MATRIMONIAL INSTITUTIONS IN THE UNITED STATES [120] [121] CHAPTER XII OBLIGATORY CIVIL MARRIAGE IN THE NEW ENGLAND COLONIES [Bibliographical Note XII.—For this chapter a large quantity of files and records of Massachusetts colonial and provincial courts has been examined. In the office of the Clerk of Courts for Middlesex county (Cambridge) have been used the Records of the County Court for Middlesex, 1649-86, 4 vols., MSS. folio, Vol. II missing; supplemented by the Files of the County Court for Middlesex, 1655-99; and followed by the Records of the Court of General Sessions of the Peace for Middlesex, 1692-1822, 9 vols., MSS. folio, the ninth volume containing also Records of the Court of Pleas and General Sessions of the Peace, October 1686, to March, 1688. In the office of the Clerk of the Supreme Judicial Court for the County of Suffolk (Boston) have likewise been examined the Records of the Court of General Sessions of the Peace, 1702-32, 4 vols., MSS. folio, with a fifth volume of fragments, 1738-80; the Minute Books of the Court of General Sessions of the Peace, January 3, 1743, to August 3, 1773, 5 vols., MSS. folio; the Records of the Superior Court of Judicature, Court of Assize and General Goal Delivery in the Province of Massachusetts Bay, 1692-1780, 33 vols., MSS. folio, Vol. II containing also the records of certain courts during the Andros period, 1686-87; and the Early Court Files of Suffolk, 1629-1800—being papers of colonial and provincial courts held in Suffolk county, of the Superior Court of Judicature held in the several counties, and of the Supreme Judicial Court prior to last century, with miscellaneous papers, the whole collection comprising several hundred volumes, of which only those for the period 1629-1730 have been covered by this investigation. Careful examination has also been made of the MSS. folio volume of Records of the County Court of Suffolk, October 1671, to April, 1680, in the possession of the Boston AthenÆum. Very important are the published Colonial Records of Plymouth (Boston, 1855-61); Massachusetts Bay (Boston, 1853-54); New Haven (Hartford, 1857-58); Connecticut (Hartford, 1850-87); Rhode Island (Providence, 1856 ff.); and the Provincial, Town, and State Papers of New Hampshire (Concord, 1867-83). The necessary complement of the records is of course found in the various compilations of statutes. For Massachusetts it has seemed best to cite by preference Whitmore's fine facsimile edition of the Colonial Laws (Vol. I, 1660-72, Boston, 1887; Vol. II, 1672-86, Boston, 1889), which should be used in connection with his Bibliographical Sketch of the Laws of the Massachusetts Colony, 1630-86 (Boston, 1890); and Ames and Goodell's Acts and Resolves (5 vols., Boston, 1869-86), which with the three supplementary volumes (Boston, 1892-96), cover the period of the provincial charter and carry us beyond the Revolution. The following original digests have also been employed: The Book of the General Lawes and Libertyes of the Massachusetts Colony (Boston, 1660); The General Laws and Liberties (Boston, 1672)—these two earliest codes being those reprinted by Whitmore; Acts and Laws, 1692-1714 (Boston, 1714); Acts and Laws, 1692-1765 (Boston, 1769); Acts and Laws (Boston, 1759); and the collection entitled Charters and General Laws of the Colony and Province of Massachusetts Bay (Boston, 1814). The first digests of New Haven and Connecticut plantations are comprised in Trumbull's True Blue Laws (Hartford, 1876). There is also a reprint of the Code of 1650, to which is added extracts from Laws and Judicial Proceedings of New Haven Colony commonly called Blue Laws (Hartford, 1822); and a facsimile reprint of The Book of the General Laws of 1673 (Hartford, 1865). For the eighteenth century we have the Acts and Laws of his Majesties Colony of Connecticut in New England (New London, 1715); Acts and Laws of his Majesties English Colony of Connecticut (New London, 1750); Acts and Laws (New Haven, 1769); and the Acts and Laws (New London, 1784). For New Hampshire, the "Province Laws" published in Vol. VIII of the New Hampshire Historical Society Collections; the Acts and Laws passed by the General Court or Assembly, 1696-1725 (Boston, 1726); the Acts and Laws (Portsmouth, 1761); and the Acts and Laws, 1696-1771 (Portsmouth, 1771), have been cited. To follow the tangled thread of Rhode Island legislation on any subject is a perplexing task; but the development of the written marriage law may be traced with tolerable clearness in the published digests. See Staples's Proceedings of the First General Assembly ... and the Code adopted by that Assembly in 1647 (Providence, 1847); Rider's facsimile reprint of the code of 1705, entitled Laws and Acts of his Majesties Colony of Rhode Island, 1636-1705 (Providence, 1896); his facsimile reprint of the code of 1719, entitled The Charter and the Laws of his Majesties Colony of Rhode-Island in America (Providence, 1895); also the original Acts and Laws (Newport, 1730); with Rider's facsimile reprint, entitled Supplementary Pages to the Digest of 1730 (Providence, [1898]); the original folio editions of the Acts and Laws dated respectively 1745, 1752, 1767 (Newport); and Gregory's facsimile reprint of the compilation of 1772, entitled Acts and Laws ... passed since the Revision in June 1767 (Providence, 1893). The Plymouth codes are printed in Vol. XI of the Colonial Records of that colony; and they are given in convenient form in Brigham's Compact, with the Charter and Laws of New Plymouth (Boston, 1836). Original material has also been gleaned from the Collections (Boston, 1806-97) and the Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society (Boston, 1879 ff.); Bradford's History of Plymouth Plantation (Boston, 1856); Winthrop's History of New England, 1630-49 (Boston, 1853); Hutchinson's History of Massachusetts, 1628-1774 (Vol. I, Salem, 1795; Vol. II, Boston, 1795; Vol. III, London, 1828); Cotton Mather's Magnalia Christi Americana (Hartford, 1820); Increase Mather's Answer of Several Ministers (Boston, 1695), on marriage with wife's sister; The Andros Tracts (Boston, 1868-74); Young's Chronicles of the Pilgrims, 1602-25 (2d ed., Boston, 1844); Historical Collections of the Essex Institute (Salem, 1896); Lechford's Note-Book, 1638-71 (Cambridge, 1885), idem, Plain Dealing (Boston, 1867); reprinted also in 3 Mass. Hist. Soc. Collections, III; Dunton's Life and Errors (Westminster, 1818); his Letters from New-England (Prince Society, Boston, 1867); the "Town Records of Boston," 1634-1777; and the "Town Records of Dorchester," both in the Reports of the Boston Record Commission; "Town Records of Salem," 1634-59, in Vol. IX of Hist. Coll. Essex Inst.; especially Sewall's "Diary," in 5 Mass. Hist. Coll., V, VI, VII (Boston, 1878-80); and his "Letter-Book," in 6 Mass. Hist. Coll., I, II (Boston, 1886), both of which afford a wealth of illustration for almost every phase of wedding and other social customs. Among recent writings relating to the general subject most important are Shirley, "Early Jurisprudence of New Hampshire," in Proceedings of the New Hamp. Hist. Society, 1876-84 (Concord, 1885); Earle, Customs and Fashions in Old New England (New York, 1894); Weeden, Economic and Social History of New England, 1620-1789 (Boston, 1891); Goodwin, Pilgrim Republic (Boston, 1888); Howe, Puritan Republic (Indianapolis, 1899); Arnold, History of Rhode Island (New York, 1874); Friedberg, Eheschliessung (Leipzig, 1865); Cook, "Marriage Celebration in the Colonies," in Atlantic Monthly, LXI (Boston, 1888); Bishop, Marriage, Divorce, and Separation (Chicago, 1891); Lodge, Short History of the English Colonies (New York, 1882); Trumbull, History of Connecticut (New Haven, 1818); Hollister, History of Connecticut (Hartford, 1857); Atwater, History of the Colony of New Haven (New Haven, 1881); Freeman, History of Cape Cod (Boston, 1869); Bailey, Historical Sketches of Andover (Boston, 1880); Bliss, Side Glimpses from the Colonial Meeting-House (Boston, 1896); idem, Colonial Times on Buzzard's Bay (Boston, 1888); Brooks, The Olden Time Series: The Days of the Spinning-Wheel in New England (Boston, 1886); articles by Scudder, Whitmore, Edes, McKenzie, Morse, and Goddard, in Memorial History of Boston (Boston, 1882-83); and Newhall, Ye Great and General Court (Lynn, 1897). Illustrative material has likewise been gathered from a large number of writers, among whom are Palfrey, History of New England (Boston, 1888-90); Carlier, Le mariage aux États-Unis (Paris, 1860); Oliver, Puritan Commonwealth (Boston, 1856); Doyle, English Colonies (New York, 1882-87); Ellis, Puritan Age (Boston, 1888); Dexter, Congregationalism (New York, 1880); Bacon, Genesis of the New England Churches (New York, 1874); Belknap, History of New Hampshire (Dover, 1812); Green, Short History of Rhode Island (Providence, 1877); Sanford, History of Connecticut (Hartford, 1888); Hawthorne, Grandfather's Chair (Boston, 1893); Campbell, The Puritan in Holland, England, and America (New York, 1892); Hildreth, History of the United States (New York, 1882); Snow, History of Boston (Boston, 1824); Shurtleff, Topographical and Historical Description of Boston (Boston, 1872); Gilman, The Story of Boston (New York, 1889); Drake (S. G.), History and Antiquities of Boston (Boston, 1854); Drake (S. A.), Old Landmarks of Boston (Boston, 1889); Drake (S. A.), The Making of New England (New York, 1887); Prime, Along New England Roads (New York, 1892); Read, in the Collections of the Old Colony Historical Society, No. 2 (Taunton, 1880); and Brigham, in Proceedings of the Mass. Hist. Society, IV. Among the works drawn upon in the treatment of special topics are Stiles's Bundling (Albany, 1871); supplemented by his History of Windsor (New York, 1859); and the very suggestive paper of Charles Francis Adams, Some Phases of Sexual Morality and Church Discipline in Colonial New England, reprinted from the Mass. Hist. Soc. Proceedings, June, 1891 (Cambridge, 1891); while there is an interesting passage relating to the same custom in Burnaby's Travels through the Middle Settlements in North America, 1759-60 (London, 1798); as also a characteristic reference in Irving's Knickerbocker History of New York (Philadelphia, 1871). For the first time the history of the stigma of the "scarlet letter" has been treated from the sources in Davis's careful monograph, The Law of Adultery and Ignominious Punishments (Worcester, 1895). In connection with the influence of the Levitical law on the New England conception of marriage and the family, Amram's The Jewish Law of Divorce (Philadelphia, 1896), and Mielziner's The Jewish Law of Marriage and Divorce (Cincinnati, 1884) are important. Of most service for the legal character of New England slave marriages are Moore's Notes on the History of Slavery in Massachusetts (New York, 1866); his "Slave Marriages in Massachusetts," in the Historical Magazine, XV (1869), containing a significant ritual used by Rev. Samuel Phillips, minister at Andover, 1710-71; and Steiner's "History of Slavery in Connecticut," in Johns Hopkins University Studies, XI (Baltimore, 1893). The originality of the system of civil registration created by the New England settlers is appreciated by Kuczynski, "The Registration Laws in the Colonies of Massachusetts Bay and New Plymouth," in Publications of the Am. Statistical Ass., VII, 65-73 (Boston, 1901). See also Bibliographical Note XV.] I. THE MAGISTRATE SUPERSEDES THE PRIEST AT THE NUPTIALS The continuity of English law and custom in the New England colonies is not more striking than the innovation. First of all it would indeed be strange if the planting of new states in the wilderness should not have afforded to thoughtful men a rare opportunity for freeing themselves from the trammels of antiquated methods and traditions which the "inertia of vested interests" might yet for ages sustain in the native land. In some instances the influences of a new and primitive environment might cause an unconscious return to the practices of earlier days. Religious and ecclesiastical ideas must necessarily play the leading part. In fact, the zeal with which the Pioneers of Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay proscribed the ceremonies and usages of the Roman and Anglican churches has had much to do with the character of civil institutions in the United States. On the part even of the Puritan there was thus sometimes a strong reaction in favor of the temporal power in matters hitherto regarded as exclusively pertaining to the spiritual jurisdiction. The sway of the so-called theocracy in Massachusetts and New Haven tended, sometimes inadvertently, to foster the growth of the American idea of complete separation of church and state. Thereby the forces of local self-government were quickened. Thus for a time the town-meeting and the congregation were practically one and the same; but authority was exercised in the name of the lay township and not in that of the ecclesiastical parish. So also the probate of wills, the administration of estates, the exercise of chancery jurisdiction,[357] and the supervision of primary and secondary education[358] were taken out of the hands of the church and vested mainly in the local community. The process of secularization in legal functions proceeded with rapid strides. In no respect was the change more remarkable than in the administration of matrimonial law and in the conception of the marriage contract. Here, as in so many other instances, our ancestors anticipated the thought and the legislation of the mother-country by more than two hundred years.[359] It will be remembered that in the beginning of the seventeenth century—and ever since the thirteenth—English marriage law was in an anomalous and most chaotic state. The Reformation in England had brought no real change in the canonical conception of the form of wedlock, though its sacramental nature was denied. On the one hand was the church at the demand of the state trying to enforce ecclesiastical rites and to secure publicity by requirement of banns, parental consent, and registration; on the other was the "irregular" or common-law marriage, entered into without any of these safeguards, by mere private agreement; and the validity of the latter was not squarely impeached by the church, though the disregard of the priestly office was punished by spiritual censure. All this is changed in the colonies. In place of confusion and complexity is found simplicity. In New England particularly civil rites, civil registration, and uniform theory of marriage tend at once to prevent the manifold evils growing out of a lax or uncertain law. The conception of wedlock which existed there from the beginning was identical with that which later found expression in the writings of Milton and the legislation of Cromwell. Marriage was declared to be, not a sacrament, but a civil contract in which the intervention of a priest was unnecessary and out of place. Governor Winthrop, in commenting upon "a great marriage to be solemnized at Boston," in 1647, expresses the sentiment prevailing during the first three-quarters of a century after the settlement. The bridegroom was "of Hingham, Mr. Hubbard's[360] church," and the latter "was procured to preach and came to Boston to that end. But the magistrates, hearing of it, sent to him to forbear. The reasons were, 1. for that his spirit had been discovered to be averse to our ecclesiastical and civil government, and he was a bold man, and would speak his mind. 2. we were not willing to bring in the English custom of ministers performing the solemnity of marriage, which sermons at such times might induce, but if any ministers were present and would bestow a word of exhortation, etc., it was permitted."[361] The last remark reminds us of the benediction of the early Christian priest, who, like the Puritan, discriminated between the religious act and the marriage. Sermons, however, were originally proscribed at the nuptials, though they were permitted at the betrothal.[362] The early colonial laws, generally, required that all marriages should be celebrated before a justice of the peace or other magistrate, sometimes under penalty of nullity for those solemnized in any other way.[363] Where no statutory provision to the contrary existed the common-law marriage by private consent was valid.[364] The question now arises as to the causes which determined the establishment of civil marriage in the New England colonies. Was it set up in imitation of the practice in Holland? Did it come as a natural result of the general tendency of Protestant, and especially of Puritan, thought? Or was it perhaps the product of both influences combined? Already in the middle of the eighteenth century colonial historians were at a loss to account for it. Thus Governor Hutchinson makes a difficulty of understanding why the lay celebration was introduced. "Their laws concerning marriage and divorce," he says, "are somewhat singular. I suppose there had been no instance of a marriage, lawfully celebrated, by a layman in England, when they left it. I believe there was no instance of marriage by a clergyman after they arrived, during their charter; but it was always done by a magistrate, or by persons specially appointed for that purpose.... It is difficult to assign a reason for so sudden a change, especially as there was no established form of the marriage covenant."[365] On the other hand, Governor Bradford believed that the civil celebration was introduced by the Pilgrims directly from Holland. The first marriage in Plymouth Plantation—that of Edward Winslow and Susannah White[366]—occurred on May 12 (22), 1621. This, he declares "according to ye laudable custome of ye Low-Cuntries, in which they had lived, was thought most requisite to be performed by the magistrate, as being a civill thing, upon which many questions aboute inheritances doo depende, with other things most proper to their cognizans, and most consonante to ye scriptures, Ruth 4, and no wher found in ye gospell to be layed on ye ministers as a part of their office. 'This decree or law about marriage was published by ye State of ye Low-Cuntries Ano: 1590. That those of any religion, after lawfull and open publication, coming before ye magistrats in ye Town or Stat-house, were to be orderly (by them) married one to another.' Petits Hist. fol: 1029. And this practiss hath continued amongst, not only them, but hath been followed by all ye famous churches of Christ in these parts to this time,—Ano: 1646."[367] The testimony of Bradford must, indeed, command our earnest attention, though in the matter of dates he is apparently misled by his authority. For, as already seen,[368] two of the Netherland provinces had established civil marriage as early as 1580; while it was not extended to them all until seventy-six years later. Nor is the mere fact that, seemingly without discussion, civil marriage was adopted by Massachusetts and her daughter-colonies, as well as by Plymouth, necessarily a fatal objection to this theory of origin, though it has a bearing upon the question which must be carefully considered. For the New England Pilgrim and Puritan alike were simply doing what their brethren did a few years after when they found their opportunity in the days of the Commonwealth. If America owes the institution of civil marriage to Holland, it is so not merely because of the residence of the Scrooby congregation at Leyden, but because of the profound influence which Dutch Puritanism exerted upon the Puritanism of England for a hundred years after the Spanish and Tudor persecutions began. It can scarcely be doubted that in various ways Dutch ideas made themselves felt in the remarkable legislative and constitutional experimentation of Cromwell's reign.[369] Moreover, the argument is strengthened by the fact that the Fathers of the English Reformation, unlike Luther and his followers, do not seem to have raised a single voice in favor of the lay ceremony. Nevertheless, though Dutch custom undoubtedly furnished a direct precedent which should not be ignored, it seems highly probable that without the influence of Holland the early establishment of civil marriage in New England was inevitable. It was required by the spirit of Protestantism. Under favorable conditions, which New England did and old England did not afford, it was sure to arise as a consequence of rejecting the sacramental theory of wedlock.[370] There is another factor of the problem which must be reckoned with. The New England Puritans were steeped to the marrow in Hebraism; and, as we shall presently see, the growth of a sentiment in favor of lay marriage was fostered by the example of the Jewish law.[371] It is vain to apologize for them on the ground that under the influence of the Mosaic code they really regarded the officiating magistrate as the "minister of God." In his "judicial" capacity the magistrate may, indeed, have been looked upon as a divine agent.[372] That is the well-known casuistry by which Luther and the early Protestants persuaded themselves that absolute divorce through the temporal court is not forbidden by the scriptural precepts.[373] But it is a grave error to suppose that the seventeenth-century Puritan had this in mind when he rejected the priestly ceremony. Doubtless he did not forget that marriage from its social and ethical sides is something higher than a mere civil contract. Yet for more than half a century after the settlement so intent was he in emphasizing its secular character that in the statutes the words "holy" or "sacred" as applied to it very seldom, if ever, appear. "Honorable" or some similar epithet is the strongest term usually employed. Even the publication of banns, as will hereafter be seen, was at first ordinarily required to be made, not on the sabbath, but at public "lecture" or on training day.[374] The difference between the colonists and their Anglican adversaries in this regard is brought out in an interesting way through the experience of Edward Winslow, whose second marriage has just been mentioned. In 1634 he was sent on public business to England, where, partly in the interest of Merry-Mount Morton, Mason, and Sir Ferdinando Gorges, he was accused by Archbishop Laud—whose scheme for setting up a governor-general and a bishop in the colonies seemed likely to be frustrated by Winslow's petition relative to the encroachments of the French and Dutch—of "teaching in ye church publickly," and of performing the marriage ceremony. The latter offense he had committed in his capacity as magistrate. In reply to the charge he excused himself on the ground that the colonists were "necessitated so to doe, having for a long time togeather at first no minister; besids, it was no new-thing, for he had been so maried him selfe in Holland, by ye magistrats in their statthouse."[375] But "with more courage and candor than caution, he proceeded to defend the practice on its merits, declaring that he knew no scriptural ground for confining this office to the clergy; while from the relations which marriage often had to property and to business obligations, there seemed good reason for making it a civil contract, as in Holland."[376] As a consequence Winslow was imprisoned in the Fleet for seventeen weeks.[377] It appears certain, then, that in the two older colonies the lay ceremony was invariably required from the beginning.[378] But in neither case does there seem to have been any direct legislation on the subject for many years. Indeed, were there no prudential reason,[379] a positive legal sanction may well have been deemed superfluous while public opinion was so sensitive and so united. The first extant order of the general court of Plymouth requiring celebration before a civil officer was passed, it is said,[380] in 1671. But in this jurisdiction, as in Massachusetts, the assistants or "magistrates" had always exercised this function; and it had long been the custom for the general court to appoint commissioners in the particular towns to join persons in marriage.[381] The earliest statute of Massachusetts relating to the celebration is the act of 1646, providing "that no person whatsoever in this Jurisdiction, shall joyne any persons together in Marriage, but the Magistrate, or such other as the General Court, or Court of Assistants shal Authorize in such place, where no Magistrate is neer."[382] In practice the last provision of this act was carried out in various ways. Thus, for example, any citizen might be appointed for a particular town during the pleasure of the court.[383] Or, in absence of the regular officer, a commission might be issued to perform the ceremony in specified cases; as when Henry Chickering was given authority to marry "two or three couples, legally published at Dedham."[384] In one instance we find a curious optional commission in which are inserted the names of three persons, either one of whom is empowered to join "Mr. John Apleton and Mrs. Priscilla Glover" in marriage.[385] But, as a rule, one or more of the three commissioners, chosen for the ending of small causes in towns where no assistant resided, was authorized by the county court to perform this duty.[386] The law and custom of the other New England colonies were essentially the same as those already discussed. Everywhere marriage was regarded as a civil contract and the celebration was performed by a civil magistrate. In New Hampshire members of the council could act.[387] In Rhode Island, besides the magistrate, "none but Quakers[388] and clergymen of the Church of England could perform the ceremony," and these were given such authority by special grant of the king.[389] The law of New Haven, 1648, is peculiar in requiring not only that the marriage be performed before a magistrate or someone expressly allowed by the general court; but when the persons to be united are "able to go forth," that it be solemnized in some public place,[390] under penalty of five pounds for "every such miscarriage."[391] In Connecticut, likewise, compulsory civil marriage was adopted.[392] During the "usurpation" period, beginning in 1686, the laws requiring civil marriage were set aside. Joseph Dudley, who entered upon his duties as president of New England in May of that year, published "an order of council, authorizing and empowering ministers and justices of the peace, the order says, 'to consummate marriages,' after three several times publication or licence from the president or deputy."[393] With this compromise Governor Andros was not satisfied; and it was his intention to allow marriages to be performed only by the Episcopal clergy. To do this at once, however, was impracticable. "Magistrates," says Hutchinson, "still continued to give people in matrimony. Other provision could not immediately be made." For at the time there was but one Episcopal clergyman in the country; and "Sir Edmund considered the Congregational ministers as mere laymen. Randolph wrote to the bishop of London, 'I press for able and sober ministers, and we will contribute largely to their maintenance; but one thing will mainly help, when no marriages shall hereafter be allowed lawful but such as are made by the ministers of the church of England."[394] Another restraint upon marriage was accounted a still more serious hardship. "None were allowed to marry except they entered into bonds with sureties to the governor, to be forfeited in case there should afterwards appear to have been any lawful impediment."[395] This requirement in many cases amounted to a practical prohibition.[396] The "first marriage at Boston with prayer-book and ring" occurred on May 18/28, 1686, just four days after Dudley received his commission as president of New England.[397] But there is evidence that zealous opposition to the religious ceremony existed up to the very beginning of this period. Thus, according to Savage, "Lawrence Vanderbosk, a Huguenot clergyman, undertook to solemnize marriages in Boston in 1685." But he was brought before a tribunal for this enormity and promised "to do no more such things," yet in September, says Judge Sewall, "he joined together Giles Sylvester and Hannah, widow of Benjamin Gillam. The reverend offender went to New York the same week."[398] Gradually, however, the stern Puritanism of the colonists became softened; the prejudice against ecclesiastical rites rapidly subsided; marriages were solemnized even by the Congregational clergy;[399] and soon after the struggle for the charters, laws were enacted allowing the ministers of all denominations to perform the ceremony. Yet, in Rhode Island, it was not until 1733 that the "settled and ordained ministers and elders of every society and denomination of Christians" were permitted to join persons in marriage, the legal fee therefor being fixed at three shillings.[400] By an act of October, 1694, the same privilege was conferred upon the "ordayned ministers of the severall plantations" of Connecticut—in order, says the general court, to satisfy "such as are conscienciously desirous to be" so joined.[401] For Massachusetts a similar statute was passed in 1692, authorizing all "settled ministers" to solemnize marriages, but only in their "respective towns;" while, on the other hand, the authority of the justice of the peace extended throughout the county.[402] The careful limitation of the respective districts of the minister and magistrate was doubtless intended to act as a check upon clandestine unions, as by the more stringent act of 1695. By this statute none may join any persons in marriage who are not inhabitants or residents of the county or town; nor without a proper certificate of due publication and parental consent from the clerks of the towns where the parties respectively dwell. For celebrating a marriage contrary to the act the minister or justice suffers a penalty of fifty pounds and is forever disabled to join persons in marriage, with the added liability of prosecution from the parent or guardian.