, and having 54 actually individually Signing for their pay. Some of their names include:

Nathaniel Wells, Edward Cutts, John Frost, Simon Frye, Caleb Emery, Joshua Hubbard, William Frost, Andrew Burley, Jonas Clarke, John Hill, Ichabod Goodwin, John Hovey, Jacob Bradbury, John Kingsbury, Banaiah Clark, John Low, Joseph Chadburne, Abner Libbey, Joseph Bragdon, Eli Twitchell, William Parsons, Moses Ames, Richard Cutts, Elijah Drew, John Woodman, Asabel Cole, Joseph Howard, Ezekiel Merrill, John Lord, Peter Morrell, Thomas Perkins, William Gerrish, Ebenzer Rice, Samuel Hubbard, John Morrill, Andrew P. Fernald, Cadwallader Gray, Andrew Rogers, Edward Emerson, Jacob Fisher, Simon Frye, Edward Hayman, Abner Libby, Benjamin Warren, Joseph Parsons, Nathaniel Merrill, Samuel Leighton, Nathaniel Wells and Daniel Sewall.
We have not researched the entire list, yet some names that readily stuck out as more prominent were...

NATHANIEL WELLs. b. 28 Oct, 1740, Wells, Me., Harvard 1760; A.M. Harv. Teacher, Wells. Mass. Senate. Judge Court Com. Pleas. Overseer, 1794–97. d. 6 Dec., 1816. ....

Judge Simon Frye, who was the first Chief Justice of the State of Maine, also a member of the first Board of Overseers of Bowdoin College.

JOHN FROST, Kittery, Me. (1738 - 1810). Served as Captain in the French and Indian War Canadian campaign of 1759. In 1775 was a Lieutenant-Colonel at the siege of Boston. When the campaign of 1775 began, he was promoted to the rank of Colonel, and he won distinction in the severe engagements that preceded the retreat of General George Washington to Philadelphia. When Burgoyne invaded New York, Colonel Frost's regiment became an adjunct to the army under General Gates. After Burgoyne's surrender, Colonel Frost joined Washington's central division, and participated in the action of Monmouth and other engagements. Until the close of the Revolutionary War he served in the middle and southern states. Frost left the army with the rank of Brigadier-General. He then returned to Kittery, was appointed Judge of the court of sessions for York county, Me. He was subsequently a Member of the Governor's Council in Massachusetts, of which Maine was then part.

William Frost (1747-1827) was a Continental Army officer who served seven years during the American Revolution. He was at the Siege of Boston, the Battle of Long Island, the Battle for Manhattan, New York and Valley Forge. In 1779, he was appointed Barrack Master at the fortress of West Point, and served as Commissary General for Patterson's Brigade of Continental troops. After the war, he served as Surveyor General and Registrar of Deeds of York County, Massachusetts (now, in Maine), Justice of the Peace and County Treasurer.

Daniel Sewall was a soldier in the Revolution Continental Army. Appointed by Governor Hancock to the post of Register of Probate for York County, and held the office for 37 years, was chosen Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas and in 1792 he was appointed Postmaster at York.