Side Lights on the Bench and Bar of Chester County1918 - Chester County (Pa.) - 433 pages |
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Page 3
... COURT - HOUSES of Chester , also AttornEYS THE REMOVAL OF THE COUNTY SEAT . THE FIRST TRIUMVIRATE AND THE COURT - HOUSE LOT THE BENCH OF JUSTICE SIX TAVERNS AT THE SEAT OF JUSTICE THE PASSING OF THE JUSTICES OUR FIRST JUDGE TO QUEBEC ...
... COURT - HOUSES of Chester , also AttornEYS THE REMOVAL OF THE COUNTY SEAT . THE FIRST TRIUMVIRATE AND THE COURT - HOUSE LOT THE BENCH OF JUSTICE SIX TAVERNS AT THE SEAT OF JUSTICE THE PASSING OF THE JUSTICES OUR FIRST JUDGE TO QUEBEC ...
Page 4
... JOHN PINKERTON " CHARLIE " PENNYPACKER 394 401 THE ANNEX ( JUSTITIA - NIL NISI BONUM ) 411 WAYNE MACVEAGH 418 THE COATESVILLE " LYNCHING " THE MONUMENT on the Court - House Lawn 424 432 PUCKLETOWN " Alack ! when good men die , and 4.
... JOHN PINKERTON " CHARLIE " PENNYPACKER 394 401 THE ANNEX ( JUSTITIA - NIL NISI BONUM ) 411 WAYNE MACVEAGH 418 THE COATESVILLE " LYNCHING " THE MONUMENT on the Court - House Lawn 424 432 PUCKLETOWN " Alack ! when good men die , and 4.
Page 14
... house in the corner of his field at the intersection of the roads leading to Brandywine and the Great Valley ; the ... court that both roads ( particularly the one leading to Wilmington ) " were occupied by Travellers from Distant Parts and ...
... house in the corner of his field at the intersection of the roads leading to Brandywine and the Great Valley ; the ... court that both roads ( particularly the one leading to Wilmington ) " were occupied by Travellers from Distant Parts and ...
Page 17
... house had been rendered unfit for tavern purposes by reason of its decay and other inconveni- ences he had built a new brick house near the other much more commodious for travellers . On this petition so dexterously prepared the court ...
... house had been rendered unfit for tavern purposes by reason of its decay and other inconveni- ences he had built a new brick house near the other much more commodious for travellers . On this petition so dexterously prepared the court ...
Page 18
... house within a few perches Jn . Harper of the noted Tavern known by the name of Turk's Head , " the court , servans sub pectore volnus , refused his application . After this refusal , Hoopes was willing to make certain concessions , in ...
... house within a few perches Jn . Harper of the noted Tavern known by the name of Turk's Head , " the court , servans sub pectore volnus , refused his application . After this refusal , Hoopes was willing to make certain concessions , in ...
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Side Lights on the Bench and Bar of Chester County (Classic Reprint) Wilmer W. Macelree No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
answer appointed asked Associate Judges Attorney-General August Bar of Chester Barnard Bench Bingham Brandywine Brinton Chester County Chester County Bar Colonel Commissioners Common Pleas common whipping Commonwealth convicted counsel County of Chester court room court-house Cross-roads death declared defendant Delaware County duties Eachus erected fact friends Futhey Goshen Goshen Township Governor Grand Jury Hannum Hemphill Henry Hickman honor indictment inquired interesting John John Hickman Joseph Joseph Hemphill Judge Atlee Judge Bell Judge Darlington Judge Haines Judge Wilson justice knew Lancaster County land lawyer Lewis looked MacVeagh ment murder never Penn Pennsylvania Pennypacker persons Philadelphia Pinkerton present President Judge prisoners Quarter Sessions question road seat sentence Sheriff tavern Thomas Tilghman tion town Townsend Haines Township Trego trial Turk's Head Udderzook Waddell Wanger Washington Townsend West Chester whipping post William William Clingan William Darlington Windle witness
Popular passages
Page 153 - Thoughts hardly to be packed Into a narrow act, Fancies that broke through language and escaped; All I could never be, All, men ignored in me, This, I was worth to God, whose wheel the pitcher shaped.
Page 145 - Nor the dejected haviour of the visage, Together with all forms, modes, shows of grief, That can denote me truly; These, indeed, seem, For they are actions that a man might play; But I have that within which...
Page 237 - I do not like thee, Doctor Fell; The reason why I cannot tell; But this I know and know full well. I do not like thee. Doctor Fell!
Page 384 - It is rarely well executed. They only who live with a man can write his life with any genuine exactness and discrimination ; and few people who have lived with a man know what to remark about him.
Page 302 - Hear the tolling of the bells — Iron bells! What a world of solemn thought their monody compels) In the silence of the night, How we shiver with affright, At the melancholy menace of their tone! For every sound that floats From the rust within their throats Is a groan.
Page 38 - For if my father and mother got wit, " And my bold brethren three, " O mickle wad be the gude red blude " This day wad be spilt for me ! " O little did my mother ken, " The day she cradled me, " The lands I was to travel in, " Or the death I was to die P NOTES THE QUEEN'S MARIE.
Page 152 - ... motives was to terminate, as soon as possible, that harrowing solicitude, worse even than the worst certainty, which a protracted trial brings to the unhappy prisoner. He never pronounced the sentence of death without severe pain; in the first instance it was the occasion of anguish. In this, as in many other points, he bore a strong resemblance to Sir Matthew Hale. His awful reverence of the great Judge of all mankind, and the humility with which he habitually walked in that presence, made him...
Page 412 - If my friends have alabaster boxes laid away, full of fragrant perfumes of sympathy and affection, which they intend to break over my dead body, I would rather they would bring them out in my weary and troubled hours, and open them, that I may be refreshed and cheered by them while I need them.
Page 116 - An Accurate and Interesting Account of the Hardships and Sufferings of that Band of Heroes who Traversed the Wilderness in the Campaign Against Quebec in 1775.
Page 151 - ... uses it, is vernacular, and his arguments are the most simple that the case will bear. They are not an intricate web, in which filaments separately weak obtain strength by their union, but a chain, whose firmness arises from the solidity of its links, and not from the artifice of their connexion. But that quality which exalts his judgments the most in the estimation of the public, is the ardent love of justice which runs through them all. His appetite for it was keen and constant; and nothing...