[403] By several subsequent acts the powers of the clergy are still further enlarged. Thus in 1763 they are empowered to solemnize marriages in "parishes" and "districts" composed of "parts of towns" in "as ample a manner" as in the several towns where they dwell.[404] In 1773 they are allowed to perform the ceremony, not merely within their official districts, but for any whose "ministerial taxes" they are entitled to receive; or if for any cause a parish is without a minister, or if the incumbent himself desires to get married, then the next minister of the same denomination in the town may lawfully act.[405] So it appears that the proclamation of President Dudley in 1686 marks an epoch of some importance in institutional history. For by it the principle of American law, generally recognized at present by the statutes of the various states, and imitated by English legislation, was first recognized. Almost everywhere in this country the lay and the religious celebrations are equally valid; and it is not without interest to note that long before the Revolution the priest had once more practically superseded the magistrate at the nuptials.[406] It was already regarded as good social "form" to have the nuptials solemnized by religious rites. No prescribed marriage ritual existed. The intention of the persons entering into the covenant might be expressed in any fitting words.[407] In the early period weddings were usually celebrated quietly in the home of the bride. But it must not be understood that all festivity was for long rigorously proscribed. Soon feasting was added to prayer and the singing of psalms.[408] A sumptuary law of 1637, forbidding the sale of buns and cakes in the markets, victualling houses, and elsewhere, carefully makes an exception of "such cakes as shalbee made for any buriall, or marriage, or such like speciall occation."[409] The ancient practice of our teutonic ancestors of "bedding" the newly married pair was maintained in some quarters. Judge Sewall had that experience when he took his second wife.[410] "In Marblehead bridesmaids and groomsmen put the wedded couple to bed;" and we are told that "along the New Hampshire and upper Massachusetts coast, the groom was led to the bridal chamber clad in a brocaded night-gown. This may have occasionally taken place among the gentry," comments Mrs. Earle, "but I fancy brocaded night-gowns were not common wear among New England country folk."[411] Another "survival" was the sham "bride-stealing" which was long kept up in the Connecticut valley. "The last bride stolen in Hadley was Mrs. Job Marsh, in the year 1783;" and to this day "in certain localities in Rhode Island, the young men of the neighborhood invade the bridal chamber and pull the bride downstairs, and even out-of-doors, thus forcing the husband to follow to her rescue. If the room or house-door be locked against this invasion, the rough visitors break the lock."[412] Furthermore, numerous instances of "smock marriages" in New England are recorded. Here the English superstition elsewhere mentioned[413] took the special form that "if the bride were married 'in her shift on the king's highway,' a creditor could follow her person no farther in pursuit of his debt."[414] In the eighteenth century weddings were accompanied by much revelry and extravagance. Gloves, rings, and scarves, as at funerals, were given away in such profusion as to call for legislation to check the abuse.[415] Unstinted feasting and drinking were the order of the day. "Sack-posset" appears to have been the favorite wedding beverage.[416] "All the friends were entertained at the bride's home with a collation or supper, and afterward a dance; while in the country they were the most important social events. The banns were proclaimed in church, and all the neighbors were invited from the pulpit to attend the ceremony. On the day of the wedding muskets were fired, a procession was formed, and marched to the bride's house, where the marriage took place; and then came a dinner, a dance, and great merry-making. Usually these wedding feasts lasted through the day and evening, but they were sometimes kept up for two or three days. On one occasion at New London there was a great wedding dance on the day after the marriage, when ninety-two ladies and gentlemen assembled and proceeded to dance ninety-two jigs, fifty-two contra-dances, forty-five minuets, and seventeen hornpipes. This was probably an extreme case; but all over New England weddings were great occasions, and were celebrated with much pomp and rejoicing."[417] Of the New England marriage celebration at the beginning of the eighteenth century we have some vivid, though imperfect, sketches from the inimitable pen of Judge Sewall. Next to funerals, weddings seem to have been his chief recreation. The brief and naÏve entries in his Diary reveal to us the mingled praying, psalm-singing, and posset which enlivened those festive occasions. Thus on October 22, 1713, he writes: "I go to Salem.... See Mr. Noyes marry Mr. Aaron Porter and Mrs. Susan Sewall, at my Brother's. Was a pretty deal of Company present.... Mr. Noyes made a Speech, said Love was the Sugar to sweeten every condition in the married Relation. Pray'd once. Did all very well. After the Sack-Posset, etc., Sung the 45th Psalm from the 8th verse to the end, five staves. I set it to Windsor Tune. I had a very good Turkey-Leather Psalm-Book which I look'd in while Mr. Noyes Read: and then I gave it to the Bridegroom saying, 'I give you this Psalm-Book in order to your perpetuating this song: and I would have you pray that it may be an Introduction to our Singing with the Choir above.'"[418] Again in 1720 we find him solemnizing the marriage of his daughter, Mrs. Judith Sewall, with Mr. William Cooper. "I said to Mr. Simeon Stoddard and his wife, Sir, Madam, The Great Honor you have conferr'd on the Bridegroom and the Bride, by being present at this Solemnity does very conveniently supercede any further enquiry after your Consent. And the part I am desired to take in this Wedding, renders the way of my giving my Consent very Compendious: There's no maner of room left for that previous Question, Who giveth this Woman to be married to this Man? Dear child, you give me your Hand for one moment, and the Bridegroom forever. Spouse, You Accept and receive this Woman now given you, etc. Mr. Sewall pray'd before the Wedding, and Mr. Coleman after. Sung the 115. Psalm from the 9. verse to the end, in the New Hall, St. David's which I set. Then we had our Cake and Sack-posset."[419] II. BANNS, CONSENT, AND REGISTRATION It is a fact of great historical interest that in the New England colonies the administration of matrimonial law was relegated to the sphere of local self-government. The requirement of previous publication, parental consent, and registration was everywhere carried into effect by the officers of the town as a part of their regular functions; and by-laws for their guidance were enacted in town-meeting. The first extant statute for the regulation of marriage is contained in the revision of the Plymouth laws made in 1636, and repeated under a slightly altered form in the revision of 1658. It is a model of brevity and precision; and it marks an epoch in the history of English jurisprudence, attempting, as it does in few words, a remedy for many of the evils which continued for two centuries to vex the mother-country. No one "under the covert of parents" is allowed to marry without their approbation. But in case such approval "cannot be had then it shall be with the consent of the Gove[~r] or some assistant to whom the persons are knowne whose care it shall be to see the marriage be fitt before it be allowed by him." After the consent of parent or magistrate has thus been obtained, the marriage is to be published in "meeting" three several times before it is solemnized. Or, if there is no meeting, then fifteen days' notice by posting in the usual public place shall be sufficient; provided the "writing be vnder some magistrats hand or by his order."[420] The Old Colony, likewise, made careful provision for registration. By an act of 1646 it is declared the duty of the town clerk to keep a register of the "day and yeare of the marriage, birth, and buriall of euery man, woman, and child" within his township. He is to have "thripence apece for each particular person soe registered." The persons marrying are themselves required, within one month, to report their marriage to him under penalty of three shillings for neglect—one-half to the Colony and the other half to the register "upon his complaint." The clerk must also submit annually to the general court at its March meeting a written report of all registrations made by him during the year. By this act, moreover, the publication of banns was devolved upon him.[421] The laws of the other colonies differed only in details from those of Plymouth. In Massachusetts the first order of the general court on the subject was passed in 1639. The intention is to be thrice published, not at divine service on the sabbath, it may be noted, but in town-meeting or at "publike lecture" in "both the townes where the parties, or either of them, do ordinarily reside." If no public lecture is held in the town, then fourteen days' notice may be given in writing on "some poast standing in publike viewe" and used solely for this purpose.[422] The "poast" is to be provided by the town under penalty of ten shillings for default.[423] Later it became customary for the town clerk or his deputy to publish the banns on Sunday, "after the blessing to the evening exercise was pronounced;" and so in 1696-97 we find the town-meeting of Charlestown ordering that "publishments should be made 'on Lecture days or any other public times, and not restrained to Sabbath Days only.'"[424] Sometimes on petition the legislature granted to individuals special permission to marry.[425] Originally the registration of births, deaths, and marriages devolved upon the town clerk; but it seems to have been neglected by him. For in 1642 the general court laid this duty upon the clerk of the writs in each town, under penalty for default, requiring him to make annual return of all names registered to the recorder of the county court.[426] A similar report to the same officer is to be submitted each year by all magistrates or persons appointed to solemnize marriages; and the "new married man" shall likewise, within one month, bring in to the clerk of the writs a certificate of his marriage.[427] Under the Province laws the duties of recorder were again performed by the clerk of the township; and under severe penalty persons might not be joined in marriage without presenting a proper certificate of publication and satisfactory evidence of parental consent.[428] Previous to 1692, of course, the legal history of New Hampshire is in the main identical with that of Massachusetts.[429] But in the pioneer stage the township was sufficient unto itself. "Dover and Portsmouth, for nearly twenty years, had no central authority.[430] They had no ministry in any form, nor any magistrates, except such as might be created by any mining hamlet in an unorganized territory, or afterward as the result of forming themselves into societies. This, however, did not prevent people either from marrying or dying. The result was that marriage in New Hampshire has borne from the outset not only the character of a civil contract, but the impress of our township system."[431] After the establishment of the royal province the contract might be solemnized by "virtue either of publishment, or of a licence from the Governor. The granting of these licences was accounted a part of the royal prerogative;"[432] and it was complained of as leading to abuse.[433] The statutes of Connecticut contain a curious provision, which will receive further notice hereafter. Distinction is made between the "contract" and the "covenant." Eight days' public notice of the proposed engagement must be given; and after the contract the betrothed pair must "forbeare" for a second period of eight days before joining in the covenant.[434] By the code of 1673 persons are not to be joined in wedlock "before the intention ... hath been sufficiently published at some publick Lecture or Town meeting in the Towns where the parties or either of them do ordinarily reside, or be set up in Writing ... upon some post of their Meeting House Door in publick view, there to stand so as it may be read eight days before such marriage."[435] In general, the marriage laws of both Connecticut[436] and New Haven[437] on the topic considered are plainly modeled upon those of Massachusetts, and so need not here receive further analysis. Some interesting details may be gleaned from the matrimonial legislation of Rhode Island. The code of 1647 requires the publication of banns at two town-meetings, confirmation before the head officer, and registration in the town clerk's book; otherwise the marriage is void. It is further enacted that the "man that goes contrarie to this present Ordinance ... shall forfeit five pounds to the parents of the Maid, and be bound to his good behaviour; and all the accessories shall forfeit five pounds a man, halfe ... to the grieved parents and the other halfe to the Town."[438] Thus was established at an early day, says Arnold, a system of registration "such as recent legislation has attempted to revive."[439] In 1656 it was permitted either to publish marriages at town-meeting, or "on a traininge day at ye head of ye Companie,"[440] or by a "Writinge under ye Magistrates hands fixed upon some noted place in ye Towne."[441] If "the banns were forbidden, the case was to be heard by two magistrates; should they allow it, the parties might marry; but if not, the general Court of trials were to decide."[442] A later version of the law of 1647, of uncertain date, is somewhat more detailed. The "man yt hath A respect to a maid & doth desi[re] to Obtaine her in Marriage ... shall first acquaint her Parents thereof & upon their consenting thereto he shall have Baines of matrimony set up in a Publick Place in ye Town or be Published two severll times In A Public Assembly In the Town & then remaine from After ye first Publication Tenn Days." Afterward, "before one of the Generll officers" the celebration may take place according to "ye usuwal Custome of this place & then a Certificate Shall be given by ye Officer yt Ioynes them togeather in Marriage to ye party So married who shall Carry it to the Clarke of ye Town where ye Marriage was Solemnized & have it Placed upon Record." For violation of the act the same penalties are imposed on the principals and accessories as in 1647; and the children "yt any shall have wthout this due & orderly Course of Law ... shall be looked at not to be Legitimate."[443] It appears that the execution of the laws was sadly neglected, and so by an act of 1698 all marriages thus far solemnized, but not duly registered, are declared valid. Persons married in future are ordered within ten days to make return to the town clerk; while the latter is required to submit annually to the head officer of the town or to the chief justice of the peace a report of all births, marriages, and deaths by him recorded.[444] Three years later a more stringent statute appears. Persons from another colony or township must present to the officer performing the ceremony a magistrate's certificate of proper publication and qualification.[445] "Fine and suspension from office were the penalties for any violation of this act by a magistrate, and fine, imprisonment, or whipping, is the punishments for the principals who disregard it."[446] After various changes[447] the law of the provincial era reached its full development in the code of 1767. A dual system of banns and lay publication is provided. If application be made to a "settled and ordained" minister of any denomination, he shall "openly and by public speaking" proclaim the banns on three several Sundays, holidays, or days of public worship "in the Meeting in the Town, where the Parties respectively belong." If lay publication be preferred, the assistant, warden, or justice, under his hand and seal, is required to post a notice in some public place in each of the towns where the parties dwell fifteen days before the wedding.[448] A method of "under-writing" in case of objection is prescribed. With leave of any assistant, justice, or warden, the person opposing the marriage is to make the objection "in writing under his or her Hand, therein assigning the Impediment, and affix the same under the Publication;" but in case of oral banns the written objection, in the presence of two witnesses, is to be delivered to the minister or elder who proclaimed the banns. The person forbidding the marriage must enter into recognizance with two good sureties to appear at the next court of general sessions of the peace and there "make good and prove" his allegations, or, in default, pay to the persons to be wedded "all such Damages as they shall sustain by Means of staying their Marriage." A certificate of publication must be produced; two credible witnesses to the ceremony are required; the person conducting the celebration must give a certificate[449] thereof to the newly wedded pair; and he is entitled to a fee of three shillings. Only fines are imposed for violation of the act by the solemnizer or by the parties. Neither by this law nor apparently by any statute subsequent to the act of 1663 is a contract declared void for non-observance of legal forms.[450] In conclusion it may be noted that generally throughout New England neglect of the prescribed forms did not invalidate marriage, though the offender against the law might be punished.[451] It is historically probable, where words of nullity were not contained in the statute, that the irregular contract by simple present agreement, without intervention of a minister or magistrate, was valid. But this is a disputed point which will hereafter be considered in connection with the history of common-law marriage in the United States.[452] III. COURTSHIP, PROPOSALS, AND GOVERNMENT OF SINGLE PERSONS It may be an exaggeration to say that the Mosaic code was the corpus juris of the Puritan.[453] But it is certain that the early private law of New England was profoundly influenced by it. The family in many respects took on a patriarchal character. The sway of the house-father, though in the main just, became in theory despotic. Even the conception of marriage as a civil contract gained support from the Jewish law.[454] Our ancestors loved to cite the book of Ruth and other scriptural texts in its favor; and their view of the proper relations of husband and wife, those of parent and child, or those of man and woman before marriage, was derived directly from the biblical ordinances.[455] Thus "old bachelors," though rare in early New England, were looked upon with disfavor. They were regarded almost as "suspected criminals."[456] Connecticut "in 1636 would not allow any young unmarried man to keep house."[457] A special order of the town of Windsor was necessary, in 1682, to permit "Isaac Sheldon and Samuel Rockwell to keep house together, 'so they carry themselves soberly and do not entertain idle persons to the evil expense of time by day or night.'"[458] Hartford taxed "lone-men" twenty shillings a week "for the selfish luxury of solitary living."[459] Even in the eighteenth century a general statute of Connecticut, under the same penalty of twenty shillings a week, forbade any "house-keeper" or "master of a family," without "allowance of the selectmen," to give "entertainment or habitation" to a single person; and "such Bourders, Sojourners, and Young persons" are required to "attend to the Worship of God" in the families where they live and "to be subject to the domestick Government of the same," or else forfeit five shillings for every breach of the law.[460] In Rhode Island in one instance "single persons of three months' residence paid five shillings, while the 'rate of faculties and personal abilities' was left at the discretion of the assessors."[461] According to a New Haven law, in order to "suppress inconvenience" and disorders inconsistent with the "mind of God in the fifth commandment," single persons, not in service or dwelling with their relatives, are forbidden to diet or lodge alone; but they are required to live in "licensed" families; and the "governors" of such families are ordered to "observe the course, carriage, and behaviour, of every such single person, whether he or she walk diligently in a constant lawful imployment, attending both family duties and the publick worship of God, and keeping good order day and night or otherwise."[462] Similar measures were adopted by the other colonies. The law of Plymouth provides that "wheras great Inconvenience hath arisen by single persons in this Collonie being for themselues and not betakeing themselues to live in well Gourned famillies. It is enacted by the Court that henceforth noe single person be suffered to liue by himselfe or in any family but such as the Celectmen of the Towne shall approue of; and if any person or persons shall refuse or neglect to attend such order as shalbe giuen them by the Celectmen; that such person or persons shalbe sumoned to the Court to be proceeded with as the matter shall require."[463] "Whereas," runs a statute of Massachusetts, "there is a loose and sinful custom of going or riding from town to town, ... oftimes men and women together, upon pretence of going to lectures, but it appears ... merely to drink and revel in ordinaries and taverns, which is in itself scandalous, and it is to be feared a notable means to debauch our youth and hazard the chastity of those that are drawn fourth thereunto: for prevention whereof," it is ordered "that all single persons who merely for their pleasure take such journeys ... shall be reputed and accounted riotous and unsober persons, and of ill behavior ... and shall be committed to prison for ten days, or pay a fine of forty shillings for each offence," unless they can "give bonds and sufficient sureties for good behavior in twenty pounds."[464] Earlier it was decreed that the "Select men of every Town, in the several precincts, and quarters where they dwel, shal have a vigilant eye over their brethren and neighbours, to see, first that none of them shall suffer so much barbarism in any of their families, as not to endeavour to teach, by themselves or others, their children & apprentices, so much learning, as may enable them perfectly to read the english tongue & knowledg of the Capital laws." Once a week children and apprentices are to be catechised "in the grounds and principles of Religion," or at least taught "some short orthodox catachism without book;" and they are to be bred and brought up "in some honest Lawfull calling ... profitable for themselves and the Common-wealth," if their parents or masters "will not, or cannot train them up in learning to fitt them for higher imployments." If parents and masters neglect their duty, "whereby children & servants become rude, stubborn & unruly, the sayd Select men with the help of two Magistrates or the next County Court for that Shire, shall take such children or apprentices from them," and until they come of age place them with persons who will more strictly look after their government as the law directs.[465] It was further enacted that every town shall order and dispose to service or otherwise all "single persons and inmates" within its borders, anyone feeling aggrieved thereby "to have Liberty to appeale to the next County Court."[466] These laws were not wholly a dead letter, as shown by the judicial records. Thus on April 2, 1672, "Thomas Henshaw and Thomas Hall, singlemen, being convicted of living from under family government ... , are ordered forthwith to submit themselves" to such government "and to appear at the next court and bring with them certificate thereof."[467] Nevertheless complaint is made that the town officers are negligent. In 1668 the legislature directs the clerk of each shire court to send "to the Constables of the Towns" within the shire an order which they are "enjoyned faithfully to execute." In the preamble it is recited that the neglect of the laws, "as by sad experience from Court to Court abundantly appears, doth occasion much sin and prophaness to increase among us, to the dishonour of God, and the ensnaring of many Children and Servants, by the dissolute lives and practices of such as do live from under Family Government, and is a great discouragement to those Family Governours, who conscientiously endeavour to bring up their Youth in all Christian nurture, as the Laws of God and this Common wealth doth require: These are therefore ... to require you to acquaint the Select men of your Town, that the Court doth expect and will require, that the said Laws be accordingly attended... : and you are also required to take a list of the names of those young persons ... who do live from under Family Government, viz., do not serve their Parents or Masters, as Children, Apprentices, hired Servants, or Journey men ought to do, and usually did in our Native Country, being subject to their commands and discipline."[468] The manuscript files of Middlesex show that lists[469] of delinquent single persons were taken by the constables as required; and that some of them were summoned to appear before the court. Following is the "answer" of Robert Williams, whose name is in the list given in the margin: "I do desire to liue under family gouernment and haue so desired euer sinc my time was out with my master that I liued with and all the time sinc commited myself into mens housis of good report as neer as I could and do desir to walk inofenciue to all men and furder I do hop that the men which I do work with will say as I do if the honered court will desir it indeed I am not a saruant yet do submit myself to family ordor I [will] do as a saruant what els the honered court would haue me do mor I hope I shall be willing to obay the finil power."[470] In a society where marriages were formed very early, girls often wedding at sixteen or less, and where widows were wooed almost at the bier of the dear departed,[471] it is perhaps not surprising if "old maids" were ridiculed and sometimes despised. A woman became an "antient maid" at twenty-five.[472] In an often quoted passage of his Life and Errors, John Dunton thus praises a woman who remained single, not from "necessity," but from "choice," and who knew that time is a "dressing-room for Eternity, and therefore reserves most of her hours for better uses than those of the Comb, the Toilet, and the Glass": "It is true an old (or super-annuated) maid in Boston is thought such a curse as nothing can exceed it (and look'd upon as a dismal spectacle); yet she, by her good-nature, gravity, and strict virtue, convinces all (so much as the fleering Beaus) that it is not her necessity, but her choice, that keeps her a Virgin. She is now about thirty years (the age which they call a Thornback), yet she never disguises herself, and talks as little as she thinks of Love. She never reads any Plays or Romances, goes to no Balls, or Dancing-match, as they do who go (to such Fairs) in order to meet with Chapmen. Her looks, her speech, her whole behaviour, are so very chaste, that but once (at Governor's Island, where we went to be merry at roasting a hog) going to kiss her, I thought she would have blushed to death."[473] But bachelors and "thornbacks" were not the only people who caused the lawmaker anxiety. He kept a sharp eye on married persons living away from their mates. An act of the Massachusetts general court, in 1647, after reciting that diverse married persons are living in the jurisdiction, whose wives or husbands are in England or elsewhere, and who are guilty of making love to women, of attempting marriage or even attaining it, or are under "suspition of uncleannes"—the vice which seems to have sorely vexed the good people of those days—and all of whom are a great dishonor to God and a reproof to religion, commonwealth, and church—orders that every such person shall be incontinently sent back "by ye first oportunity of shiping," unless present on transient business or to "make way" for the family to come over.[474] Such complaints were by no means groundless and the courts were often called upon to execute the law. Under the circumstances bigamy was easily committed, though not always permanently concealed. On December 3, 1639, the pretended marriage of James Luxford was declared void; "all that hee hath" was given to his victim; and he himself was fined, set in the stocks, and ordered "sent away to England by the first opportunity."[475] In 1644 the "marriage of John Richardson to Elizabeth Frier was annulled upon proof that he had a former wife living in England."[476] Henry Jackson—whose case seems to justify the act of 1647—was presented in 1672-73 "for lying, in saying he was single and attempting marriage with several," though since confessing that he has a wife beyond the sea; "for living from under family government; and for carrying a fire brand at night near a hay stack;" on all of which counts, we are prepared to hear, he got twenty stripes, had to pay costs, and was ordered away to "England by the next ship."[477] More numerous are the cases of "living apart." For example in 1637 the general court decreed that Isaac Davies should be sent home to his wife in England.[478] Three years later "Willi Wake" in like manner was advised to seek his consort.[479] Edward Iron in 1651 "upon promise to take some effectual course to send for his wife now in England" was "granted liberty to abide in the country until the next return of ships." Should his attempt fail, then he was "ordered to depart out of this jurisdiction by the next opportunity."[480] For similar absence from his spouse James Underwood in 1654 was fined at Salem.[481] In 1663 for the same offense Christopher Blake was presented by the grand jury of Suffolk, although in his petition he avers that for three years he had "been desirous of getting his wife across but she refused to come;" and that he had never "presented himself as a single man, but always openly manifested the true state of his condition." Accordingly the general court ordered the prosecution "stayed for a year."[482] In 1671 Paul Hall, presented in the same county, "appeared and declared he was informed his wife was dead." The court, being skeptical, commanded him to "repair to the last place of her abode or bring in a certificate of her death."[483] Delinquent wives were looked after with equal vigilance. In 1668 the constable of Boston is ordered to summon "before the county court two women and one man for living apart from their spouses contrary to law."[484] A presentment of Sarah Pickering failed in 1674 because she produced evidence that her husband had renounced her.[485] Even when both partners were in the jurisdiction the law was not less harshly administered. On June 17, 1672, for "disorderly living apart," Michael Smith and wife, "inhabitants of Charlestoun" were "admonished and ordered to pay costs."[486] The case of "Abr. Hagborne" in 1663 is more remarkable. Although he had come to the colony twenty-two years before; had lived contentedly with his wife for fourteen or fifteen years until she "did depart" for England; had sent for her to return home and provided for her transportation, "whereby the innocence of Living Apart is on your peticoners part;" and "had no idea the law against living apart would apply to the known settled inhabitants, brethren and freemen whose wives unnaturally desert them;" yet the county court "was pleased to require him to depart the Countrie & to repayre vnto his wife." So he "humbly petitions" the general court that he may not be compelled to return to England and that he may "not be put vpon [religious] temptacoÑs or aboue his strength or any kind of iniun[~cc]on [injunction] of going to Serue other Gods;" but may be "allowed to continue his Abode here ... vnder the Shadow of that happie Gouernment in Co[=m]onwealth and Churches ... those few days of his pilgrimage that remayne." A gracious answer, it is perhaps needless to add, was the meet reward of so just and so skilful a prayer.[487] In like spirit single women and wives in the absence of their husbands were forbidden to "lodge any inmate or sojourner," except with the approval of the selectmen or other magistrates.[488] Of course, these were pioneer days. The peace of the settlements was probably disturbed by loose and riotous adventurers, outcasts from the society of the Old World. Doubtless these measures, aside from religious motives, were in some degree useful police ordinances; as were also those prohibiting the husband from beating his wife, and the wife from striking her spouse.[489] But the colonists went farther and prescribed the death penalty for disobedience to parents, following the precepts of the Mosaic law.[490] Furthermore, they attempted to regulate courtship by statute, in a way which, however wholesome, would scarcely be relished by the young men and maidens of our generation. Thus the general court of Plymouth prohibits "any motion of marriage to any man's daughter or mayde servant" without having "first obtayned leaue" of the parents or master under penalty of fine and corporal punishment in the discretion of the bench. But appeal is allowed to the magistrate, when the master "through any sinister end or couetous desire," witholds his consent.[491] The courts were not wholly without business growing out of this legislation, as appears from illustrations collected by Mr. Goodwin. "In 1652 Jonathan Coventry was indicted for 'making a motion of marriage' to Katherine Bradbury, servant to Mr. Bourne, of Marshfield, without the latter's consent.[492] Coventry left the Colony before arrest.... In 1648 Thomas Dunham was ordered to abstain from visiting or sending to Martha Knott, of Sandwich, from October 4 till the first Tuesday of December, that the Court may better learn of his pretended contract, unless the Governor, on the clearing of things, give him leave. A romantic case was that of Governor Thomas Prence against Arthur Howland, Jr., nephew of the Pilgrim.[493] The tolerant course of the elder Arthur Howland toward the Quakers had earned Prence's hearty ill-will; and when, in 1660, he found that Arthur, Jr., had wooed his daughter Elizabeth, he had the swain before the General Court, where he was fined £5 for making love without her father's permission. The couple remained constant, for in 1667 the irate Governor once more brought up young Arthur, who was again fined £5 because he had 'disorderly and unrighteously endeavored to obtain the affections of Mistress Elizabeth Prence,' and was put under bond of £50 to 'refrain and desist.' But Prence, like Canute, was unable to control the forces of Nature. This action was in July; but before the next spring the imperious Governor seemed to have been forced to capitulate, for Arthur and Elizabeth were united."[494] On the other hand, the right of a lover to appeal to the magistrate, in case his "motion" were hindered through "sinister end or couetous desire," was occasionally of practical value. In 1646, for instance, Richard Taylor complained to the general court of Plymouth that he was prevented from marrying Ruth Wheildon by her father Gabriel; but when before the court Gabriel yielded and promised no longer to oppose the marriage.[495] The records show that parents might be held accountable for "miscarriages" resulting from unreasonable opposition.[496] To the close of the colonial era a law of Connecticut provided that "if any Man shall directly or indirectly endeavour to draw away the affections of any Maid ... , on pretence of Marriage, before he hath obtained Liberty and Allowance" from her parent, governor, or guardian, should there be any, "he shall forfeit the sum of Five Pounds to the Party grieved; double that amount for the second offence; and for a third transgression suffer imprisonment, besides paying the costs of prosecution."[497] An elaborate statute of New Haven, for the regulation of proposals, provides "that whosoever within this jurisdiction shall attempt, or endeavor to inveagle, or draw the affections of any maide, or maide-servant, whether daughter, kinswoman, or in other relation, for himself, or for any other person, without the consent of father, master, governor, or such other, who hath the present interest, or charge, or (in absence of such) of the nearest magistrate, whether it be by speech, writing, message, company-keeping, unnecessary familiarity, disorderly night meetings, sinful dalliance, gifts, or any other way, directly or indirectly, every such person (besides all damages which the parent, governor, or person intrusted or interested, may sustain by such unlawful proceedings) shall pay to the plantation forty shillings for the first offence; and for the second offence towards the same party four pounds; and for the third offence he shal be further fined, imprisoned, or corporally punished, as the plantation court, or court of magistrates considering all circumstances, shal determine."[498] The foregoing act was probably suggested by the Massachusetts law of 1647, which is likewise here presented. It is declared that, "whereas God hath committed the care and power into the hands of parents for the disposing their Children in Marriage, so that it is against rule, to seek to draw away the affections of young maidens under pretence of purpose of marriage, before their parents have given way and allowance in that respect; and whereas it is common practise in divers places for young men irregularly and disorderly to watch all advantages for their evil purposes, to insinuate into the affections of young Maidens by coming to them in places and seasons unknown to their parents for such ends, whereby much evil hath grown amongst us, to the dishonour of God and damage of parties; for prevention whereof for time to come. It is further Ordered, that whatsoever person from henceforth shall endeavour, directly or indirectly, to draw away the affection of any mayd in this jurisdiction, under pretence of marriage, before he hath obtained liberty and allowance from her parents or Governors or in absence of such of the nearest magistrate, he shall forfeit for the first offence five pounds, for the second towards the partie ten pounds, and be bound to forbeare any further attempt and proceedings in that unlawful designe, without or against the allowance aforesayd. And for the third offence upon information or complaint by such parents or Governors to any Magistrate, giving bond to prosecute the party, he shall be committed in prison, and upon hearing and conviction by the next court, shal be adjudged to continue in prison, untill the Court of Assistants shall see cause to release him."[499] The courts were not without employment under this statute. In 1658 Paul Wilson appeared before the county court of Middlesex, sitting in Charlestown, "to answer the complaint of Deacon Upham for violent soliciting his daughter against his will." Whereupon the tribunal "admonished Wilson of his evil behavior towards the said Upham and his daughter Priscilla, and ordered him to give bond of ten pounds for his regular behavior towards the said parties." Accordingly the culprit gave bond "yt he will no more frequent the company of Priscilla Upham, nor by no means whether direct or indirect, make any more addresses vnto her without her fathers leave first orderly had & obteined."[500] For a similar offense, in 1672, the county court of Suffolk fined Benjamin Scott five pounds.[501] Two years later, before the same tribunal, Thomas Irons was presented "for procuring Richard Barnum to publish a marriage" between himself and Mary Arnold without her father's leave;[502] while the next February, as we learn from the record, John Lorin stood "convict on his own confession of making love to Mary Willis without her parents consent and after being forwarned by them, £5."[503] Although parents might be prosecuted for "unreasonably denying any child timely or convenient marriage,"[504] it is evident that lovers had to be very circumspect in old colonial days. In a community where power to dispose of a son or daughter in wedlock was believed to be the gift of heaven, it is not strange that "allowance" was sometimes hard to gain. Praising the chaste reserve of the gentle "old maid" of Boston whom he had learned to admire, John Dunton thus expresses the dominant view: "I am sure this is most agreeable to the Virgin modesty, which should make Marriage an act" rather of "obedience" than "choice." "And they that think their Friends too slowpaced in the matter give certain proof that lust is the sole motive."[505] Nor was the average New England house-father at all likely to allow sentiment to get the better of prudence in seeking a match for his child. He was more apt to be governed by a spirit of cold calculation which never for an instant lost sight of the "main chance." Judge Sewall, for example, can hardly be called "slowpaced" in providing his daughters with wooers. He superintends the whole "business" of love-making with never-flagging zeal. Poor, timid daughter Betty is fairly worried into matrimony, perhaps as the only sure way of escaping her father's nagging. What a procession of "captains" and "persons of worth" he parades before the reluctant girl before he succeeds in gaining his will! The first who "wished to speak with her" is Captain Tuthill, who appears as a suitor when she is but seventeen years of age. After the judge had made careful and satisfactory inquiry as to the captain's estate—which he finds valued at £600 or £700—and the young man "in good Business, and like to be in better;"[506] and after having his daughter read to him about the courtship of Adam and Eve "as a soothing and alluring preparation for the thought of matrimony,"[507] the lover is invited to call. Of this visit and its surprising result Sewall thus writes in his Diary: "At night Capt. Tuthill comes to speak with Betty, who hid her self all alone in the coach for several hours till he was gon, so that we sought at several houses, till at last came in of her self, and look'd very wild."[508] A number of others in rapid succession have little better luck with the coy maiden. The next fall, however, on returning from a journey to Rhode Island, the judge finds his "family in health, only disturb'd at Betty's denying Mr. Hirst." A month later he sadly records that he supposes even this suitor has "taken his final leave."[509] Nevertheless two days after, on October 26, 1699, he addresses Betty at "Brantry," where she had gone on a visit, the following characteristic letter: "Mr. Hirst waits upon you once more to see if you can bid him welcome. It ought to be seriously considered, that your drawing back from him after all that has passed between you, will be to your Prejudice; and will tend to discourage persons of worth from making their Court to you. And you had need well to consider whether you are able to bear his final Leaving of you, howsoever it may seem gratefull to you at present. When persons come toward us, we are apt to look upon their Undesirable Circumstances mostly; and therefore to shun them. But when persons retire from us for good and all, we are in danger of looking only on that which is desirable in them to our wofull Disquiet. Whereas 'tis the property of a good Balance to turn where the most weight is, though there be some also in the other Scale. I do not see but that the Match is well liked by judicious persons, and such as are your Cordial Friends, and mine also. "Yet notwithstanding, if you find in yourself an i[=m]ovable, incurable Aversion from him, and ca[=n]ot love, and honour, and obey him, I shall say no more, nor give you any further trouble in this matter. It had better be off than on. So praying God to pardon us, and pity our Undeserving, and to direct and strengthen and settle you in making a right Judgment, and giving a right Answer, I take leave, who am, dear child, your loving father. Your mother remembers to you."[510] Either this letter had the desired influence or Betty was unable to endure the "wofull disquiet" of a "final leaving;" for a year later it stands written that "Mr. Grove Hirst and Elizabeth Sewall are married by Mr. Cotton Mather."[511] IV. PRE-CONTRACTS, BUNDLING, AND SEXUAL IMMORALITY The colonists were extremely anxious to restrain vice by legislation. The whole field of private morals was brought under the purview of the magistrate. Unchastity and sexual crimes, especially, they were determined to prevent at all hazards; and, in consequence, the early colonial and court records are far from pleasant reading. Conjugal infidelity is especially abhorred by the lawmaker. Originally, in all the New England colonies save Rhode Island and Plymouth, death was the penalty prescribed for adultery with a "married or espoused wife." In the New World the Puritan thus actually realized what Luther, Hooper, and other Reformation Fathers ardently desired as an ideal fulfilment of the Mosaic code.[512] The capital law of Massachusetts, at any rate, was not a dead letter, as is clearly shown by the records of the early period. The only attempt to put in force the original act of 1631 was, indeed, a failure. It appears that in 1637 two men and one woman were convicted; but on the ground that the statute had been "made by the court of assistants by allowance of the general court," and for fear lest it had not been "sufficiently published," the extreme penalty was not administered. Instead the culprits were whipped and then banished on pain of death should they return.[513] The act of 1631 was, however, at once confirmed,[514] and it remained in force until superseded by the "Body of Liberties," whose provision on this point was not abrogated during the period of the colonial charter. Under the law as thus constituted two persons were condemned and executed in 1644.[515] Further, in his Magnalia Cotton Mather mentions the execution of an adulterer from Weymouth.[516] These are the only cases of capital punishment for this offense yet discovered; but a number of persons narrowly escaped it, where the evidence seems sufficient to warrant the death penalty. Apparently the courts shrank from pronouncing sentence according to the full rigor of the law,[517] satisfying themselves with lesser punishments, such as imprisonment, banishment,[518] or whipping. In Plymouth the death penalty for adultery seems never to have been established.[519] Instead, the "scarlet letter," a punishment even more terrible to bear, was there adopted as a permanent badge earlier than in any other colony; while in England it appears never to have been so employed for any crime.[520] So far as known, the oldest typical case of bearing such a "stigma" continuously for adultery occurred in 1639. In that year a woman was sentenced to be "whipt at a cart tayle" through the streets, and to "weare a badge vpon her left sleeue during her aboad" within the government. If found at any time abroad without the badge, she was to be "burned in the face wth a hott iron."[521] Two years later a man and a woman for the same offense were severely whipped "at the publik post" and condemned while in the colony to wear the letters AD "vpon the outeside of their vppermost garment, in the most emenent place thereof."[522] So the custom was already developed in judicial practice when the oldest statute providing for the "scarlet letter" appeared in 1658. It was then enacted "that whosoeuer shall comitt Adultery shalbee seuerly punished by whiping two seuerall times; viz: once whiles the Court is in being att which they are convicted of the fact and 2cond time as the Court shall order; and likewise to weare two Capital letters ziz; AD cut out in cloth and sewed on theire vpermost Garments on theire arme or backe; and if at any time they shalbee taken without the said letters whiles they are in the Gourment soe worn to bee forth with taken and publickly whipt."[523] The Plymouth statute was copied into the Cutt Code for New Hampshire in 1679-80.[524] By the act of 1701, taken from the Massachusetts law of 1694, the initial letter is still prescribed;[525] and down to its repeal in 1792 the law was frequently enforced by the courts.[526] It is an evidence of the more humane tendency of Rhode Island legislation that neither death nor the scarlet badge seems ever to have been prescribed for adultery, although the offense was otherwise harshly punished. The culprit is to be "publickly set on the Gallows in the Day Time, with a Rope about his or her Neck, for the Space of One Hour; and on his or her Return from the Gallows to the Gaol, shall be publickly whipped on his or her naked Back, not exceeding Thirty Stripes; and shall stand committed to the Gaol of the County wherein convicted, until he or she shall pay all Costs of Prosecution."[527] In Connecticut a brand appears to have superseded the death penalty at least by 1673, as shown in the code of that year. The provision of this code is retained almost exactly in the compilation of 1769, requiring "that whosoever shall commit adultery with a Married Woman or one Betrothed to another Man, both of them shall be severely Punished, by Whipping on the naked Body, and Stigmatized or Burnt on the Forehead with the Letter A, on a hot Iron: And each of them shall wear a Halter about their Necks, on the outside of their Garments, during their Abode in this Colony, so as it may be Visible: And as often as either of them shall be found without their Halters, worn as aforesaid, they shall, upon Information, and Proof of the same, made before an Assistant or Justice of the Peace, ... be Whipt, not exceeding Twenty Stripes."[528] As a detail of interest it may be observed that nowhere save in Connecticut is the continuous wearing of a halter provided for by statute; although for offenses other than adultery several decisions show that during the seventeenth century this punishment was employed in the Bay Colony.[529] Furthermore, in Connecticut, as will hereafter appear, the law of incest differs from that of adultery in not requiring a rope to be so worn. The statute of Massachusetts prescribing the death penalty for adultery did not survive the fall of the charter. So in 1794 the scarlet letter was substituted.[530] The act published on June 20 of that year, and remaining in force until after the close of the provincial era, varies in several important details, though not essentially, from the laws of Plymouth and Connecticut already presented. The offenders "shall be set upon the gallows by the space of an hour, with a rope about their neck, and the other end cast over the gallows; and in the way from thence to the common goal shall be severely whip'd, not exceeding forty stripes each." Also the offenders "shall forever wear a capital A, of two inches long and proportionate bigness, cut out in cloth of a contrary color to their cloaths, and sewed upon their upper garments, on the outside of the arm, or on their back, in open view." If "found without their letters so worn, during their abode in this province, they shall, by warrant from a justice of peace, be forthwith apprehended and ordered to be publicly whip'd, not exceeding fifteen stripes, and so from time to time, toties quoties."[531] Apparently writers have thus far failed to discover positive evidence that the provision of this act regarding the capital letter was ever carried out. A search in the manuscript records of the superior court of judicature, however, has disclosed several interesting cases. The earliest sentence occurred in March, 1707, when Mathew Fuller and Hannah Parker were indicted before a superior court at Plymouth. In the exact terms of the statute Hannah was sentenced to be set on the gallows, receive thirty stripes upon her naked back, and forever after to wear the capital A. But, singularly enough, her paramour was acquitted, no reason being assigned therefor either in the court record or in the files.[532] Again in 1721 Jemima Colefix, for sinning with a free negro and bearing a mulatto child, received a similar sentence; and in this case also the accused man was acquitted of being the putative father as had been charged.[533] The next case is dated February 9, 1730-31; and it shows that men as well as women had to endure this penalty. Before a court held in Boston "the jurors present John Warren, miller, and Rachel Gould for adultery," both being married persons. Although they pleaded not guilty, they were each set on the gallows, given thirty-nine stripes, and condemned to wear the capital letter.[534] Twenty years later, on September 26, 1752, "Daniel Bayley, cooper, and Mary Rainer" received the same punishment, except that they each suffered forty stripes, the full number allowed by the statute.[535] Finally after the lapse of thirty years more, just as the War of Independence was drawing to a close, we learn from the records that, following the usual stripes and exposure on the scaffold, Jerusha Doolittle was condemned to wear the fatal A as a badge of shame "forever."[536] This closes the list of cases found in which the stigma is referred to. On the other hand, there are a number of sentences for adultery, or for what would ordinarily be so regarded, where this penalty is not imposed. These are the cases of semi-adulterous conduct, nominally provided for by the act of 1694, in which there is either no charge or not sufficient evidence of absolute transgression.[537] Usually one and sometimes both of the culprits are married. Fines, stripes, and occasionally banishment are the penalties imposed. As in the early period, there is manifestly a hesitation to urge conviction for "adultery" so as to involve the extreme penalty of the scarlet letter. The courts thus seem to favor a strict construction of the statute, giving the accused the benefit of the more lenient interpretation. In several cases the jury declines to convict for the offense charged where the evidence would clearly seem enough to sustain a verdict.[538] Throughout New England, Rhode Island alone excepted, persons guilty of incest—that is to say, of uniting within the degrees of consanguinity or affinity legally forbidden—were stigmatized with an initial letter precisely as in the case of adultery. An act of Massachusetts in 1692, "for the punishing of capital offenders," makes this offense a felony punishable with death.[539] Because some of the "articles" dealing with capital crimes, among which is incest, "were conceived in very uncertain and doubtful terms," and because in such cases the penalty of death was not "conformable to ye Laws of England," the act was disallowed by the privy council in August, 1695.[540] However, in June of the same year a new act for the prevention of incestuous marriages had been adopted by the general court; and this remained in force during the provincial era. By it the forbidden degrees are enumerated in harmony with the English ecclesiastical law. For violation of its provision exactly the same penalty in the same words is imposed as by the statute of 1694 for the punishment of adultery, except that in place of A a capital I is to be continuously worn.[541] This act of 1695 was adopted by New Hampshire in 1714,[542] and by Connecticut in 1702, the provision regarding the initial letter reappearing in the statute books of the latter commonwealth until 1821.[543] In Massachusetts the legal stigma for incest was often imposed by judicial sentence. As already noticed by Davis, such a sentence in 1743 was executed upon Andrew Fleming, of Groton, who had first been set on the gallows for an hour and whipped forty stripes.[544] Hitherto no other examples of wearing the capital I seem to have been discovered. But a careful search in the manuscript records of the superior court for the period ending in 1780 has brought to light five additional cases. The first of these occurred in 1729 and the last in 1759. In every instance the culprit is punished with rope and gallows, stripes, and the scarlet letter.[545] The New England Puritans were, of course, very serious in their efforts to check sexual immorality. Their laws are characteristic of the age. As yet small progress had been made in enlightened theories of crime and its punishment. Besides they were steeped to the core in Hebraism. More or less as a religious duty they accepted and re-enacted the harsh precepts of the primitive Jewish code. It is not a little curious, however, to see them preserving an ancient English usage, almost extinct in the mother-country—in some instances regulating it by statute—which "thwarted their endeavors for complete propriety."[546] This was the custom of pre-contract, contraction, or betrothal, which everywhere in New England was celebrated with due solemnity. Such was the case in Massachusetts.[547] By the Connecticut statute, as already noted, the "contract" was carefully distinguished from the "covenant;" and because many persons entangle themselves by rash and inconsiderate promises for their future joining in marriage, the act of 1640 requires eight days' public notice of the betrothal, after which a second period of eight days must elapse before the covenant is sealed.[548] The pre-contract was in use also in New Hampshire[549] and Plymouth. In the latter jurisdiction the "couple—having the consent of the parents or guardians, in the case of minors—made before two witnesses a solemn promise of marriage in due time, the ceremony having the formality of the magisterial weddings then in vogue."[550] Undoubtedly pre-contract was derived from the English "espousals," which, it has already appeared, were a direct survival of the beweddung of the Anglo-Saxon laws. But in New England the betrothal gained a peculiar legal significance. "The betrothed woman was put, both by law and social custom, one step above the woman who was not betrothed, and one step below the woman who was married. This was so both as respects the civil and the criminal law."[551] In Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Haven the "espoused wife" like the married wife is to suffer death for adultery;[552] while for fornication, on the other hand, the single woman and her partner in guilt are much less severely punished. The betrothed woman "was sentenced to wear the brand of the 'scarlet letter,' precisely as if she were married."[553] Thus in New England the betrothal regained a sanction similar to that which it possessed according to primitive Germanic custom. It was, in fact, a kind of marriage. The espoused couple were separated from the world and placed in a relation whose sacredness might not be violated as respects others without the most serious consequences. On the other hand, it was entirely in harmony with this theory that when they "were guilty of incontinence with each other after pre-contract before marriage, their punishment was in general one half, or less than one half, what it would have been had there been no betrothment."[554] By the statute of Plymouth, for example, the penalty in such cases was fifty shillings for each person and imprisonment for a period not exceeding three days, or if the guilty persons "will not or cannot" pay the fine, they are to suffer "corporal punishment by whipping" instead; while for transgression before contract the fine was twice as much.[555] This was, in effect, to place a premium[556] upon wrongdoing committed between the espousals and the nuptials. Naturally the immorality of such offenses seemed thus to be lessened; and, as will presently appear, a vast amount of sexual license was the natural result. The evil consequences of this anomalous state of the law were rendered all the more serious through the custom of "bundling" which obtained a wide prevalence in New England as it did also in New York and the other middle colonies. According to Stiles, who has produced the only general history of the subject, bundling "was practiced in two forms; first, between strangers, as a simple domestic makeshift arrangement, often arising from the necessities of a new country, and by no means peculiar to America; and, secondly between lovers, who shared the same couch, with the mutual understanding that innocent endearments should not be exceeded."[557] It is the second form with which we are here most concerned; and in its origin this likewise appears to have been "a custom of convenience." It was long regarded as a gross or licentious practice peculiar to New England. Thus Irving taunts the people of Connecticut with having tried to deprave the manners of the "Dutch lasses of the Nederlandts" through the introduction of that "horrible" usage.[558] But the Dutch maidens needed no lessons from their Yankee sisters in this regard; for in their "queesting" they had brought with them a form of bundling from Holland.[559] Indeed, it is not at all improbable that in this case Pilgrim and Puritan alike may have been strongly influenced by Dutch precedent, as they certainly were in more important institutions. Such an inference seems all the more justifiable, for as yet no trace of bundling has been reported "in any localities of England itself, the mother country;"[560] though in Ireland, Scotland, and Wales evidences of its recent existence are not wanting,[561] and the custom seems clearly to be deeply planted in the ancient usage of the German race.[562] In New England, however, it was by no means confined to Connecticut.[563] It prevailed in the sister-provinces, and especially in both western[564] and eastern Massachusetts, down to the revolutionary period and perhaps for a good many years to come. Burnaby,[565] writing of his visit to that colony in 1759-60, gives a lively account of the custom, under the name of "tarrying," significantly observing that it takes place between the permission to pay court and the banns. In his view, bundling is on the whole an innocent practice, seldom being attended by evil consequences. On the other hand, that veracious historian, Rev. Samuel Peters, reproves Burnaby for presenting the custom in "an unfavorable light, and as prevailing among the lower class of people;" whereas, according to Peters, it exists among "all classes, to the great honor of the country, its religion and ladies."[566] Again in 1777 Lieutenant Anbury, "a British officer, who served in America during the Revolutionary War, and whose letters preserve many sprightly and interesting pictures of the manners and customs of that period,"[567] chats racily of an invitation to bundle which he received at Williamstown, Mass.—a courtesy brought about through the scarcity of beds for the entertainment of strangers.[568] Charles Francis Adams finds positive proof of the existence of the custom "within a ten-mile radius of Boston" at least until 1781;[569] and he also quotes a reference to it from a letter of Abigail Adams written three years later.[570] Nor apparently was bundling entirely abandoned in eastern Massachusetts until nearly fifty years thereafter, Cape Cod having the "dubious honor" of holding out against the "advance of civilization" in this regard until 1827.[571] The next year, in Franklin county, Me., a letter to the Portland Yankee reveals the custom existing in full vigor.[572] According to the judgment of Stiles, bundling "came nearest to being a universal custom from 1750 to 1780." Contrary to the popular view,[573] it appears to have been confined to the more humble and less cultivated classes; "to those whose limited means compelled them to economize strictly in their expenditure of firewood and candle-light."[574] No evidence has yet been produced showing that it made its appearance in the main centers of New England civilization. Though bundling could arise only in a comparatively rude state of society, it seems in itself to have been neither very vicious nor very immoral. Yet manifestly it was easily capable of abuse. Under dangerous conditions it might readily degenerate into coarseness and vice. Such conditions were not wanting throughout the colonial era. The general tone of sexual morality was not high. The laws and usages already presented, which in effect invited transgression on the part of engaged lovers, afforded a constant temptation.[575] Bundling thus has its chief moral significance as an adjunct of pre-contract which must be held responsible for a very large share of the sexual misconduct revealed in the judicial records. Before the general court of Plymouth the cases of "uncleanness" after contract and before marriage are very numerous. According to Goodwin, they averaged one a year; and this appears to be a conservative estimate. By actual count the records of that colony, for the twenty-eight years between 1633 and 1661, show at least twenty-four sentences for ante-nuptial offenses, chiefly after betrothal; while during the seventeen years following 1661 there are not less than forty-one such judgments. Members of some of the most illustrious families of New England were guilty of indiscretions in this regard.[576] In several of the early cases the husband was publicly whipped in view of the wife, who sat near in the stocks.[577] The manuscript records of two counties of Massachusetts for a portion of the seventeenth century appear to demonstrate that such "miscarriages" before complete wedlock were not less frequent in the Bay Colony.[578] A thorough analysis of the records of the county court of Suffolk, covering the ten years 1671-80, brings to light twenty of these cases, while during the same period there are forty-three instances of transgression by "single women."[579] Now, it is important to remember that the statutes of Massachusetts, unlike those of Plymouth, do not discriminate between the offenses of single persons and those committed with each other by espoused lovers.[580] The question therefore arises as to whether the custom of pre-contract—for pre-contract was not established by law in that province—can be held in any way accountable for these facts. A comparison of the penalties imposed in the two classes of cases, as exhibited in Tables I and II, shows that an affirmative answer must be given. The sins of betrothed persons are in general punished with far less rigor than those of single men and women. Thus twenty-one out of forty-three single women, and eight out of thirteen single men, are sentenced to stripes alone, nineteen of them receiving each from fifteen to forty lashes; TABLE I Cases of Fornication before Marriage in the County Court of Suffolk County, Mass., 1671-80 Cases of Fornication by Single Persons in the County Court of Suffolk County, Mass., 1671-80 The most noticeable feature of these cases is the tendency on the part of single men to confess the crime and accept punishment, besides becoming bound as putative fathers. All the convictions for fornication are by confession or pleading guilty. 1. Single women convicted | 43 | a) Fine or stripes | 22 | £15 or 20 stripes | 1 | £5 or {20 stripes | 1 | {15 stripes | 4 | £3 or {20 stripes | 1 | {15 stripes | 3 | 50s. or {15 stripes | 3 | {10 stripes | 2 | 40s. or {15 stripes | 2 | {10 stripes | 4 | b) Stripes alone | 21 | 40 (20 each in two places) | 2 | 30 | 2 | 20 | 11 | 15 | 4 | 10 | 2 | 2. Single men, confession | 13 | a) Fine or stripes | 5 | £5 or 20 stripes | 4 | 40s. or 15 stripes | 1 | b) Stripes alone | 8 | 30 | 3 | 20 | 5 | c) Putative fathers | 17 |
while in no case is a single man or woman merely fined. On the other hand, out of twenty married couples punished for ante-nuptial misconduct, fifteen are given the choice of fines or stripes, three are merely fined; and in no instance is whipping alone the penalty decreed. Furthermore, the fines are on the average smaller in these cases than in others, although as regards both fines and stripes the sentences are sadly lacking in uniformity. The conclusion seems irresistible that, in harmony with popular sentiment, the courts, exercising the discretion granted by the statute, were inclined to deal more leniently with the faults of the betrothed than with those of less favored bachelors and spinsters. Similar evidence is afforded by the incomplete records of the county court of Middlesex for the period 1629-86, supplemented by the Files. These contain in all thirty cases of transgression before marriage, eight of which fall within the ten years covered by the Suffolk records already considered. Most of the severe sentences (Table III) occur in this period and the six years immediately following, although the heaviest fine, twenty pounds for the couple, is imposed in 1663.[581] Seemingly, from the few cases known, single persons were treated more harshly than those who were betrothed.[582] On presentment by the grand jury[583] or voluntarily confessions were made by wives and husbands before the court; and these documents contain evidence of the close relation TABLE III Cases of Fornication before Marriage in the County Court of Middlesex County, Mass., 1649-86 [Except 1663-71] During the same period these records contain five cases of fornication by single persons. 1. Fine only | 15 | married | couples | £20 (together) | 1 | " | " | £5 " | 3 | " | " | £4 " | 6 | " | " | £3 " | 2 | " | " | 40s. " | 3 | " | " | 2. Fine or stripes | | | | a) Fine | 10 | " | " | £1 (together) | 5 | " | " | £6 " | 1 | " | " | £4 " | 3 | " | " | £3 " | 1 | " | " | 50s. (wife) | 1 | | | b) Stripes | 10 | " | | 20 | 6 husbands | 0 wives | | 15 | 1 husband | 0 " | | 10 | 3 husband | 10 " | | 3. Stripes only | | | | 15 | 1 husband (the wife 50s. or whipped) | | | 4. Confessions and petitions | 3 married couples | | | 5. Convicted and respited | 1 married couple | | | existing between the colonial church and state. On October 31, 1671, for instance, Christopher Wheaton and Martha his wife were sentenced in Boston to make an acknowledgment "in publique at Hull to ye Satisfaction of ye Congregation, & pay twenty Shillings fine," on pain of being whipped ten stripes each by the constable.[584] An elaborate "church confession," found among the Middlesex Files, would seem to prove that in another case the decree of the court was obeyed; and that the written acknowledgment made before the congregation was returned to the court for record.[585] The files and records of the same two counties, supplemented by the record of the superior court, may next be examined for the period of the second charter. The impression made by their contents is decidedly disagreeable and depressing. The coarser and more heinous sexual crimes are growing more frequent, although due allowance must be made for the increase of population. Indeed, the bulk of the records of the general sessions appears to be concerned with sexual immorality of almost every kind.[586] Inquiry is, however, here restricted to the two classes of cases thus far considered. For convenience the material is treated chronologically in two divisions. The first division covers the period ending in 1725; and the second the years 1726-80. Within the former period (Table IV) the records of the general sessions of Suffolk for the years 1702-25, inclusive, TABLE IV Summary of Fornication Cases Before the General Sessions of Suffolk County, 1702-25, and the General Sessions of Middlesex County, 1692-1725 Between 1702 and 1725 the following cases brought conviction before the general sessions for Suffolk county: Cases of fornication where the woman alone was sentenced | 104 | Cases of conception before marriage with fine, and in a few cases fine or whipping for husband, or both husband and wife | 48 | Cases of woman fined or whipped, and putative (or acknowledged) father sentenced to maintenance of child | 44 | Between 1692 and 1725 there were the following convictions before the general sessions for Middlesex county (each case stands for both man and woman if both were tried): Cases of fornication | 135 | Cases of fornication and conception before marriage | 155 | yield forty-eight cases of conviction of married couples for pre-nuptial misconduct, as compared with 148 cases of single women sentenced for the same offenses.[587] The corresponding records of the general sessions of Middlesex for the years 1692-1725 contain the extraordinary number of 155 cases of the first class, as compared with 135 of the second. In a great many instances the husband or both husband and wife appear "freely and voluntarily" and confess their guilt. TABLE V Fornication Cases before the General Sessions of Middlesex County, Mass., for Each Quinquennium, 1726-80[588] Quinquennium | | | 26 | 31 | 36 | 41 | 46 | 51 | 56 | 61 | 66 | 71 | 76 | Total | | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | | | 30 | 35 | 40 | 45 | 50 | 55 | 60 | 65 | 70 | 75 | 80 | | Single women | | | | | | | | | | | | 523 | Appeared and confessed | .. | 13 | 2 | 4 | 12 | 4 | 10 | 6 | 5 | 13 | 21 | ... | Confessed on recognizance | 2 | 3 | 12 | 3 | 9 | 7 | 9 | 6 | 4 | 2 | 2 | ... | Pleaded guilty | 9 | 2 | 3 | 12 | 10 | 4 | 11 | 11 | 13 | 5 | 2 | ... | Pleaded guilty and named man | 1 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 21 | 18 | 16 | 7 | 3 | ... | Conf. on recogniz'nce and named man | 10 | 4 | 6 | 4 | 3 | 6 | 16 | 11 | 15 | 9 | 1 | ... | Appeared, confessed, and named man | 4 | 15 | 5 | 1 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 9 | 15 | 16 | 45 | ... | Married couples | | | | | | | | | | | | 160 | Appeared and confessed | 37 | 65 | 16 | 3 | 1 | .. | 1 | .. | .. | .. | .. | ... | Pleaded guilty | 15 | 9 | 8 | 1 | 1 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | ... | Pleaded not guilty, but convicted | 2 | .. | 1 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | ... | Wives[589] | 31 | | | | | | | | | | | | Appeared and confessed | 2 | 1 | 3 | .. | 1 | .. | .. | .. | 1 | .. | .. | ... | Pleaded guilty | 3 | .. | .. | .. | 1 | 2 | 6 | 7 | 4 | .. | .. | ... | Total | 85 | 115 | 57 | 32 | 48 | 33 | 77 | 68 | 73 | 52 | 74 | 714 | This is especially true during the decade following 1715, there being five such confessions at one sitting of the court, four of them on one page of the record. The results for the later period (Table V) are still more striking. Before the Middlesex court alone, during the fifty-five years commencing in 1726, were 523 cases of single women and 191 cases of married couples; but 189 of these couples were tried during the twenty-five years ending in 1750—there being but two isolated cases of confession after that date—and 181 within the first fifteen years. On the TABLE VI Penalties Imposed in Cases Comprised in Table V[590] Fine | Single | Married | Wives | | Women | Couples | | £12½ | .. | 1 | .. | £9 | 1 | .. | .. | £6 | 1 | 2 | .. | £5 | 18 | 37 | .. | £4 | 48 | 61 | 3 | £3 | 6 | .. | .. | 50s | 10 | .. | 1 | 40s | 24 | 2 | 4 | 30s | 9 | .. | 3 | 25s | 8 | 1 | .. | 20s | 43 | 3 | .. | 15s | 20 | .. | .. | 10s | 96 | 2 | 2 | 5s | 169 | .. | 16 | 4s | 11 | .. | .. | 3s | 13 | .. | 2 | 2s | 7 | .. | .. | 1s | 10 | .. | 1 | Total | 494 | 109 | 32 | other hand, 337 single women were convicted during the twenty-five and 257 during the same fifteen years. Again, 118 out of the 181 married couples tried between 1726 and 1740 appeared and, presumably, freely confessed their faults. The leading years in this regard are 1730 with twelve, 1732 with twenty-nine, and 1734 with sixteen confessions. The leading quinquennium is the second (1731-35) with sixty-six confessions as compared with thirty-nine in the first (1726-30) and nineteen in the third (1736-40). To offset these figures we find thirteen presumably voluntary confessions by single women in the second quinquennium, none in the first, and two in the third. These facts seem to point directly to the action of special causes in producing this kind of immorality, or, at any rate, its confession. Whether this action was local for Middlesex cannot positively be determined from these documents alone; although, as will soon appear, other evidence shows that this cannot be assumed. After 1725 the records for Suffolk are incomplete; but it is surprising that during the seven years (September, 1725, to October, 1732) covered by Table VII there were in that county only seven convictions of married couples, not one of whom freely confessed, as compared with forty-eight cases of single women, including one confession. There can be little doubt that in the eighteenth century, just as in the age preceding, the general cause of this ante-nuptial immorality—and probably also of some part of the similar misconduct of single persons whose engagements were not followed by wedlock—was the custom of solemn pre-contract which still survived. During the second quarter of the eighteenth century the penalties were relatively severe, though not so rigorous as during the period of the first charter; but the facts exhibited in Table VI show that the courts still treated pre-nuptial offenders more mercifully than those who were not married. To determine the special cause of the sudden rise in the number of confessions during the same period is a more difficult matter. It is not improbable that a suggestion of Charles Francis Adams, regarding another aspect of the problem, may give us a clue to its right solution. Already the practice of church confession of these offenses, in obedience to judicial decree, has been noticed; and independently of the courts, as a religious expiation, such acknowledgments were required by the authority of particular churches. In the eighteenth century, if not earlier, under the "seven months rule," the culpable parents were forced to humble TABLE VII Fornication Cases before the General Sessions of Suffolk County, Mass., September, 1725, to October, 1732[591] | Year | | 1725 | 1726 | 1727 | 1728 | 1729 | 1730 | 1731 | 1732 | Total | Single women: | | | | | | | | | | Confessed | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 1 | £3 or 10 stripes | .. | .. | 1 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | Pleaded guilty | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 8 | £4 or 10 stripes | .. | .. | 2 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | £3 or 10 stripes | .. | .. | 2 | .. | .. | 1 | .. | .. | .. | £2 or 10 stripes | .. | .. | .. | 1 | .. | 1 | .. | 1 | .. | Pleaded not guilty, but convicted | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 3 | £5 or 10 stripes | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 1 | .. | .. | .. | 10 stripes | .. | .. | .. | 1 | .. | 1 | .. | .. | .. | Pleaded guilty and named man | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 35 | £5 or 10 stripes | .. | 1 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | £4 or 10 stripes | 2 | 2 | 1 | .. | 2 | .. | .. | .. | .. | £3 or 10 stripes | 1 | 2 | 2 | 5 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 1 | .. | £2 or 10 stripes | .. | .. | .. | 1 | 1 | .. | 1 | 3 | .. | Came in freely and accused a man | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 1 | £2 or 10 stripes | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 1 | .. | .. | Married couples: | | | | | | | | | | Fornication before marriage, man alone accus'd | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 2 | 20s. or 10 stripes | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 1 | 1 | .. | .. | Fornication before mar'ge, woman alone accus'd | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | 5 | 40s. or 10 stripes | .. | 1 | .. | .. | 1 | 1 | .. | .. | .. | 20s. or 10 stripes | 1 | 1 | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | .. | Total | 4 | 7 | 8 | 8 | 7 | 10 | 6 | 5 | 55 | themselves before the whole congregation or else expose their innocent child to the danger of eternal perdition.[592] Yet, in spite of the fact that the clergy had thus devised a punishment more terrible to bear than the fines or stripes imposed by the criminal law, during the very period under consideration the church records show a great increase in the number of confessions. Adams suggests that an explanation may be found in the religious excitement which generally prevailed during the second quarter of the eighteenth century, the period which includes the "Great Awakening" under Whitefield in 1740, the Northampton revival of 1735, "engineered and presided over by Jonathan Edwards," and earlier "harvests" of the same character.[593] At Braintree, for example, there was a vast increase in the number of church confessions during the pastorate of John Hancock, 1726-43. It was "everywhere noticed that the women, and especially the young women, were peculiarly susceptible to attacks of the spiritual epidemic. Jonathan Edwards for instance mentions, in the case of Northampton, how the young men of that place had become 'addicted to night-walking and frequenting the taverns, and leud practices,' and how they would 'get together in conventions of both sexes for mirth and jollity, which they called frolicks; and they would spend the greater part of the night in them;' and among the first indications of the approach of the epidemic noticed by him was the case of a young woman who had been one of the greatest 'company keepers' in the whole town, who became 'serious, giving evidence of a heart truly broken and sanctified.' This same state of affairs doubtless then prevailed in Braintree, and indeed throughout New England. The whole community was in a sensitive condition morally and physically."[594] The morbid quickening of the conscience would thus naturally result in a greater number of confessions rather than in an increase of sexual license; and this same cause seems adequate to explain the extraordinary number of confessions which we have found in the contemporary court records.[595] Besides, after the sin had been disclosed before the congregation, an acknowledgment in court would almost necessarily follow. It would be very strange, however, if there were not a considerable increase in immorality. The practice of bundling, as Adams believes,[596] may have afforded ready opportunity. Any violent or protracted disturbance of the mental or nervous equilibrium, often tending to produce sexual excesses, would be sure to find "vent" in so dangerous a custom, especially when sanctioned by the recognized doctrine of betrothal. Finally it is not without interest to note that the higher legal significance of the "contraction," as compared with that of the English sponsalia, is due mainly to the influence of the Jewish law. The code of Moses mentions no fixed ceremonies for concluding marriage.[597] But precisely the same relation as by the Puritans is fixed between marriage and betrothal. For criminal assault upon the betrothed "damsel that is a virgin" and for adultery the death penalty is prescribed.[598] Later, however, the rabbinical law establishes "certain legal formalities for the act of concluding marriage. The act consisted of two distinct parts, intervened by the lapse of a certain time, the betrothment and the nuptials."[599] To constitute a legal betrothment the mere consent of the parties did not suffice. The performance of a solemn act was required. This consisted in the man's giving to his chosen bride in the presence of two witnesses either a written instrument, sh'tar, or a piece of money, kaseph, and saying: "Be thou consecrated (wedded) to me."[600] The contract thus made is not a "mere promise to marry," with civil consequences for non-fulfilment. "It is the very initiation of marriage. The betrothed parties are in some respects regarded as married, though not yet entitled to the marital rights nor bound to fulfil any of the mutual duties of conjugal life.... The betrothment could be dissolved only through death or a formal bill of divorce."[601] Among the Jews it was quite customary for the betrothal to be preceded by an "engagement," but it was not legally required.[602] The Puritan went farther in this regard, regulating proposal and courtship, as well as the pre-contract and nuptials, by statute. V. BREACH OF PROMISE AND MARRIAGE PORTIONS The New England contraction or public betrothal, when its social and legal consequences are considered, is thus seen to be an institution of far more historical interest than the scanty attention it has hitherto received would lead one to infer. This is all the more apparent when the accompanying practice of legal courtship is kept in view. Never, perhaps, in any modern society has parental control been so pronounced. But if consent were once given and sealed by a contract in due form, it could not be lightly withdrawn. The early records abound in notices of suits for breach of promise. The colonists were a litigious people; and members even of some of the best families do not hesitate to drag their matrimonial difficulties into court. Sometimes a jilted lover sues his fickle sweetheart; or a forlorn maiden seeks satisfaction from her betrothed spouse. Thus the Massachusetts court "orders that Joyce Bradwicke shall giue unto Alex: Becke the so[=m]e of xxs, for promiseing him marriage wthout her ffrends consent, & nowe refuseing to [p=]forme the same."[603] Likewise in the Plymouth jurisdiction we find John Sutton complaining "against Mary Russell, in an action of the case, to the damage of two hundred pounds, for engageing herselfe to another by promise of marriage, whenas shee had engaged herselfe by promise of marriage vnto the said John before. The jury find for the plaintiffe fifteen pounds damage, and the cost of the suite which came to 1lb 10s 6d."[604] But this did not entirely end the matter. In 1662-63 the case was taken up for review, Mary having in the meantime become the wife of John Jacob. After a careful rehearing, the court reaches the curious decision that Mary's "actinges haue bine such ... as may not reflect vpon her disparagement, wee apprehending that what wrong hath bine vnto John Sutton heerin hath bine rather occationed by her father than by ... herselfe, shee haueing heard such thinges concerning the said Sutton as might justly discurrage her, although the truth of these reports wee see not cause to determine." Whereupon, oddly enough, it is decreed "that the abouesaid John Sutton doe pay vnto John Jacob ... the su[=m]e of fifty shillings."[605] Sometimes a parent joins with his aggrieved child in seeking reparation; as when "Richard Siluester, in the behalfe of his daughter, and Dinah Siluester in the behalfe of herselfe" recover twenty pounds and costs from John Palmer, "for acteing fraudulently against the said Dinah, in not [p=]forming his engagement to her in point of marriage."[606] The proceedings of the Massachusetts courts contain the record of many similar suits under a variety of conditions. Some are ordinary cases of breach of promise.[607] In 1735 a woman was awarded two hundred pounds and costs at the expense of her betrothed who after jilting her had married another, although he had first beguiled her into deeding him a piece of land "worth £100."[608] Hopestill Aldrich in 1764 was not so successful. The higher court on appeal declined to give her damage, because after beginning her action against the faithless Darius Daniels she had married David Bowin, "who is still living and is her lawful husband."[609] A number of cases afford further evidence of the danger lurking in the New England doctrine of espousals, the indemnity sought being intended in part to punish personal wrongs committed under cover of pre-contract.[610] Puritan lovers did not always hesitate to prosecute their parents for refusing marriage when permission had once been given. Such was the fate of Hope Allen, who admitted before the Massachusetts court that "he did give his consent yt ye said Mr. Deacon should haue his daughter;" and accordingly for breaking his word he was censured, and had to pay a fine of ten pounds for his "irregular procedure."[611] The action might take a still more interesting form, including both the recreant parents and the promised consort in the same complaint. In this way Richard Sutton alleges "against Moses Symonds and Sarah, his wife, and Elizabeth theire daughter, that shee, the said Elizabeth, hath made a promise of marriage vnto him, and is hindered by the parents ... from proceeding with her therin." The court after due consideration decides that Moses ought to pay the said Richard "the su[=m]e of three pounds, for satisfaction for his time and charges spent about the [p=]mises;" but not without kindly releasing the couple from their engagement, "vnless on second considerations they shall see cause to renew theire former couenants."[612] These illustrations would seem to show that the blighted hopes and disappointed affections of New England lovers were not judicially reckoned at an extortionate figure. But those were the days of "small change" in all domestic affairs. As a matter of fact, the colonists were a close-fisted, bargaining race;[613] and in no respect perhaps were they more prudent than in their matrimonial transactions. Sometimes very careful contracts were executed in court regarding the property rights of the future husband and wife.[614] Often before betrothal and almost invariably before wedlock an exact arrangement was made between the parents touching the marriage portion on either side. The "higgling of dowries," suggests Weeden, was one of the most "singular practices" of New England life.[615] Even paupers were provided a marriage portion at the county's charge.[616] No shrewder hand at a bargain existed than Judge Sewall, whose Diary and Letter-Book are crowded with illustrations of this and other matrimonial customs. In 1712 we find him planning a match between his daughter Mary and young Samuel Gerrish. So he dines with the father and "discourses" with him "about my Daughter Mary's Portion. I stood for making £550 doe: because now twas in six parts, the Land was not worth so much. He urg'd for £600. at last would split the £50. Finally Feb. 20. I agreed to charge the House Rent and Difference of Money, and make it up to £600."[617] The worthy magistrate was not less thrifty in managing his own courtships, never for a moment allowing mere sentiment to get the better of prudence. From the outset he was lucky; for in 1676, according to tradition, he received as a dowry with his first wife, Hannah Hull, her weight in pine-tree shillings, which her father, the mint-master, measured out to him against her body in his own scales. In reality, his wife brought him much more than this fabled treasure; for six years after the wedding he came into the enjoyment of the mint-master's large estate, thus laying the foundation of his own fortune and official career.[618] Hannah lived with him more than forty years, bearing him seven sons and seven daughters. On her death the judge writes to a friend: "Wife expired on Satterday Oct. 19th, a little before Sun-Sett; and I lost my most constant lover, my most laborious Nurse; which produc'd a Flood of Tears in our Bed Chamber."[619] Soon, however, he was able to stem the torrent of his grief, for on the sixth day of the next February he enters in his diary: "Wandering in my mind whether to lead a Single or a Married Life."[620] Indeed, several weeks before this, when his wife was hardly two months dead, his mind and feet had begun to wander in the direction of Madam Winthrop,[621] upon whom, in his usual kindly way, he had bestowed certain tokens of his regard.[622] But for the present the charms of Widow Winthrop had to yield to those of Widow Dennison, whose goodly estate he had come to admire through having drawn her husband's will.[623] Attending her home from the funeral of her late consort, he "prayed God to keep house with her."[624] This was in March. Presently he opens serious negotiations. He makes her numerous presents, among which are "A pound of Reasons and Proportionable Almonds;" a "Psalm-Book neatly bound in England with Turkey-Leather;" the "last two News Letters;" "Dr. Mathers Sermons very well bound," and "told her in it we were invited to a wedding;" a "pair of Shoe-buckles, cost 5s 3d;" and "Two cases with a Knife and a fork in each; one Turtle shell tackling: the other long with Ivory handles Squar'd, cost 4s 6d."[625] In November, after much visiting and chaffering, he came to the point. "I told her 'twas time now to finish our Business: Ask'd her what I should allow her; she not speaking; I told her I was willing to give Two [Hundred] and Fifty pounds per a[=n]um, during her life, if it should please God to take me out of this world before her. She answer'd she had better keep as she was, than give a Certainty for an uncertainty; she should pay dear for dwelling at Boston. I desired her to make proposals, but she made none. I had Thoughts of Publishment next Thorsday, the 6th. But I now seem far from it. May God, who has the pity of a Father, Direct and help me."[626] This is by no means the end. The courtship drags along, and they continue to "higgle like hucksters and pedlers."[627] "She said she thought twas Hard to part with All, and have nothing to bestow on her Kindred. I said, I did not intend anything of the Movables, I intended all the personal Estate to be to her. She said I seem'd to be in hurry on Satterday ... which was the reason she gave me no proposals. Whereas I had ask'd her long before to give me proposals in Writing; and she upbraided me, That I who had never written her a Letter, should ask her to write." So the thrifty judge, although his "bowels" did "yern toward Mrs. Dennison," must even decide that God "in his Providence" directed him to "desist."[628] Later the widow grew more kind. On the following Lord's day she came to see him in the evening, walking all the way from Roxbury. She "ask'd pardon if she had affronted me;" and plainly let it be seen that she was not averse to the match, if only she were not called upon to "put all out of her Hand and power" and could "reserve something to bestow" on her deceased husband's friends "that might want." But, says Samuel, "I could not observe that she made me any offer of any part all this while." So "she went away in the bitter Cold, no Moon being up, to my great pain. I saluted her at parting."[629] Then the judge turned to Widow Tilly, whom he married on the next Thanksgiving day (October 29, 1719), though she pleaded her "Unworthiness of such a thing with much Respect."[630] But the union was short-lived; for in May of the next year "a very Extraordinary, awful Dispensation" came to the Judge. "About midnight," he writes, "my dear wife expired to our great astonishment, especially mine."[631] Already by the following December he wants God to "yet again provide such a good Wife for me, that I may be able to say I have obtained Favour of the Lord."[632] For in the meantime his mind has been "wandering" again toward Catherine Winthrop. But the gentle widow is now very coy and close at a bargain. After many visits and some interesting love passages,[633] the judge writes, she "was Courteous to me; but took occasion to speak pretty earnestly about my keeping a Coach: I said 'twould cost £100. per a[=n]um: she said twould cost but £40."[634] Clearly the issue was getting too sharply joined; and it is not wholly surprising that the lady was a trifle cool at her suitor's next visit.[635] Later he asked her "when our proceedings should be made publick: She said they were like to be no more publick than they were already. Offer'd me no Wine that I remember." She did not offer to help him on with his coat, nor at his request would she send her servant Juno to light him home.[636] It is to be feared that Catherine had not forgiven her suitor for leaving her for Widow Dennison, and was now getting "even." But the judge stood manfully to his arms. At the next meeting "I told her ... I was come to enquire whether she could find in her heart to leave that House and Neighborhood, and go and dwell with me at the South-end; I think she said softly, Not yet. I told her it did not ly in my Lands to keep a coach.... Told her I had an Antipathy against those who would pretend to give themselves; but nothing of their Estate. I would [give] a proportion of my Estate with my self. And I su[=p]os'd she would do so."[637] It goes without saying that when Sewall made his next call the lady was "not at home." After one or two more futile efforts[638] at coming to terms the grapes began to sour. The aged wooer somewhat spitefully closes this unlucky chapter of his courtships with the ungallant remark that "I did not bid her draw off her Glove as sometimes I had done. Her dress was not so clean as sometimes it had been. Jehovah jireh."[639] Thus Eros regained his sight. Several other attempts prove not more successful in providing the venerable widower with a suitable place to rest his "weary Head in Modesty."[640] But at last, humbly confessing himself, "aged, and feeble, and exhausted," he offers himself as a husband to Mrs. Mary Gibbs, of Newton, who is all too yielding in her reply.[641] For with this gentle dame the astute wooer, erstwhile so meek, at once proceeds to drive the sharpest bargain in the long history of his courtships. As she had no property to leave him by will, he insists upon the following harsh conditions: "I Rode to Newtown in the Coach, and visited Mrs. Gibbs. Spake of the proposals I had intimated per Mr. H. Gibbs; for her Sons to be bound to save me harmless as to her Administration; and to pay me £100. provided their Mother died before me: I to pay her £50. per a[=n]um during her Life, if I left her a Widow. She said 'twas hard, she knew not how to have her children bound to pay that Sum; she might dye in a little time. Mr. Cotton, whom she call'd spake to the same purpose, spake of a Joynture. I said I was peremptory as to the indemnifying Bond; Offer'd to take up with that alone, and allow her forty pounds per a[=n]um."[642] These terms, "hard" as they were and again insisted upon with most unromantic bluntness,[643] were at length accepted by the amiable Mary; who, surviving her kindly though grasping spouse, was no doubt by his side, according to his wish, to "carry it tenderly"[644] with him when he passed to his last reckoning. VI. SELF-GIFTA, CLANDESTINE CONTRACTS, AND FORBIDDEN DEGREES The Separatist and the Puritan, regarding marriage as "purely a civil contractual relation," logically conceded that "the parties may marry themselves as they may make other contracts." But, "like all other civil institutions, this may be regulated by municipal law. It should therefore be sanctioned by the civil authority;" and for that reason persons may be fined for marrying without observing the forms prescribed by the statutes.[645] Nevertheless such legal restraint, however wholesome and reasonable, seems to have been resented by the more radical as an interference with individual liberty; though doubtless the disregard of the marriage laws was in part due to the rudeness of an early society. Instances of self-betrothal and self-gifta seem to have been frequent in all the New England colonies. Thus, in 1678, Edward Wanton was fined £10 by the general court of Plymouth for "marrying himself," and Thomas Boarman paid £5 for the same offense. In 1684 William Gifford was fined fifty shillings for contracting a "disorderly marriage."[646] More interesting is the case of Edward Perry, on Cape Cod, who appears to have been guilty of self-marriage in 1654. For this he was fined £5; and Thomas Tupper, of Sandwich, for neglecting to perform the ceremony, "was 'disallowed' by the court from solemnizing marriages in future."[647] Then "magistrate Prence, when passing by on his return from court to Eastham, was to marry him rightly. Perry refused to be re-married, and was fined £5 more, with the discouraging notice that his fine would be repeated every three months till he complied."[648] Marriages by the primitive form of "hand-fasting" were not unknown in Massachusetts. An intelligent French refugee, who visited Boston two years after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, writes that "there are those who practice no Formality of Marriage except joining Hands, and so live in Common."[649] But the most celebrated instance of self-gifta is the case of Governor Richard Bellingham, who in 1641 entered into a private marriage with Penelope Pelham, herself "about forming a contract with another."[650] "Two errors more," says Winthrop, "he committed upon it. 1. That he would not have his contract published where he dwelt, contrary to an order of court. 2. He married himself contrary to the constant practice of the country."[651] The governor was therefore indicted for his offense by the grand jury; but "he declined to leave his place on the bench" over which he presided, "in order to take a position in the dock, and thus 'escaped both trial and punishment.'"[652] The secretary "postponed the case amidst excitement, and it was not again called up."[653] In spite of the constantly increasing severity of the penalties, clandestine marriages gave the lawmaker much trouble.[654] This is plainly revealed by the laws, already cited, relating to banns, consent, registration, and celebration,[655] especially by those of Rhode Island. The act of 1647 provides "that no contract or agreement between a Man and a Woman to owne each other as Man and Wife, shall be owned from henceforth threwout the Whole Colonie as a lawfull marriage, nor their Children or Issue so coming together to be legitimate or lawfullie begotten," but such as conform to the statute.[656] The clause relating to the issue of irregular marriages is noteworthy; for it is contrary to the usual tenor of the colonial laws, which—anticipating the policy of William III.—usually imposed severe penalties upon the offenders without affecting the legitimacy of the children. But even so stringent a remedy did not suffice. A new law in 1665 enforces that of 1647, adding the penalty prescribed for "fornication" for non-observance; but making the important exception in favor of existing irregular marriages "that any persons now living within the confines expressed in our late charter, ... that are reputed to live together as man and wife by the common observation or account of there neighbours before this act was passed, shall not come vnder any of the censures, fines, or penaltyes in any of the fore premised acts or orders, or in this present [order] concearning marriages," though "there may have been some neglect of the due observation of the rules and directions to that end therein contained."[657] It appears that "some persons" had "taken advantage of the law" to render the children of unregistered marriages illegitimate. An explanatory statute was therefore enacted in 1698 declaring such marriages lawful;[658] and in the subsequent legislation of this colony the lawmaker was content to punish the parties to irregular marriages without affecting the status of the offspring.[659] The clergy of New England, and especially those of Massachusetts, were much agitated over the question of the degrees of relationship which should be prohibited in wedlock. Marriage of first cousins, by affinity as well as by blood, and with a deceased wife's sister was strongly opposed. That of cousins german had been legalized by a statute of Henry VIII. in 1540;[660] and the earliest fruit of this act was the marriage of that monarch with Catherine Howard, first cousin of Ann Boleyn, his former wife.[661] Within less than two years thereafter Catherine lost her head; and Sewall, who like the Mathers regarded such marriages as incestuous, draws a grim moral from her fate.[662] Indeed, the Puritans, were in sore straits, fearing lest the "English Nation," while rejecting the excessive strictness of the Roman church in this regard, had gone "beyond the golden mean towards the other Extream."[663] In their anxiety to obey the Mosaic law they even exceeded its requirements.[664] Already in 1679 the general court, in reply to interrogation, had decided that marriage with a deceased wife's sister was unlawful,[665] thus taking the position which has been stubbornly maintained ever since by the English House of Lords. Interest in the matter seems, however, to have culminated in 1695. In that year a meeting of the ministers of Boston, Charlestown, and Dorchester, with Increase Mather at their head, came to the same conclusion as the general court in 1679.[666] This led directly to the passage of the celebrated law against incestuous marriages of the following June,[667] by which the general court, though not taking "in hand to determine what is the whole breadth of the divine commandment," proceeded, among other prohibitions, to forbid marriage with a wife's sister or niece.[668] For violation of the law, we have already seen, the culprit was condemned, as in the case of adultery, to wear the "scarlet letter." This act[669] remained nominally in force until after the Revolution; but the statute of 1785 in which these prohibitions do not appear was adopted seemingly without discussion.[670] The colonial laws on this subject were not allowed to slumber. From the records of the Connecticut court of assistants, for instance, it appears that in May, 1694, Nathaniel Finch is complained of "for that he hath unlawfully married to Elizabeth Hemmeway," sister "of the said Finch his first wife." The pleas of Finch's attorney are "esteemed to be insufficient, and also of an offensive nature." Accordingly, having considered all the facts of the case, the "rules of God's word, the judgment of most able Divines, and the Laws of this colony," the court finds the "said marriage to be incestuous and unlawful," and therefore declares it "to be wholly null and void;" further relegating the case to the county court to be held at New Haven the next June, "to lay such punishment on the said Finch for his said offence as the nature thereof doth require."[671] While the Massachusetts act of 1695 does not expressly prohibit a woman from wedding her husband's brother, a passage in Sewall's Diary shows that such unions were already treated as unlawful. On December 25, 1691, he writes, the "marriage of Hana Owen with her Husband's brother, is declar'd null by the court of Assistants. She commanded not to entertain him; enjoin'd to make a confession at Braintrey before the Congregation on Lecture Day, or Sabbath, pay fees of court and prison," and "to be dismissed."[672] VII. SLAVE MARRIAGES Finally in this connection a word regarding the treatment of slave marriages in New England may not be wholly out of place. With respect to the morality of slavery and the slave trade as viewed by the Puritan the record is perfectly clear. He was no better and no worse than his contemporaries. In his eyes the commerce in human chattels, whether red, black, or white,[673] was as legitimate a business as the handling of West India molasses; though like the Spaniard he may sometimes have excused or extolled it as affording a field for missionary work. "The seventeenth century," observes Weeden, "organized the new western countries, and created an immense opportunity for labor. The eighteenth coolly and deliberately set Europe at the task of depopulating whole districts of Africa, and of transporting the captives, by a necessarily brutal, vicious, and horrible traffic, to the new civilizations of America.... New England entered upon this long path of twisted social development—the wanton destruction of barbaric life in the hope of new civilized life, this perversion of the force of the individual barbarian into an opportunity for social mischief—with no more and no less consciousness than prevailed elsewhere at that time. The Winthrops and other Puritan colonists asked and received Indian captives for slaves as freely as any partisan went for loot or plunder."[674] With respect to matrimonial rights nothing can be more misleading than the self-gratulations of writers who have treated colonial history from what Charles Francis Adams has aptly called the "filio-pietistic" point of view.[675] Thus in his early edition Bancroft, referring to the alleged mitigating character of Massachusetts legislation, securing to the slave such protection "as the Hebrew scriptures seemed to enjoin," declares that "this brought about a total modification of the character of negro slavery by giving to the slave the rights of marriage and the family."[676] Palfrey goes even farther in his zeal, solemnly assuring us that "from the reverence entertained by the Fathers of New England for the nuptial tie, it is safe to infer that slave husbands and wives were never parted."[677] In like spirit statesmen, jurists, and historians have reiterated the assertion that slavery was not hereditary in Massachusetts. "In all her annals," says Charles Sumner, "no person was ever born a slave" on her soil; and if, in fact, "the issue of slaves was sometimes held in bondage, it was never by sanction of any statute or law of Colony or Commonwealth."[678] Similar statements are made by Hurd, Washburn, and Belknap.[679] Justice Gray declares that "previously to the adoption of the State Constitution in 1780 negro slavery existed to some extent, and negroes held as slaves might be sold, but all children of slaves were by law free."[680] The unsupported dictum of Palfrey is equally confident. "In fact," he says, "no person was ever born in legal slavery in Massachusetts."[681] Since the appearance of Moore's able monograph it is perhaps needless to explain that the facts are against these comfortable theories. Slavery was authorized by statute in Massachusetts under sanction of the Mosaic law; and so the children of slave mothers were also slaves.[682] The evils of the institution may, indeed, have been somewhat mitigated by the simple industrial conditions which then prevailed. The climate and soil were ill suited to slave labor. Occasionally there may have been a mind far enough ahead of the age to perceive dimly the social danger lurking in the system. Almost the only clear voice raised against it is that of Samuel Sewall,[683] whose practice nevertheless was not always consistent with his doctrine.[684] Mixture of race was not favored. But not until 1705 was intermarriage between a white person and a negro or mulatto forbidden by statute.[685] Through Sewall's influence the prohibition was not then extended to Indians;[686] and he succeeded in having a clause retained in the act enjoining that "no master shall unreasonably deny marriage to his negro with one of the same nation."[687] A passage in his diary shows that the laws relating to banns, as also, it is safe to infer, those regarding celebration and registration, were applied in the case of such unions; while at the same time we are given a pleasing picture of the humane treatment which slaves sometimes received from their masters. On September 26, 1700, he records that "Mr. John Wait and Eunice his Wife, and Mrs. Debora Thair come to Speak to me about the Marriage of Sebastian, Negro Servt of said Wait, with Jane, Negro Servt of said Thair. Mr. Wait desired they might be published in order to Marriage. Mrs. Thair insisted that Sebastian might have one day in six allow'd him for the support of Jane, his intended wife and her children, if it should please God to give her any. Mr. Wait now wholly declin'd that, but freely offer'd to allow Bastian Five pounds, in Money [=p] a[=n]um towards the Su[=p]ort of his children [=p] said Jane (besides Sabastians cloathing and Diet). I persuaded Jane and Mrs. Thair to agree to it, and so it was concluded; and Mrs. Thair gave up the Note of Publication to Mr. Wait for him to carry it to Wm Griggs, the Town Clerk, and to Williams in order to have them published according to law."[688] Examples of such kindly usage were doubtless not uncommon among New England slave-owners, just as they were often found at all times in the South. But it is vain to apologize for a system, wicked and corrupting in itself, on the ground of individual benevolence or of laws which inconsistently in certain particulars seem to recognize the spiritual and social equality of human chattels. In a community where a black man or woman for sexual misconduct with a member of the favored race was condemned by statute to be sold into another province;[689] where Indian prisoners were divided among the captors, and sold as legitimate spoil;[690] where African fathers and mothers, bought on their native soil for watered rum with short measure, were shipped across the ocean in stifling death-traps,[691] to be "knocked down" from the auction block to the highest bidder,[692] it seems rather more than absurd to assume that under the benign influence of Puritan religion and morality slave wives and husbands were never parted through the lust or greed of their owners. Nor in general was the alleged hope of converting the "benighted heathen to enjoy the blessings of a Gospel dispensation" more than a soothing balm to quiet the incipient throes of a rudimentary conscience in this regard.[693] Nay, in New England as elsewhere, the Christianizing of the blacks was sometimes actually discouraged, lest it should put in jeopardy the white man's property in them. During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries a typical "case of conscience" arose. Would not the baptism of a slave in effect be a dangerous admission of his spiritual equality with the master? "Could an intelligent being, who, through the Mediator, had participated in the spirit of God, and by his own inward experience had become conscious of a Supreme Being, and of relations between that Being and humanity be rightfully held in bondage? From New England to Carolina, the 'notion' prevailed that 'being baptized is inconsistent with the state of slavery;' and this early apprehension proved an obstacle to the 'conversion of these poor people.' The sentiment was so deep and so general that South Carolina in 1712, Maryland in 1715, Virginia repeatedly from 1667 to 1748, set forth by special enactments that baptism did not confer freedom."[694] Naturally the Puritan was deeply exercised by the same scruples. He sorely dreaded lest through extending the means of grace to his serf Christ should inadvertently be put "in bondage." But he solved the problem in the same way as his southern brother—at the expense of the bondman. In Massachusetts as in Rhode Island slavery was consecrated "without regard to the religion of the slave."[695] Accordingly in 1696 "the ministers of Boston" submitted to the general court "That ye wel-knowne Discouragemt upon ye endeavours of masters to Christianize their slaves, may be removed by a Law which may take away all pretext to Release from just servitude, by receiving of Baptisme." But to the credit of the court, we are told, "this proposal was not noticed."[696] Over forty years later a different result was reached by the clergy of Connecticut. At a meeting of the General Association for that colony in 1738, "It was inquired—whether the infant slaves of Christian masters may be baptized in the right of their masters—they solemnly promising to train them in the nurture and admonition of the Lord: and whether it is the duty of such masters to offer such children and thus religiously to promise. Both questions were affirmatively answered."[697] Thus the negro of Connecticut was admitted to the covenant of grace without jeopardizing his owner's chattel interest in his body. The attitude of Massachusetts slave-owners on this problem is revealed in Sewall's "question" from the Athenian Oracle: "What then should hinder but these be Baptized? If only the Covetousness of their Masters, who for fear of losing their Bodies, will venture their Souls; which of the two are we to esteem the greater Heathens? Now that this is notorious Matter of Fact, that they are so far from persuading those poor Creatures to Come to Baptism, that they discourage them from it, and rather hinder them as much as possible, though many of the wretches, as we have been informed, earnestly desire it; this we believe, none that are concern'd in the Plantations, if they are ingenuous, will deny, but own they don't at all care to have them Baptized. Talk to a Planter of the Soul of a Negro, and he'll be apt to tell ye (or at least his Actions speak it loudly) that the Body of one of them may be worth twenty Pounds; but the Souls of an hundred of them would not yield him one Farthing; and therefore he's not at all solicitous about them, though the true Reason is indeed, because of that Custom of giving them their Freedom, after turning Christians." Whether this custom be "reasonable" the writer doubts; for neither the "Father of the Faithful" nor St. Paul commands masters to liberate their slaves and Christianity does not "alter any Civil Right." In the "mean time, if there be such a Law or Custom for their Freedom, to encourage 'em to Christianity, be it reasonable or otherwise, this is certain, that none can excuse those who for that Reason should in any way hinder or discourage 'em from being Christians; some of whose excuses are almost too shameful to repeat, since they seem to reflect on the Christian Religion, as if that made Men more untractable and ungovernable, than when bred in Ignorance and Heathenism."[698] Much of the same casuistry is manifested in dealing with the question of slave marriages. A bondman might be made amenable to the law of banns and celebration; but his continued enjoyment of marital rights and family life was absolutely precarious. As Moore suggests, the proviso of the act of 1705 forbidding the "unreasonable denial of marriage to negroes is very interesting. Legislation against the arbitrary exercise and abuse of authority proves its existence and the previous practice."[699] Besides, the adoption of that law was prompted perhaps as much by self-interest as by regard for morality. It was in effect a prudent police ordinance. Masters were liable for the legal fines imposed on their slaves for sexual offenses. It might be cheaper and less troublesome to allow orderly wedlock. "Moreover it is too well known," writes Sewall, "what Temptations Masters are under, to connive at the Fornication of their Slaves; lest they should be obliged to find them Wives, or pay their Fines. It seems to be practically pleaded that they might be Lawless; 'tis thought much of, that the Law should have satisfaction for their Thefts, and other Immoralities; by which means, Holiness to the Lord is more rarely engraven upon this sort of servitude. It is likewise most lamentable to think, how in taking Negroes out of Africa, and selling of them here, That which God has joined together, men do boldly rend asunder; Men from their Country, Husbands from their Wives, Parents from their Children. How horrible is the Uncleanness, Mortality, if not Murder, that the ships are guilty of that bring great Crouds of these miserable Men and Women. Methinks when we are bemoaning the barbarous Usage of our Friends and Kinsfolk in Africa: it might not be unreasonable to enquire whether we are not culpable in forcing the Africans to become Slaves amongst ourselves."[700] For another reason families were in constant danger of being separated. The breeding of slaves was not generally regarded as convenient or profitable in New England. According to Belknap, "negro children were considered an incumbrance in a family; and when weaned, were given away like puppies," and they were "publickly advertised in the news-papers" to be so disposed of.[701] That there was something grotesque in using the solemn ritual of the church in the marriage of slaves was faintly realized. In 1748 Rev. Noah Hobart "challenged the want of flexibility in the forms of the Liturgy of the Church of England, as tending 'to introduce irreligion and profaneness'—especially in the use of the office of Matrimony for marriages contracted between slaves." The use of the phrase "with all my worldly goods I thee endow, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost" he regarded as particularly sacrilegious, although the prayers employed by the Congregational minister at slave weddings were equally profane.[702] In at least one instance a sufficiently flexible special ritual was composed which very frankly discloses the idea of its author, and probably also that of a majority of his brethren, as to the real character of a slave marriage. According to Moore, it was discovered at Northampton, N. H., in 1868, by Mr. J. Wingate Thornton; and it was prepared and used by Rev. Samuel Phillips, of Andover, Mass., whose ministry there, beginning in 1710 and ending with his death in 1771, was a prolonged and eminently distinguished service of more than half of the eighteenth century." This "Form of a Negro-Marriage" is a decidedly safe and practical service from the master's point of view. The minister says: "You S: do now in the Presence of God, and these Witnesses, Take R: to be your Wife; Promising that so far as shall be consistent with ye Relation wch you now sustain, as a Servant, you will Perform ye Part of an Husband towards her; And in particular, you Promise, that you will Love her: And that, as you shall have ye Opportty & Ability, you will take a proper Care of her in Sickness and Health, in Prosperity & Adversity: And that you will be True & Faithfull to her, and will Cleave to her only, so long as God, in his Provdce, shall continue your and her abode in Such Place (or Places) as that you can conveniently come together." Similar words are repeated to the woman; and when each in turn has sealed this unique troth-plight, the minister continues: "I then agreeable to your Request, and wth ye Consent of your Masters & Mistresses, do Declare, that you have Licence given you to be conversant and familiar together, as Husband and Wife, so long as God shall continue your Places of abode as aforesaid; and so long as you shall behave your-selves as it becometh Servants to doe: For you must, both of you, bear in mind, that you Remain Still as really and truly as ever, your Master's Property, and therefore it will be justly expected, both by God and Man, that you behave and conduct your-selves, as Obedient and faithfull Servants towards your respective Masters & Mistresses for the Time being."[703] Through this ingenious device, it is clear, the permanence of the slave's nuptial bond, with all his connubial and family rights, was made absolutely dependent upon his owner's will.
CHAPTER XIII ECCLESIASTICAL RITES AND THE RISE OF CIVIL MARRIAGE IN THE SOUTHERN COLONIES [Bibliographical Note XIII.—For Virginia the chief materials have been drawn from Hening's Statutes at Large (Richmond, 1809-23), and the laws comprised in Acts of the Assembly (fol., Williamsburg, 1769). The third volume of O'Callaghan, Documents Rel. to the Col. History of New York, has an interesting memorial of the bishop of London written in 1677; and there are some references to marriage in Strachey, For the Colony in Virginea Britannea: Lawes Diuine, Morall, and Martiall, being "Dale's Code" (London, 1612): in Force, Tracts, III; Spotswood, Letters, constituting Vols. I and II, new series, of the Collections of the Va. Hist. Soc. (Richmond, 1882-85); Beverley, History of Virginia (reprint, Richmond, 1855); and the acts of the assembly of 1619 contained in the Colonial Records of Virginia (Richmond, 1874). Cooke, Virginia (Boston, 1884), gives a curious proclamation of Governor Wyatt for the regulation of courtship. In Vol. IV of the Va. Magazine of Hist. and Biog. (Richmond, July, 1896) there is a unique "Marriage Agreement" which throws some light on the economic affairs of the provincial household; and further illustrations of domestic and social customs may be found in Goodwin, The Colonial Cavalier (Boston, 1895); and Fiske, Old Virginia and Her Neighbors (Boston, 1898). The principal sources for Maryland are Browne, Archives of Maryland (Baltimore, 1883-91); Bacon, Laws of Maryland (fol., Annapolis, 1765); and, to supplement these, the Laws of Maryland made since 1763 (fol., Annapolis, 1777); or the same (fol., Annapolis, 1787). Streeter, "Papers Rel. to the Early Hist. of Maryland," in Md. Hist. Soc. Publications (Baltimore, 1876), publishes a record of the first wedding in the colony, with the marriage license bond. The matrimonial doctrines of the Labadists are discussed by James, "The Labadist Colony in Maryland," in J. H. U. S., XVII (Baltimore, 1899); and the character of the episcopal clergy is described by Browne, Maryland (Boston, 1884), and by Lodge, Short History (New York, 1882). On this subject, as on most topics for the period, the extremely valuable Colonial Records of North Carolina (Raleigh, 1886-90) are a mine of information; and they are enriched by Colonel Saunders's "Prefatory Notes." The first matrimonial statute, passed by the assembly of Albemarle in 1669, is also contained in Chalmers, Political Annals: in Carroll, Hist. Coll. of South Carolina (New York, 1836); and in Hawks, History of North Carolina (Fayetteville, 1857-58), likewise of service on other points. The various statutes of the eighteenth century may be consulted in Iredell-Martin's Public Acts of the Gen. Assembly (Newbern, 1804); in Swan's Revisal (ed. 1752); or Davis's Revisal (ed. 1773). Similar collections of laws for South Carolina are Cooper and McCord's Statutes at Large (Columbia, 1837-41), and Brevard's Alphabetical Digest (Charleston, 1814)—both of which contain useful editorial notes. Constitutional provisions are, of course, found in Poore, Charters (Washington, 1877). The works of Friedberg and the Atlantic article of Cook, elsewhere mentioned, are still of service; and Weeks in his valuable monograph, "Church and State in North Carolina," in J. H. U. S., XI (Baltimore, 1893), has traced from the sources the struggle of the Presbyterian with the Episcopalian government party for the privilege of using their own rites in the celebration of marriage.] I. THE RELIGIOUS CEREMONY AND LAY ADMINISTRATION IN VIRGINIA Throughout the colonial period in Virginia the religious marriage ceremony, according to the rites of the Church of England, was prescribed by law. Indeed, it was not until 1794 that the lay celebration before a magistrate was permitted, and then only in certain exceptional cases. But in two important particulars, even in the earliest statutes, there is a remarkable advance upon the custom of the mother-country. In the first place, it is noteworthy that the administration of matrimonial law is gradually intrusted to the county officers and the local courts. Here, as in New England, there is a quickening of the forces of local self-government; and the lay tribunals gained important functions which in England belonged to the ecclesiastical courts. Again, the legislation of 1631-32 embodies the essential principles of the Hardwicke act of 1753. The institution of marriage begins to be protected and defined by careful statutory provisions and is no longer left to the perils of uncertain custom. Banns or license, parental consent, certificate, and registration are all soon introduced. Marriage becomes in effect a civil contract long before it is squarely acknowledged to be such by the law. The brief act of 7 Charles I., 1632, provides that "no mynister shall celebrate matrimony betweene any persons without a facultie or lycense graunted by the Governor, except the baynes of matrimony have beene first published three severall Sundays or holydays in the time of devyne service in the parish churches where the sayd persons dwell, accordinge to the booke of common prayer." The minister is forbidden to "ioyne any persons soe licensed in marriage at any unreasonable tymes, but only betweene the howers of eight and twelve in the forenoone." If the marriage is after publication of banns without license, and the persons are under twenty-one years of age, the consent of parents is required before legal celebration.[704] It was also enacted that all marriages should be solemnized in church "except in case of necessity."[705] The act of 1632 determined the broad outline of the marriage law of Virginia until after the Revolution. But two or three important modifications were made by subsequent legislation. Thus, an act of the Commonwealth period, 1657-58, enforces the provision that "ministers only shall celebrate marriages;" and significantly adds that they shall not do so without license or publication of banns "as formerly," under a penalty of "tenne thousand pounds of tobacco to ease the leavye of that county." No license is to be granted "without certificate vnder the hands of the parents, masters, or guardians of the parties to be married."[706] Again, the first act of the Restoration, 1661-62, requires license or "thrice publication according to the prescription of the rubric in the common prayer booke, which injoynes that if the persons to be marryed dwell in severall parishes the banes must be asked in both parishes, and that the curate of one parish shall not solemnize the matrimony untill he have a certificate from the curate of the other parish, that the banes have been there thrice published, and noe objection made" to the union. For violation of the law by the minister the penalty of 1657-58 is retained. But this statute goes farther and declares that "any pretended marriage hereafter made by any other then a minister" shall be "reputed null, and the children borne out of such marriage of the parents" shall be "esteemed illegitimate and the parents suffer such punishment as by the laws prohibiting fornication ought to be inflicted."[707] This act of the Restoration, like that of the Duke of York, 1665, was probably invalid as transcending the requirements of the English common law.[708] In part it may have been intended to punish violation of the marriage law by dissenters, and its severity must have been keenly felt. At any rate, it was repealed in 1696 and replaced by an "act for the prevention of clandestine marriages." The preamble recites that "many great and grievous mischeifes have arisen and dayly doe arise by clandestine and secret marriages to the utter ruin of many heirs and heiresses," and that "the laws now in force ... do inflict too small a punishment for so heinous and great an offence." The minister guilty of violating the provision for banns or license, which is re-enacted, is to suffer imprisonment "for one whole year without bayle or mainprize and shall forfeitt and pay the sume of five hundred pounds currant money, one moyety thereof to our sovereign lord the king, ... and the other moyety to him or them that shall sue or informe for the same." No licenses are to be granted without a certificate from the clerk of the county court; and the certificate may not be issued by the clerk without the consent of the parent or guardian given in person or by writing attested by two witnesses, under penalty of a year's imprisonment and the payment of a fine of five hundred pounds current money. The clause of the preceding act making the issue of irregular marriages illegitimate is not repeated in this act or subsequently—an admission, seemingly, that the provision was originally null and void. But a female between the ages of twelve and sixteen contracting such a marriage forfeits during coverture her inheritance to the next of kin. After the death of her husband the inheritance reverts to her or those who should have claimed "in case this act had never been made."[709] This clause was retained in subsequent legislation.[710] By the act of 1705 still more careful provision is made for license and certificate; and if any minister, contrary to the spirit of the law, shall "go out of this her majesty's colony and dominion" and there join in matrimony "persons belonging to this country," without license or publication, he is to suffer the same penalty as if the offense had been done in the province.[711] No relaxation in the illiberal rule requiring solemnization by a clergyman of the establishment was made until after the Revolution. First in 1780 the court of each county was authorized to license not more than four ministers of any religious society to solemnize marriages. In 1784 ministers of all denominations, except itinerants, were put on the same level in this regard. Already the preceding year laymen "in the western waters" had grudgingly been empowered to act, provided they make use of the ritual of the English church; but it was not until 1830 that it became possible, when the court saw fit, to appoint laymen for this purpose in all counties of the commonwealth; and this policy has survived to the present hour.[712] But if the Anglican clergy during the entire colonial period were given a monopoly of matrimonial business, it by no means follows that the dissenters, whose numbers were constantly gaining, ever tamely submitted. On the contrary, they often took the law into their own hands and had their marriages celebrated before their own ministers, or resorted to the local magistrates. This fact is made clear by the act of 1780 and subsequent statutes, by which marriages irregularly contracted are declared valid. Indeed, as early as 1677 we have evidence that dissenters refused to observe an unjust and probably invalid law. A memorial of the bishop of London in that year laments that in Virginia there is a great "defect in the execution of those two wholesome laws ... of the Assembly, the one prohibiting all marriages to be solemnized without a lawful minister imposing the punishment due for fornication on the parties & making their children illegitimate & so not capable of inheriting, the other prohibiting any persone the ministeriall Function without proveing himself to have first received Orders from some Bishop in England."[713] As already stated, the matrimonial laws of Virginia were from an early day locally administered, and mainly by the civil magistrate. The minister of every parish was required to keep a "booke wherein shall be written the day and yeare of every christeninge, wedding, and buriall;"[714] and annually on the first day of June it was the duty of the church wardens and ministers to make a return to the quarter court of all marriages solemnized during the year.[715] By the act of 1642 the report is to be made to the "commander of every monethly court;"[716] and in 1661-62 the duty of registration is laid upon the reader equally with the minister.[717] At length, in 1780, the officiating minister is required to transmit a certificate of every marriage solemnized by him to the clerk of the county court for record.[718] It was the minister's duty to publish the banns thrice, as required by law. But in consequence of the scarcity of clergymen of the established church, in some places it became practically impossible to comply with the statutes. So, in 1705, the clerk or reader in any parish having no minister was empowered to publish banns and, "if no objection be made," to grant a certificate thereof to the officiating minister.[719] In Virginia, as we have seen, the governor's license instead of banns takes the place of the license of the English bishop. Licenses are not to be issued "without certificate under the hands of the parents, masters or guardians."[720] On account of the rapid growth of population, in which was an ever-increasing proportion of dissenters, and on account of the scarcity of ministers of the established church, the demand for licenses became so great that, in 1661, the clerks of the county courts were empowered to issue them. "Whereas," runs the statute, "many times lycences are granted and the persons are marryed out of the parishes, which lycences have been usually granted by the governor, whose knowledge of persons cannot possibly extend over the whole country," therefore persons desiring to be married by license are required to give bond to the clerk that there is no lawful impediment. The clerk is then to write the license and certify to the first justice in the commission for the county, or else to the person appointed for this business by the governor, who shall sign it.[721] Later the personal or written consent of the parent or guardian is required before the clerk may issue certificate.[722] But by the act of 1705 a bond is required in all cases, and parental consent only in the case of minors. The license is then issued by the clerk for the signature of the magistrate or the governor's deputy.[723] The granting of licenses was an important source of income for the governor, he receiving two hundred pounds of tobacco or twenty shillings for each license issued. Such, for example, was the law in the days of Beverley.[724] These fees were collected by the sheriff and turned over to the governor or secretary of the colony.[725] At the beginning of the Revolution, in order to provide for the expense of the militia, a tax of forty shillings was laid by the assembly upon each marriage license;[726] and in the next year the law granting license fees to the governor was repealed.[727] The legal fee allowed the minister was twenty shillings or two hundred pounds of tobacco for each marriage when celebrated by license, and five shillings or fifty pounds of tobacco when celebrated by banns.[728] In 1792, however, the uniform fee for a marriage was fixed at one dollar.[729] Marriages within the "levitical degrees prohibited by the laws of England" were forbidden;[730] and curious and stringent regulations concerning the secret marriage of indented servants were made. Thus in 1642-43, since "many great abuses & much detriment hath been found to arise both against the law of God and likewise to the service of manye masters of families in the collony" by secret marriage of servants, it is provided that a man servant contracting a secret marriage with a maid servant shall serve an additional year after the completion of the term of indenture; while a maid servant so offending is to double the time of her service. A freeman for secretly marrying an indented maid servant must double the value of her service and pay a fine of five hundred pounds of tobacco to the parish where the offense is committed.[731] The unjust discrimination against female servants was done away with in 1657-58.[732] A still more rigorous law was passed in 1661-62. The minister is prohibited under a penalty of ten thousand pounds of tobacco from either publishing the banns or celebrating the contract of marriage without a certificate of consent from the masters of both the persons, who are each to suffer the penalty of a year's extra service, as before; while the freeman clandestinely marrying a servant is to pay to the master fifteen hundred pounds of tobacco or a year's service.[733] But in 1748 for the offending parties the year's extra service is commuted at "five pounds current money."[734] It may be noted that in this Virginia legislation there is no provision like that of Plymouth for compelling the consent of stubborn masters. The matrimonial history of Virginia begins with the nuptials of Ann Burras and John Laydon, celebrated in 1608.[735] A few years later, in Dale's code, appear the first marital regulations, though to what extent they were ever carried out must remain uncertain. Every minister is required to "keepe a faithful and true Record, or Church Booke, of all Christnings, Marriages, and deaths of such our people, as shall happen within their Fort, or Fortresse, Townes or Towne at any time, vpon the burthen of a neglectfull conscience, and vpon paine of losing their Entertainment."[736] The statutes of the Dominion are silent as to the celebration of pre-contract or espousals; and the penalties prescribed for adultery and fornication are in marked contrast with those of early New England. Persons were presented for these offenses by the church wardens at the annual visitations;[737] and the culprits were punished by fines or whipping.[738] Nor do the laws concern themselves with the regulation of courtship and "sinful dalliance" in New England style; although a proclamation of Governor Wyatt shows that his excellency was willing to supply the law's defect in this regard. He announces that "every minister should give notice in his church that what man or woman soever should use any word or speech tending to a contract of marriage to two several persons at one time," such "as might entangle or breed scruples in their consciences, should for such their offense, either undergo corporal correction, or be punished by fine or otherwise, according to the quality of the person so offending."[739] Very little material has been collected regarding wedding customs in Virginia.[740] But this sketch may be concluded by reference to a curious "marriage agreement" which took place in Eastville, Northampton county, in 1714, and which throws light on domestic economy in the Old Dominion. Mr. John Custis and Frances, his wife, having fallen out, are inspired with hope and faith that they may renew "perfect love and friendship" by bond and covenant. First, therefore, it is duly stipulated that "the sd Frances shall return to the sd John all the money, Plate and other things what soever that she hath from him or removed out of the house upon oath and be obliged never to take away by herself or any other, anything of value from him again or run him in debt without his consent, nor sell, give away or dispose of anything of value out of the family without his consent, upon the condition that the plate and damaske linen" shall not be given away or otherwise disposed of by the said John during her life, but be delivered to his children "by the said Frances immediately after her decease." Next it is agreed that "Frances shall henceforth for bear to call him ye sd John any vile names or give him any ill language, Neither shall he give her any," but they are "to live lovingly together and to behave themselves to each other as a good husband & good wife ought to doe. And that she shall not intermeddle with his affairs but that all business belonging to the husband's management shall be solely transacted by him, neither shall he intermeddle in her domestique affairs but that all business properly belonging to the management of the wife shall be solely transacted by her." Again, after settling his debts, John gives bond in the sum of one thousand pounds that he will keep "true and perfect accounts of all the profitts and disbursements of his whole Estate," present and future, in Virginia or the rest of the world, and that he will "produce the same accounts yearly if it be required upon oath. And that after all debts hereafter necessarily accrueing; for buying cloaths, tools and all the necessary [things] for the servants and the plantations, paying leavys and Quitt-rents & making necessary repairs of his whole estate and alsoe all other necessary charges acrewing for the use & benefitt of the estate which is to descend to the child of ye said Frances are deducted and paid he shall freely & without grudging allow one full moity ... of his whole estate" to her annually, "for clothing herself and the children with a reasonable proportion thereof and the remainder to be all laid out in the education of the children & for furnishing ... all things ... necessary for house keeping (that are to be brought from England) and Phisick," so long as she remains peacefully with him; and that he shall allow for her maintenance and that of the family "one bushell of wheat for every week and a sufficient quantity of Indian Corn and as much flessh of all kinds as the stocks of Cattle, Sheep and hoggs" will stand, with "sufficient quantity of Cyder and Brandy if so much be made on the plantation." But if Frances exceed her allowance, then it is to cease, and the "bond to be voyd." Out of her allowance Frances is to have "free liberty to keep a white servant if she shall think fitt;" also the usual colored servants, among whom are mentioned "Jenny," "Queen," and "Billy boy," who are to "tend the garden, goe of errands or with the coach, catch horses, and doe all other necessary works" both in and about the house. Moreover, with impulsive generosity, "ye sd John" binds himself, not only to allow Frances "fifteen pounds of wool and fifteen pounds of fine dresst flax or fifteen pounds of wool in lieu thereof every year to spin for any use in the family she shall think fit;" but even to suffer her "to give away twenty yards of Virginia cloth every Year to charitable uses if soe much remain after the servants are clothed." Finally, pending the marketing of the tobacco crop in England, which will take twelve months, Frances is graciously endowed by John with fifty pounds in money for support of herself and the family, if there should happen to be so much left when all the debts are paid.[741] II. OPTIONAL CIVIL MARRIAGE AND THE RISE OF OBLIGATORY RELIGIOUS CELEBRATION IN MARYLAND The earliest extant record of a marriage in Maryland, we are told, is that of William Edwin and Mary Whitehead, dated March 26, 1638. They were married by license, with security to the Lord Proprietor for the payment of "one thousand weight of merchantable tobacco, to be paid upon demand, in case the said William Edwin hath precontracted himself to any other woman than Mary Whitehead (spinster)," or in case there is any other lawful impediment to the marriage.[742] According to Bozman, many similar marriage-license bonds have been preserved.[743] The requirement of a "caution," in such cases, is enforced in the act of the assembly passed in 1640.[744] No marriage may be solemnized without banns "three days before published in some Chappell or other place of the County where publique instnts are used to be notified, or else afore oath mad & caution entered in the County Court that neither partie is apprentice or ward or precontracted or within the forbidden degrees of consanguinity or under govermt of parents or tutors and certificate of such oath & caution taken from the Judge or Register of the Court."[745] By the act of 1658, passed during the Fendall government, the civil ceremony is made legal. Persons desiring to be married have liberty to apply either to a magistrate or to a minister; but in all cases, under severe penalty, a certificate of the publication of banns at the county court, or in some church, chapel, or meeting, is required.[746] Banns or a license from the governor or lieutenant-general is prescribed by the act of 1662; and, as before, the ceremony may be performed by either a minister or a magistrate, but in presence of two witnesses. Otherwise the marriage is void.[747] Thus far no form of words at the nuptials had been prescribed. Therefore in 1666, by a statute which was to remain in force three years, a modification of the English ritual was adopted.[748] The general provisions of the law of 1662 are repeated in the act of 1676, except that the intention to allow complete liberty with respect to the form of celebration is more accented. Instead of a "minister or magistrate," as in the former act, any "priest, minister, pastor, or magistrate" may now conduct the celebration; and, as before, a marriage not so solemnized is declared null and void; though it is highly probable that such a requirement was invalid as being inconsistent with the English common law.[749] Up to this point, under the Catholic proprietors of the palatinate, absolute toleration had prevailed. Optional civil or ecclesiastical rites were sanctioned. But now arose a struggle for supremacy between the toleration party composed of Catholics and Quakers, who began to take strong root in the province, and a bigoted Protestant faction. "As happened twenty years before, a minority in the colony, in sympathy with the dominant party in England, wished to control in matters of religion, and, backed by the home government, renew a policy of intolerance in their own interests. Now, of course, this minority was composed of Protestants of the Established Church, instead of Puritans, as in the days of the Commonwealth."[750] The Episcopal minority triumphed with the establishment of the royal government in 1692, the Church of England was set up, and Catholics and dissenters were taxed for its support. A reactionary policy was begun with respect to the marriage celebration, and we have in this instance the only clear example of such retrogression that can be found in American history.[751] Only in Maryland was civil marriage entirely abrogated after it was once introduced.[752] The change did not take place all at once. A beginning was made by the law of 1692 which in part deprived members of the established church of the privilege of the civil celebration, but as yet did not interfere with the liberty of others. As under the preceding acts, either a minister or a magistrate may perform the ceremony; but now it is provided that he "shall joyn them in manner and forme as is sett down & expressed in the Liturgy of the Church of England wch being finished the Minister, Pastor, or Magistrate shall say I being hereunto by Law Authorized do pronounce you lawfull man and wife."[753] A more rigorous statute, affecting members of the establishment, appears in 1702. To "prevent all illegal and unlawful Marriages, not allowable by the Church of England," it is enacted that "no Minister, Priest or Magistrate shall presume to join together in Marriage, any persons whatsoever, contrary to the Table of Marriages, by this Act appointed to be set up in every Parish-Church within this Province," under penalty of five thousand pounds of tobacco for violation, and with a like punishment for each of the parties to such a marriage. To "prevent any Lay-Persons" from acting "where any Minister or Priest can be had, and to ascertain what shall be paid for Marriages," it is provided that "in every Parish where any Minister or Incumbent shall reside and have charge of souls therein, no Justice or Magistrate, being a Lay-Man, shall join any Persons in Marriage, under penalty of Five Thousand Pounds of Tobacco ... to our Sovereign Lord the King." The marriage fee is fixed at five shillings sterling, provided the persons to be married come to the parish church or chapel at time of divine service.[754] In 1717 was passed a more elaborate act, which remained in force throughout the colonial period, but which did not extend to "persons of different persuasions from the Church of England," who are still to enjoy their own "manner of proceedings" unaltered. "Persons who desire Marriage" are to "apply themselves to a Minister ... and shall cause due Publication to be made, according to the Rubrick of the Church of England, of their Intent to marry, at some Church or Chapel of Ease belonging to the Parish" wherein the woman resides. In "case there be no Minister, Curate or Reader in such Parish, an Advertisement or public Notification ... shall be set up at the Court-house Door of the County, where such Marriage shall be intended, there to remain for the Space of Three Weeks at the least." The clerk of the county court is required to make a certificate of publication, on presenting which any "qualified" minister is empowered to solemnize the marriage "according to the Liturgy of the Church of England." For proceeding without certificate of publication or the governor's license, the minister and each of the parties shall severally forfeit five thousand pounds of tobacco, as under the act of 1702; and for evasion of the law by getting married in any place outside the province, except where the woman is a resident, the man is to suffer the same penalty.[755] But it is important to note that neither the act of 1702 nor that of 1717 invalidates an irregular or clandestine marriage. Another statute of 1717 prescribes severe penalties for miscegenation. Any free negro or mulatto intermarrying with a white person shall become a slave for life, unless the free mulatto in question be "born of a white woman," when he is merely condemned to service for seven years. On the other hand, servitude for this same period is the punishment prescribed in case a white man or woman intermarry with a negro or mulatto.[756] Two years before a law provides that for joining any negro whatsoever or a mulatto slave to any white person the minister, pastor, or magistrate shall forfeit five thousand pounds of tobacco, one half to the use of free schools, and the other half to the informer.[757] It is significant that throughout the whole colonial period all persons in Maryland, except members of the establishment, should have had unrestricted liberty to contract civil marriage, only to have that liberty taken away after the Revolution began. By the reactionary law of 1777, "the rites of marriage between any white persons, subjects or inhabitants of this State, shall not be celebrated by any person within this State, unless by ministers of the Church of England, ministers dissenting from that Church, or Romish priests, appointed or ordained according to the rites ... of their respective churches, or in such manner as hath been heretofore used and practiced in this State by the society of people called Quakers."[758] This monument of religious conservatism has survived to our own time. No attempt is here made to describe wedding customs in the colonial era;[759] but the Archives of Maryland contain a unique document, entitled "Articles of Courtship," which may serve as companion-piece and counterpart to the "Marriage Agreement" with which the domestic economy of Virginia, half a century later, has already been illustrated. In this instance Robert Harwood essays by formal indenture to compound a lawsuit and at the same time reclaim the reluctant affections of Elizabeth Gary, despite the fact that ungallantly he had sought to requite her fickleness through "slanders and unhandsome attempts." From the "Articles of agreement ... made the 24th of September 1657 between Peter Sharpe of Putuxent County in the Province of Maryland Chirurgeon of the one pte, and Robert Harwood of the Same County planter of the other parte," it appears that "there hath been a Suit Commenced by the Said Peter Sharpe before the Governour and Councell ... a gainst the abovenamed Robert Harwood on the behalf of Elizabeth Gary Daughter of Iudith now the wife of the Said Peter Sharpe, for reparation for Slanders, and undhandsome attempts charged to be acted and reported by the Said Robert Harwood to the great Detriment of the Said Elizabeth, and of the Said Peter Sharpe his wife and family;" and, on the other side, that Robert, "for his own Vindication, doth much insist upon a former promise of Marriage Grounded upon a Mutuall declared affection" between him and Elizabeth, "obtained after a long familiaritie and Sollicitation;" with which engagement the said Peter and Judith his wife "are much dissatisfied," but which they are nevertheless willing to see followed by wedlock, if Elizabeth really have the proper "affection and resolution of marriage to and with the Said Robert." Therefore it is duly stipulated that the insistent suitor shall have a fair chance to ensnare the coy damsel on neutral ground. "Imprimis the said Peter Sharpe doth for himself and his heirs ... agree that the Said Elizabeth Gary shall within fifteen dayes ... be conveyed to the house of mr Thomas Davis at the Cliftes and there she is to remaine for the Space of six weekes," the said Robert "during all the Said Time" being given "full free and perfect Liberty (bringing one or more of the Neighbours with him) to have all freedom of discourse" with her, and "to use all faire and Lawfull Endeavours" to win her consent to marry him. That Robert's "nerve" and zeal were confidently relied upon is revealed by the proviso that "one or more of the Neighbours" are "alwayes to be present" with the lovers at the above specified courting, the "Said Robt Harwood paying for the Said Elizabeth Gary her Entertainment during her Stay at the Said Davis his house." Next it is covenanted by Peter, "if it should by Gods permission, So happen" that Elizabeth shall "within the Said prefixed time give her consent," that he will not directly or indirectly, "neither by himself nor by any other person or persons," try to hinder the marriage, which "shall be permitted to take effect without obstruction." On his part Robert doth agree that, if in the time set he fail to gain Elizabeth's consent to "intermarry with him," he "will from thence forth totally and absolutely discharge the Said Elizabeth" from all former promises; and will "never after by himself, or any other person or persons, either by words Letters or any other way directly or indirectly Endeavour to gain" her affections, "or to procure any familiaritie of discourse with her or willingly to Come into her Company." But if "Robert and Elizabeth shall entermarry," the docile bridegroom "shall first enter into Good Caution and Securitie not to upbraid or deride or any other way Exercise, or use any bitherness" toward the bride, "for or in relation to any former passages between them;" and in case of "breach of this his Engagement he shall from thenceforth be absolutely disabled and made uncapable of Entermedling with or disposing of any part of the Estate now belonging to the Said Elizabeth, or any part of the produce thereof." Finally it is stipulated that "in the Cause formerly depending and now to be withdrawen" Robert is to "beare his own Charge," as well as those "on the plaintiffes behalf," if the marriage take place, otherwise Peter is to pay his own costs. Thereupon the instrument is "signed, sealed and delivered in the presence of Thomas Turner Clerk," under date of September 26, 1657.[760] III. THE STRUGGLE FOR CIVIL MARRIAGE AND FREE RELIGIOUS CELEBRATION IN NORTH CAROLINA From the outset the colony of North Carolina had a population of diverse nationalities and various religious creeds. The "Fundamental Constitutions" of 1669, granted by the Earl of Clarendon and his colleagues, provided, hesitatingly, for the establishment of the English church;[761] but it was not until after the beginning of the eighteenth century that an attempt was made to enforce the Episcopal system by statute. In the meantime, the regular clergy were few, and dissenters came in large numbers; for lest "Jews, heathens, and other dissenters from the purity of the Christian religion may be scared and kept at a distance," the Constitutions had inconsistently guaranteed a qualified religious freedom.[762] Among the sects represented were Protestants from Germany, Huguenots from France, and Independents from New England. Later the Quakers and Presbyterians became relatively strong; and they stoutly resented the bigoted tyranny of the Episcopal minority, which was sustained by the government by whom the matrimonial legislation was shaped. The intolerance was the harder to bear because of the low character of the English clergy, some of whom in vice and dissipation being worthy rivals of the brawling and cock-fighting parsons of Maryland and Virginia. To this class belonged Rev. Daniel Brett, the first Episcopal clergyman who came to the colony; and Rev. John Boyd, notorious for open drunkenness.[763] During nearly half a century following the charter[764] there was in practice full toleration as to the form of the marriage celebration. The very first statute of the "Assembly of Albemarle," the first legislative body after the "Fundamental Constitutions" went into effect, provides in characteristic American style for the solemnization of marriage. "Forasmuch," runs this act, "as there may be divers people that are minded to be joyned together in the holy state of Wedlock and for that there is noe minister as yet in this County by whom the said Partyes may be joyned in Wedlock according to the rites and customs of our native Country the Kingdome of England;" therefore, that "none may be hindred from this soe necessary a worke for the preservation of Mankind and settlement of this County it is enacted And be it enacted by the Pallatine and Lords Proprietors of Carolina by and with the advice and consent of the Present Grand Assembly ... that any two persons to be joyned together in the holy state of matrimony takeing three or fower of their Neighbors along with them and repairing to the Governor or any one of the Councell before him declaring that they doe joyne together in the holy state of Wedlock And doe accept one the other for man and wife; and the said Governor or Councellor before whom such act is performed giveing certificate thereof and the said certificate being registered in the Secretary's Office or by the Register of the Precinct or in such other Office as shall hereafter for that use be provided. It shall be deemed a Lawfull Marriage and Partyes violating this Marriage shall be punishable as if they had binn marryed by a minister according to the rites and customs of England."[765] This timely act was ratified by the Proprietors, January 20, 1669/70; and there can be no doubt of its validity. It is a straightforward and sensible measure, such as the pioneer, forced to resort to self-help, has so often shown himself capable of throughout the history of the Anglo-Saxon race. Its clear expression, good English, and respectable spelling speak well for the training and intelligence of the first settlers of Carolina; although the act has been sneered at and ridiculed by some people who ought to know better.[766] From the beginning the Quakers seem to have been allowed to solemnize marriage in their own way; and this they contrived to do even after the English forms were prescribed by statute. According to Hawks, the "Friends were entitled, by express grant from the proprietors, thus to adhere to their peculiar usage; for they had declared to them as an inducement to emigrate, 'there is full and free liberty of conscience granted to all, so that no man is to be molested or called in question for matters of religious concern; but every one to be obedient to the civil government, worshipping God after his own way.'"[767] The records of the monthly meeting in North Carolina reveal the Friends using the same simple rites as elsewhere in the colonies. The betrothed man and woman proclaimed their own banns, "passing the meeting" twice as in Pennsylvania. Thus at a monthly meeting of Friends "in Pasquotank ye 11th of ye first month 1707/8," held "as their manner is, to Inspect into ye affairs of ye Church," Zachariah Nixon and Elizabeth Symons appear the "second time & declare their Intentions of taking Each Other in Marriage and being approved by the said meeting are left to their liberty to take each other."[768] It appears, then, that civil marriage, side by side with religious marriage according to the rites of each denomination, was lawful until 1715. By the so-called "Vestries Act" of that year, for the establishment of the Church of England in the province, magistrates are authorized to join people in wedlock only in "such parishes where no minister shall be resident." If any layman, except in such parishes, presume to act, he shall be fined five pounds, one-half to the parish for the use of the poor, and one-half to the resident minister or incumbent. After license or banns no marriage may be lawfully celebrated by minister, priest, or magistrate contrary to the table of marriages, which the church wardens and vestry are to have set up in every church or chapel.[769] But there is no invalidating clause for neglect. Already in 1704 some provision had been made by statute for registration.[770] Now it is enacted that the "inhabitants and freemen of each precinct" by majority vote are to elect three freeholders, from whom the governor or commander in chief is to choose one as register of deeds; and until there be a clerk of the parish church, such register is to record betrothals and marriages. Every "master or mistress of a family who shall neglect to register the birth or death of any person born or dying within his or her house or plantation; and every married man who shall neglect to remit to the said register a certificate of his marriage and cause the same to be registered, for longer than one month," must pay a fine of one shilling a month for the period of delay, provided the whole penalty do not exceed twenty shillings.[771] The act of 1715 fixes the minister's marriage fee at five shillings; and to retain a monopoly of this perquisite at all hazards was the unswerving purpose of the Episcopal clergy throughout the colonial period. The governors, too, found the stipend for issuing marriage licenses a lucrative source of revenue. In 1730 the royal instructions to Governor Burrington declare, "to the end Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of the Bishop of London may take place in that our Province so far as may be We do think fit that you give all countenance & encouragement to the exercise of the same excepting only the collating the Benefices Granting licenses for Marriages and probate of Wills which we have reserved to you our Governor and to the Commander in chief of our said Province for the time being as far as by law we may."[772] The license fee was fixed at ten shillings.[773] A new law was passed in 1741, which, though it does not expressly forbid dissenting ministers from performing the marriage ceremony, at any rate, as Weeks insists, makes "dissent burdensome and humiliating," puts a "premium on conformity," and constitutes "religious persecution."[774] "To prevent clandestine marriages" it is enacted "that every Clergyman of the Church of England, or for want of such, any lawful magistrate, within this Government" may join persons in the "holy state of matrimony." By implication this provision widens the area within which a magistrate is empowered to act, for by the law of 1715 a layman may not perform the ceremony in any parish where a "minister or priest" resides, thus probably including dissenters, who in the present case do not count. The next clause gives still further chances for lay celebration; for, while a justice of the peace may not join in marriage "any persons whatsoever in any parish where a minister shall reside and have a cure," still by implication he may do so in any parish in the colony by obtaining permission from the minister, and, of course, in all cases turning over to said minister the legally prescribed fee.[775] Another provision of this statute may perhaps justify the inference that dissenting ministers are not absolutely excluded. To prevent "that abominable mixture and spurious issue" which would follow, it is enacted, "That if any white man or woman, being free, shall intermarry with an indian, negro, mustee, or mulatto man or woman, or any person of mixt blood, to the third generation, bond or free, he shall, by judgment of the county court, forfeit and pay the sum of fifty pounds, proclamation money, to the use of the parish;" and any persons, including dissenting ministers, are forbidden to solemnize such marriages, under the same penalty.[776] The marriage of servants indented or by custom is also dealt with. It is provided "That if any minister or reader shall willingly publish, or cause or suffer to be published, the banns of matrimony between any servants, or between a free person and a servant; or if any minister or justice of the peace shall willingly celebrate the rites of matrimony between any such, without a certificate from the master or mistress of such servant, that it is done by their consent; he shall forfeit and pay five pounds, proclamation money, to the use of the master or owner." Every servant so married without consent shall serve the master or mistress "one whole year, after the time of service by indenture or custom is expired."[777] Regarding the scope and intent of the law of 1741, Weeks remarks that "in this, as in the former cases, the Assembly did not undertake to give" the right of celebrating marriages to the established clergy, "but simply recognized it as resting on prescription. But they might have granted this right to Dissenters as they proposed doing in the act of 1770. The Quakers seem to have been allowed to marry after their own fashion from the first," and why not grant the same privilege "to Presbyterians and Baptists"? Instead of taking such a just and tolerant course, "their preachers were debarred from performing the ceremony even among their own flocks. They were thus put to grave inconvenience, and the law of 1766 recites that the Presbyterians refused to consider themselves as bound by its provisions." Surely there was good reason to take this position, considering the previous law and custom of the colony. The Episcopalian government party seems to have been conscious of this fact, as appears from the discussion of the clergy bill of 1762. "The governor and council," continues Weeks, "tried to force on the lower house a clause by which it was enacted that 'no Dissenting minister of any denomination whatever shall presume on any pretence to Marry any person, under the penalty of forfeiting £50.' The law does not seem to have been successful, but it is a clear statement of the tendency of the act of 1741, and shows the position of a certain element in the province."[778] The assembly rested from further matrimonial legislation until the passage of the act of 1766, already mentioned, which gave some relief to the Presbyterians, but not to any other dissenting body. Aside from the greed for the marriage fees, the principal motive leading to its passage was not justice, as will presently appear, but a desire to reward and strengthen the sympathy of the Presbyterians for the government in its struggle with the Regulators. The preamble of the act recites that because "the presbyterian, or dissenting clergy, conceiving themselves not included in the restrictions mentioned" in the act of 1741, have "joined many persons together in holy matrimony, without either licence or publication; whereby the payment of the just and legal fees to the governor on such occasions, has been eluded, and the validity of marriages may be endangered:" therefore all such marriages now celebrated or to be celebrated before the first day of January next are declared valid. Henceforth no minister of the Church of England or justice of the peace may celebrate marriage without a certificate of three times publication of banns, or a license from the governor or the commander in chief, "who is authorized hereby to grant the same, on certificate of the county court" of the person's "having taken and filed ... the usual bond," under the "penalty of fifty pounds, proclamation money; with condition that there is no lawful cause to obstruct the marriage for which such license is given." Presbyterian missionaries or itinerants in the western parishes, as well as all other dissenters in the province, are in effect excluded by the provision that after January 1 any Presbyterian minister regularly called to any congregation in this province may celebrate matrimony "in their usual and accustomed manner." But in all cases a license from the governor is requisite; and the marriage fee, it is carefully added, is always reserved to the clergyman of the Church of England having cure of any parish, no matter whether a dissenting minister or a justice performs the ceremony. Furthermore, a marriage celebrated without a license is declared "illegal and void."[779] Governor Tryon, who approved the act of 1766, was not overfond of the Presbyterians as such, and all other "sectaries" he looked upon "as enemies to society and a scandal to common sense."[780] The next year, writing to the Earl of Shelburne, he says the law of 1766 "has more objects in view than appears on the sight of it." The Marriage Act of "1741 to which it has relation entitles every Justice of the Peace to marry by licence. In abuse of this privilege many Justices performed the marriage ceremony without licence ... and took the fee allowed to the Governor, most generally dividing the spoil between the Justice and the Clerk of the county who gave the bond and certificate. Another tendency of this Act was to prevent the frequent abuses of rascally fellows who travelled thro' the province under the title of ministers of the Presbyterian and other sectaries and who being beggars in conscience as well as in circumstances sought all opportunities to perform that sacred office to the great prejudice of the country. It is also to be observed most of the justices in the back or western settlements are Presbyterians, who by the Act of 1741 had the power to marry by licence: Therefore upon the whole I do not conceive the allowing the Presbyterian ministers the privilege to marry in their usual and accustomed manner can be of any real prejudice to the established Church especially as the marriage fee is reserved to the ministers of the parish; and the licence to be granted under the hand and seal of the Governor, this last provision prevents the former abuses in the application of the fee collected. The Act also provides a summary and effectual method for the Governor to oblige the county court clerks to account for the fees due to him: a recovery tho' an equitable one, was never yet secured but in temporary laws."[781] The Presbyterians were by no means satisfied with the reward their loyalty had received. Especially did the "rascally" missionaries of the western frontiers feel themselves abused. Petitions protesting in strong terms against the act were presented by the clergy. Those of Mecklenburg, for instance, regard themselves as "highly injured and aggrieved" by the statute, "the preamble whereof scandalizes the Presbyterian clergy."[782] The petitioners of Tryon county say they are "much aggrieved," the law depriving them of a privilege "which a million of our fellow-professors in America now enjoy ... neither was it ever taken from Dissenters in America until it was taken from us by this act."[783] The "manly protest from the inhabitants of Orange and Rowan claims that the right of 'dissenting ministers' to perform the marriage ceremony after their own fashion was a 'priviledge they were debarred of in no other part of his majesty's Dominions; and as we humbly conceive, a priviledge they stand entitled to, by the Act of Toleration, and in fine, a priviledge granted even to the very Catholics in Ireland and the Protestants in France.'"[784] The vigorous resistance aroused by the unjust law of 1766, and the continued services rendered by the Presbyterian pastors to the governor in his struggle with the Regulators had the desired result. In December, 1770, a legislative committee brought in a report recommending a new law. "Upon perusing the several Acts of Assembly concerning the solemnization of the rites[785] of matrimony and considering the great number of Presbyterian Inhabitants settled in the western Frontier Counties in this Province and the difficulties and expenses they must necessarily be under," the committee "Can't but think that the restraints and penalties in the Said Acts are in some measure hard and oppressive and that they have a just and reasonable claim to the attention of the Legislative body for granting to them a religious toleration in that particular, and that it is well becoming the Catholic and liberal principles of the Members of the House Representatives of this Colony, to appoint a Committee to prepare and bring in a Bill for impowering all regular Presbyterian Ministers in this Province to Solemnize the rites of Marriage, according to the Westminster confession of Faith, by publication in their religious Assemblies, where the parties are best known, and by License, without any Tax or Fees to the Clergy of the Establishment."[786] Such a bill was accordingly brought in and passed with the governor's approval, "but with a clause suspending its operation until the pleasure of the King should be known."[787] No relief was offered by this act to the other dissenters; and the report of Governor Tryon shows that he felt himself under special obligations to the Presbyterians. According to Saunders, he said that the act was an "indulgence" to which they were well "entitled because of the attachment they had shown to the Government;" and it appears, aside from the "merits of the case," that something was due from Tryon to the Presbyterians "for the support their pastors gave him in 1768." Certainly "the letters in which all the Presbyterian pastors in the Province united to praise Tryon and denounce the Regulators were as strong in language as they were opportune in point of time. Indeed, old Parson Micklejohn of the Established Church was not more pronounced in enforcing the duty of obedience to 'the powers that be' as being of divine origin than the Presbytarian pastors were. The Governor in his report put him" and these ministers "on the same footing in this regard."[788] The act had passed the house and received the governor's signature; but the battle was not yet won. It is perhaps not surprising that the ear of George III., in the days immediately following the Stamp Act, should have inclined more to the desires[789] of the loyalist clergy of the English church than to the complaints of "sectaries" in a rebellious province. Accordingly, the marriage act was disallowed by his Majesty; and the law of 1766 remained in force until 1778, two years after the constitution of 1776 had brought the establishment to an end.[790] IV. EPISCOPAL RITES BY LAW AND FREE CIVIL OR RELIGIOUS CELEBRATION BY CUSTOM IN SOUTH CAROLINA AND GEORGIA The history of marriage in South Carolina runs much the same course as in the northern province; except that we hear of no struggle by the privileged establishment to enforce the statutes eventually enacted in its behalf. For a time, under the same charters, the two colonies were ruled in the same way by the proprietors; and in South Carolina for over three decades there was apparently full toleration with respect to matrimonial rites. That such was the case near the close of the seventeenth century may be inferred from the registration act of 1696. It is required that "every man which hereafter shall be married according to the rubrick of the Church of England, or by any other contract or ceremony," shall record his marriage in the register's office within thirty days after celebration, or else forfeit "one royall" for neglect. But at the time of registration he must produce "a certificate from under the hand of the parson, minister, magistrate, or otherwise," attested by "six persons at least met and congregated at such religious meateing" where the ceremony took place. For neglecting to file the certificate the register forfeits his office.[791] The Church of England was established by law in 1704. In the act for that purpose it is declared that "no justice or magistrate, being a layman, shall presume to join any persons in marriage, under penalty of one hundred pounds currant money of this province." Vestries are to provide a fit person as register of births, christenings, marriages, and burials, except those of "negroes, Mullatoes, and Indian slaves;" and a fine is prescribed for wedding contrary to the table of forbidden degrees.[792] All these provisions are repeated in the new act of 1706 for the "establishment of religious worship" in the province.[793] Six years thereafter the full text of the law of Henry VIII., "for marriages to stand notwithstanding Pre-Contracts" is adopted; and it appears again and again in the statute book until recent days.[794] No further important change was made in the law before the Revolution. The act of 1706, giving a monopoly of the business of solemnizing matrimony to the established clergy, remained nominally in force. A fine could be levied for neglect of its provisions. But in the "Up" or "Back" country it was quietly disregarded; and, apparently without a contest, custom sanctioned the optional civil ceremony or optional ecclesiastical rites according to the usage of each denomination. "In the early stages of our juridical and civil history," says Brevard, "the laws of the province on this subject were in conformity to the English; but as the population ... encreased by emigrants from all countries, and of different religious denominations, this adherence to Episcopal regulations and forms was gradually relaxed, and at length generally disregarded." The church act of 1706, he adds, must have gone into "effectual and general operation." But, except partially, "it seems never to have extended farther than about sixty miles from Charleston."[795] What has just been said regarding South Carolina applies equally to Georgia, whose territory had belonged to South Carolina since the original grant of 1663. But the charter issued to James Oglethorpe and his associates in 1732 expressly abrogates the laws of the parent colony,[796] and gives the power to enact new laws to the corporation of associates as trustees for the colony. The Episcopal system was introduced, but it was not rigidly enforced. The charter to Oglethorpe "guaranteed liberty of conscience to all except papists,[797] and the spirit exhibited in ecclesiastical legislation was one of toleration. Hence a considerable Puritan element was drawn to the Colony."[798] The preamble of the act of 1785 shows that it had been the custom for justices, ministers, and "preachers of the gospel" to solemnize marriage. Such marriages are made valid and the practice legalized for the future.[799] It appears, then, that throughout the southern colonies matrimonial legislation was tending in the same direction. Everywhere, except in Maryland, the optional civil ceremony was legally or practically recognized, though under various restrictions. Marriage was already a civil contract of mutual partnership; and, notwithstanding an occasional invalidating clause for neglect of the prescribed forms, the common-law marriage by mutual consent was probably valid, though, so far as it appears, the records of the provincial courts are almost entirely silent on that question.[800] In short, in its principal elements, throughout the South matrimonial law had reached or was strongly tending toward the existing American type.
CHAPTER XIV OPTIONAL CIVIL OR ECCLESIASTICAL MARRIAGE IN THE MIDDLE COLONIES [Bibliographical Note XIV.—The New York Colonial MSS., of more service for the history of divorce, afford several important documents available for the present chapter. The use of these papers is facilitated by O'Callaghan's Calendar of Historical Manuscripts (Albany, 1866). Among the treasures also preserved in the State Library at Albany may be found the MS. copy of the Dongan Laws, including the marriage act of 1684 concerning which there has been much discussion; and some forty volumes of MSS. Marriage License Bonds, of interest to the genealogist and historian. The use of these is made easier by the published Names of Persons for Whom Marriage Licenses Were Issued by the Secretary of the Province of New York, Previous to 1784 (Albany, 1860), to which O'Callaghan has given an Introduction. The most important source for the province is the Documents Relating to the Colonial History of New York (Albany, 1856-83), edited by O'Callaghan and Fernow. Original material may also be found in the Records of New Amsterdam (New York, 1897); Munsell's Annals of Albany (Albany, 1850-59); the same compiler's Collections on the History of Albany (Albany, 1865-71); and Valentine's Manual of the Corporation of the City of New York (New York, 1843 ff.). For the Dutch period we have O'Callaghan's Laws and Ordinances (Albany, 1868); for the proprietary government, "The Duke of Yorke's Book of Laws," in Linn's Charter and Laws (Harrisburg, 1879); earlier in Vol. I of the Collections of the New York Historical Society for the Year 1809 (New York, 1811); and recently in Vol. I of the Colonial Laws of New York (Albany, 1894), while the last-named collection covers the period of the royal province, and is enriched by Cumming's Historical Note and his comments on the various statutes and papers. The celebrated "Lauderdale Peerage Case," so important for understanding the marriage law of New York for the period between 1691 and 1772, may be found in the English Law Reports, X (London, 1885); and also abridged in Cook, Reports of Cases Decided by the English Courts, XXXVII (Albany, 1887). In connection with this case several members of the American bar submitted written opinions, and three of those published are in the New York State Library: see Fowler, Letter and Opinion (New York, May 11, 1885); Seward, Answers to the Interrogations of Brodie and Sons (New York, June, 1885); and Webster, Opinion on the Law of Marriage in the Colony of New York (New York, May 26, 1885). But far more conclusive than the views of the witnesses and expert advisers called at the trial is the remarkable paper of Rev. John Rodgers, found in the cabinet of President Stiles by the historian Holmes, entitled "A brief view of the state of religious liberty in New York 1773," in 2 Mass. Hist. Coll., I (Boston, 1838). For the history of bundling, besides the mention in Valentine's Manual, should be consulted the case of Seger v. Slingerland in Caine's Reports, II (New York and Albany, 1860), where the custom was judicially considered; also Lamb, History of the City of New York (New York and Chicago, 1877); and especially Stiles, Bundling (Albany, 1871). Stiles, History of the City of Brooklyn (Brooklyn, 1867-70), gives an account of the restrictions put on the remarriage of widows in the old Dutch wills; and there are some notices of marriage law and customs in Grant, Memoirs of an American Lady (New York, 1809); Weise, History of the City of Albany (Albany, 1884); Watson, Annals and Occurrences of New York City and State (Philadelphia, 1846); Vanderbilt, Social History of Flatbush (New York, 1882; new ed., 1899); Ostrander, History of the City of Brooklyn and King's County (Brooklyn, 1894); Gerard, The Old Stadt Huys of New Amsterdam (New York, 1875); Hazard, Annals of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, 1850); and especially Earle's Colonial Days in Old New York (New York, 1896). In 1786 a brief account of wedding customs in New York state was given by Hannah Thompson, "Letters," in Pa. Mag. of Hist. and Biog., XIV (Philadelphia, 1890); and in 1748 the governor's lucrative monopoly of marriage-license fees is described by the Swedish botanist Kalm, Travels in North America (Warrington, 1770): see Hart, Source-Book of American History (New York, 1899), extract 50. Cook, "The Marriage Celebration in the Colonies," Atlantic, LXI (Boston, 1888), discusses the subject for the middle provinces; and for the historical background Brodhead, History of the State of New York (New York, 1853-71); O'Callaghan, History of New Netherland (2d ed., New York, 1855); Friedberg, Eheschliessung (Leipzig, 1865); and his Geschichte der Civilehe (Hamburg, 1877), have been of most service. For New Jersey, Leaming and Spicer, Grants, Concessions, and Original Constitutions (2d ed., Philadelphia, 1881), is of first-rate importance. This collection is supplemented by the documents in New Jersey Archives (Newark, 1880-86); and Smith, History of the Colony of Nova-Caesaria or New Jersey (Burlington, 1765; reprint, 1877); while the law of 1719 may be found in Acts of the General Assembly (Woodbridge, 1752); or in Allinson, Acts of the General Assembly, 1702-1776 (Burlington, 1776). The early legislation of Pennsylvania is contained in Linn's convenient Charter to William Penn, and Laws of the Province of Pa., 1682-1700 (Harrisburg, 1879), which is supplemented by Nead's valuable Historical Notes. Some illustrations of judicial and administrative proceedings have been gleaned from the Colonial Records of Pa. (Harrisburg, 1838-53); and the marriage laws enacted from 1700 onward are cited in Carey and Bioren, Laws (Philadelphia, 1803); the Laws of the Commonwealth of Pa., 1700-1810 (Philadelphia, 1810); and Pepper and Lewis, Digest (Philadelphia, 1896). For the doctrines of the Friends one must go to the founder. William Penn's Select Works (1 vol. fol., London, 1771; 5 vols., 8vo, London, 1782) are a mine Of information on every phase of Quaker teaching; and the same is true of William Sewel's History of the Rise, Increase, and Progress of the Christian People called Quakers (original Dutch ed., Amsterdam, 1717; first English ed., London, 1722), a work whose scrupulous accuracy has never been impeached. On the other hand, for the false charges brought against the Friends by their orthodox antagonists one should read Thomas Underhill, Hell broke loose: or an History of the Quakers Both Old and New (London, 1660), who has raked together scandals of every description; Nathaniel Smith, The Quaker's Spiritual Court (London, 1668); and Gerard Croese, Historia quakeriana (Amsterdam, 1695; English ed., London, 1696), the book whose errors called forth Sewel's History. More recently Quaker rites and wedding customs have been described by Watson, Annals of Philadelphia (last ed., Philadelphia, 1881); Hallowell, Quaker Invasion of Mass. (Boston, 1883); Applegarth, "Quakers in Pennsylvania," J. H. U. S., X (Baltimore, 1892); and in a lively sketch, drawn mainly from records of the Monthly Meeting, by Earle, "Among Friends," in New England Magazine, XIX (Boston, 1898). There is a typical Quaker marriage certificate of 1692 in Vol. XIII of the Pa. Mag. of Hist, and Biog. (Philadelphia, 1889). A brief summary of the matrimonial laws of the colony may be found in Gordon, History of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, 1829).] I. NEW YORK The history of matrimonial institutions in the middle colonies is on the whole less attractive than in New England. At any rate, it is less interesting in the sense of being less eventful. The original materials from which to construct it are less abundant. There is nothing equal to the Diary of the inimitable Sewall from which it may be filled out and embellished. It is not quickened by the struggle to maintain or to introduce diverse forms of celebration resting upon opposing theories as to the nature of the nuptial contract. There is little answering to the Puritan thoroughness in regulating the conduct of domestic life, even among the Quakers. Hence the legislative and judicial records are relatively meager. In New York, notably, between 1684 and the Revolution the law-book is a complete blank. On the other hand, in Pennsylvania, after the establishment of the proprietary government, the predominance of Quaker sentiment enables the original usages and the early statutes regarding wedlock to run their even course for generations without essential change. Still the study of marriage in the middle section of the English colonies is not devoid of social interest. There, on account of mixed population and diverse religious sects, toleration in the main prevailed. The quaint records of the Dutch and the homely ceremonial of the Friends may even prove entertaining, while in this field, as in every other, the thought and experience of New York and Pennsylvania have done much to form and fix the types of law and administration now prevailing in the United States. a) Law and custom in New Netherland.—Long before the first plantations were established on the Hudson, as already seen, optional civil marriage had been sanctioned in several of the Dutch states, and as early as 1656 it was extended to the United Netherlands. In Holland independents of both old and New England found encouragement and also a model in the effort to realize similar ideas born of their common Protestantism. It is therefore strange at first glance that a thorough-going civil-marriage law should not have been introduced in New Netherland from the beginning. The laws of the mother-country, even after 1656, varied considerably in details among the different provinces. In their content they generally rested on the basis of the later Roman statutes.[801] From the desire to check the evils of clandestine contracts, in many instances rigorous measures had been adopted. Usually parental consent, often publication of banns, was made essential to a valid marriage.[802] The laws of Guelderland were especially severe;[803] and these according to Fernow, "naturally prevailed" in New Netherland; for a "majority of the early settlers" came from that province. "In Guelderland," he declares, "a marriage was void, if the express consent of the father, or if dead of the mother had not been obtained for the marriage of a son. With regard to daughters the law was still more rigorous; even a marriage, entered into by a girl with parental consent, did not emancipate her from parental authority, if she was still under age at her husband's death: she had to place herself again under the guardianship of her father or mother. Neither were parents obliged to give before a Court of Justice any reasons in case they refused consent. This law had its foundation in the Codex Justinianus."[804] In all respects except the celebration optional civil or ecclesiastical marriage was sanctioned in New Netherland. It is doubtless safe to assume that during the early years of the Dutch colony banns and parental consent, probably according to the law of Guelderland, were required; but legally, so far as the evidence at hand shows, the covenant had to be solemnized by a minister with religious rites. The first legislation by the local authorities appears to have been enacted only ten years before the first establishment of English rule. The occasion was the violation of the "custom of our Fatherland" in the publication of banns by the magistrates of Gravesend, as appears from the following letter addressed to them by Peter Stuyvesant:[805] "Worthy and dear friends. "I received in due time your letter of the 13th inst. sent to me by the Fiscal, which has been communicated to the High Council. We have been very much astonished that you arrogate to yourself the publication of marriage-proclamations within your village without our or the Council's knowledge, in cases where both parties live beyond the jurisdiction of your village. As to the allegation made by you, that the person is a freeman of your village, he is the same in the City of Amsterdam and here in this City and for this reason must the marriage-proclamation be reported and published here as well as there according to the customs of our Fatherland. We do not deny, that matrimony is ruled by divine and by human laws, but they who enter upon this state must do it according to these divine and human laws, with the consent or knowledge of their parents, tutors or guardians and then notify thereof the Commissary, appointed by higher authority, at the place where they reside or where they have previously been living during the last year. Your final request, that we should send you a copy of the order and power of attorney, which his [evidently Johannis van Beeck's] father has given us concerning this son, is not complied with, as we do not think ourselves bound to do it, considering yours being a subordinate jurisdiction and subject to us; besides the father would be displeased and it would be unreasonable in us, to communicate to others, what an honest and prominent man has written to us in a detailed letter. "Thus much in answer to your open letter. This further serves as cover of the enclosed order and resolution made by us and the Council, which you must promptly obey, not because we wish to prevent the marriage, but that according to divine and human laws and ordinances they may be put in practice, proclaimed and affixed, at the proper place and without infraction of anybody's rights. "Relying thereupon we commend you with cordial greetings to God's protection and remain Your well-affected friend and Governor P. Stuyvesant." The ordinance mentioned in the letter bears date of January 19, 1654/5, and runs as follows: Since the magistrates at Gravesend "have presumed and undertaken publickly to post notices of marriage" of persons "domiciled in and about this city of New Amsterdam," far beyond their proper district; therefore the "Director General and Council order and notify the aforesaid Magistrates of Gravesend and all others within this Province, to annul such posting of intentions of Marriage, and on sight hereof to withdraw the same, and in all cases to proceed with and confirm no such Marriage, either privately or publickly, before and until such persons, according to Netherland style, have entered and received their bans and proclamations of marriage where they are dwelling and have resided the last years."[806] This important measure was supplemented by another four years later. The preamble recites that it had become common for betrothed persons to put off marrying for a long time after the proclamation of their banns, "which is directly in contravention of, and contrary to the excellent order and customs of our Fatherland." Therefore it is ordered that thenceforward all persons must be married within one month after publication, unless they can give a good excuse.[807] Light is thrown on the real motive for the adoption of this act by its provision that no man and woman are henceforth to live together until lawfully married. It seems to have been the custom, in too many instances, for betrothed couples whose banns had been asked the first time to begin living together as if already man and wife. They looked upon themselves as at least half married; and we are thus confronted by a state of affairs strikingly similar to that which we have found existing in New England in consequence of the laws governing pre-contract. Doubtless couples through indifference, the refusal to fulfil the contract on the part of an unscrupulous lover, or for other reasons, were now and then led to protract the irregular marital relation beyond the completion of the term prescribed for the publication of banns. Moreover, as in New England, the custom of queesting or bundling imported from the old home may have proved a snare for the unwary feet of the young men and maidens of New Netherland. Indeed, the practice of bundling has been assigned by New York writers as the proximate cause of the singular provision referred to. "It was one of the ordinances of the time," says Valentine, "that upon an agreement of marriage, the bans should be published from the pulpit three times, before the marriage could be solemnized. Impatient of the delay, however, the youthful couple were often inclined to be satisfied with their moral obligations towards each other, and to waive the immediate fulfillment of the legal ceremony; in the meantime ... the indulgence of cohabitation, then called 'bundling,' was practiced. It was for a long time winked at by the community, but its violence against the tenets of propriety was obvious, and at the time [1656] before spoken of, in which the city authorities resolved to set themselves to the reformation of abuses, this custom came under their prohibatory decrees." There were "those who still maintained its advantageous results, even though the contract of marriage were subsequently violated. The latter instances, it was contended, were comparatively few, and were set off by the increase of population which came" through this means. Yet the reformers "triumphed, and in 1658 it was ordered, that henceforth the mere publication of bans should not justify cohabitation."[808] The custom of bundling was, however, too tenacious to be stopped by a decree of the legislator. For more than a century in New York it continued to flourish, and sometimes to bear evil fruit, as is clearly revealed in the case of Seger v. Slingerland, which was decided in 1804.[809] Another action shows that forty years later the practice existed in the neighboring state of Pennsylvania. In this instance the plaintiff admits that "the custom in courtship which he has denominated bundling" prevails "very generally" in the part of the country where the interested persons reside; and in this suit, as in the New York case, the defendant won on appeal because of the connivance of the parents in the misconduct of their daughter.[810] According to the old Dutch law, enforced in New Netherland, all persons desiring to form a valid union were required to appear before the minister or the court, as they saw fit, in the place where they had "their fixed domicil for the last year and day, and to apply there, for three Sundays or market days, when publication of the banns was to be made in the church or the court-house, or other place where the court of justice was held; and every one who had any impediment to propose, was obliged to state the same in the mean time, on pain of being otherwise deprived of that right."[811] The following document of 1655, contained in Fernow's collection relating to the plantations on the Delaware when under the Dutch jurisdiction, may serve to illustrate the prescribed formality in applying for publication of banns: "Appears Toms Broen, as father and guardian of his daughter, Jannetje Tomas and consents to the marriage between her and Willem Mauritz here present and requests that their legal bans might be published; the names being, of the bridegroom Willem Mauritz, bachelor, from Walle Schier, about 33 years old, of the bride Jannetje Tomas, spinster, born in New-Netherland, about 16 years old. Witness Stuyte Andries."[812] From the same collection, two years later, we learn that "Laurens Pieters bachelor from Lier and Catlyne Jans of Gottenburch in Sweden were confirmed in marriage after proclamation of banns on the previous Sundays."[813] The civil courts in New Netherland possessed full jurisdiction in all suits or matrimonial causes, including cases of separation and divorce.[814] For an understanding of the relation of the lower and higher courts, the procedure in such cases, and the details of the law, the often-mentioned case of Johannis van Beeck and Maria Verleth is instructive. The facts in this case appear to have been the proximate cause of the ordinance of 1654/5 and the letter of Stuyvesant already submitted. It is all the more interesting because it involves the double question of irregular banns and unlawful celebration, as shown by the final decree. On January 26, 1654, takes place the first step in the proceedings. Cornelis van Tienhoven, the schout, lodges formal complaint before the burgomasters and schepens of New Amsterdam against the court of Gravesend for illegally "granting and confirming the Banns of Matrimony betwixt Johan van Beeck and Maria Verleth, who both have their domicil in and about this city of New Amsterdam;" suggesting that such conduct tends to the infringement of the good policy of the fatherland, as also the privileges and jurisdiction of the city, and to prepare a way for sons and daughters to go secretly and get married. In reply, says the record, the "Burgomasters, and Schepens ... do hereby refer the foregoing complaint and proposition made by Cornelis van Tienhoven, in quality as Schout, to their High Mightinesses the Director-General and Councillors of New Fetherland."[815] But this did not end the matter.[816] On February 10, pending the decision of the higher court, van Beeck petitioned the burgomasters and schepens "that his bans with Maria Varleth may be entered and be properly proclaimed here" in New Amsterdam. Whereupon the court "engage to do same because it is usual and custom of Fathld to have publcts where domicil is and married where he pleases."[817] After a little delay, the court keeps its promise. On February 19 the burgomasters and schepens solemnly examined the petition, noting (1) who instituted marriage and the apostles' teaching; (2) the proper ages and the attained ages of both parties; (3) consent of parents on the girl's side; (4) distance between this and fatherland; (5) that "matters by long delay might come to be disclosed ... which would bring disgrace on both families;" therefore that "proper ecclesiastical proclamations ... ought to be made at the earliest opportunity and followed afterwards by their marriage."[818] This resolution seems a trifle indiscreet, in view of the fact that the original case had been referred to their High Mightinesses. It is therefore not strange that a communication signed by Stuyvesant himself should express surprise that van Beeck should have affixed by a poster "that his marriage, contracted not only without his father's knowledge, but contrary to his express prohibition to marry abroad has been declared lawful and proper by Resolution of the Burgomasters and Schepens ... ; of which Resolution the Director General and Council are ignorant;" at the same time requesting an "authentic copy" of the resolution, with "written reasons" for failing to submit the same for approbation of the higher court.[819] This was on March 2, 1654. Apparently, after republication of the banns, van Beeck had had the marriage ceremony performed outside of the Dutch jurisdiction, probably because of the doubtful legality of the course taken by the officials of New Amsterdam. The records are silent as to the further proceedings in the case, except as they may be inferred from the following decree of the higher court, rendered not earlier, apparently, than 1656, which leaves us in doubt as to how the original complaint against the magistrates of Gravesend was disposed of: "Whereas, the Director-General and Council of New Netherland have heard the charge of the Fiscal against Johannis van Beecq, a free merchant and inhabitant of this City of New Amsterdam, defendant, who has been duly summoned by the Court Messenger Elslandt in the name of the Fiscal on three Court days and who has had himself married by an unauthorized countryman, named Goodman Crab, living at Greenwich, against the laudable laws and customs of the United Netherlands and, as the Fiscal further states and proves in his charge, contrary to the advice and command of his lawful guardian,[820] the Honble Director-General, also without previously publishing the bans and who has so far failed to make his appearance, of Netherland and without previous publication of the bans, is hereby declared ... unlawful and the said Jan van Beecq and Maria Verleth are commanded to live separate under penalty of being punished according to law for living in concubinage."[821] "And whereas the Fiscal demands by his motion, exhibited on the 1st of September, 1654, that the said van Beecq be condemned in contumacy, "Therefore, after proper invocation of the Lord, the Director-General and Council of New Netherland, in the name and behalf of their Noble High: Might: the Lords-States-General of the United Netherlands and of the Noble Lords-Directors of the Privileged West India Company administering justice at the requisition of the Fiscal, declare, that the Fiscal's charges are true and founded in law and therefore the marriage of Johannis van Beecq and Maria Verleth, solemnized at Greenwich and confirmed by an unauthorized person contrary to the laudable laws and customs From the evidence already presented it is perhaps not rash to infer that marriage by mere private consent, in words of the present tense, was not valid in New Netherland. Publication of banns and celebration before an authorized person were essential. The principle, therefore, of the English common-law marriage did not obtain. It had been superseded by statute. These records afford other evidence to sustain this conclusion. Thus in February, 1662, William Beeckman, of "Fort Altena on the South-River," writes to Stuyvesant and the council, complaining that one Laers, a Finnish priest, who was granted a divorce from his wife two months before, has "married himself again last Sunday"—an act "which in my opinion (under currection) he has no right to do. I expect your Honors' orders, how to conduct myself in regard to it."[822] As a result the marriage was declared to be "null, void, illegal;" seemingly on the ground that self-marriage was not tolerated by the usages of the Reformed church. Clearly in the opinion of the court the performance of the ceremony by a person legally competent was necessary to a valid contract. It is possible, however, that the decree was unjust because of unfair representation of the facts by Beeckman, who is accused of being a tyrant. In a letter to Stuyvesant, remonstrating against his treatment, Laers says: "I cannot discover anything illegal in it [his conduct]. I acted just in the same manner as I had done before in respect to others; exactly as others do who are not prosecuted for it, and I can conscientiously assure you that it was done without any evil intentions. Had I known that my marrying myself in this manner should have been so unfavorably interpreted, I should have submitted to the usage of the Reformed Church. But I did not know it. Wherefore I pray once more the honorable general that he will vouchsafe me his aid."[823] Another case, or rather pair of cases, occurring during the restoration of Dutch rule in 1674, seems conclusive as to the severity of the law. On the fifth of February of that year, as the fiscal alleges, Jacob Fabricius, a Lutheran preacher, had "contrary to the laws of this government married Ralph Doxy and Mary van Harris ... without having any lawful authority thereto and without publication of bans." For this offense it is suggested in the complaint that the culprit be severely whipped and "forever banished this government cum expensis." After hearing the fiscal's charge, the confession of Fabricius, and a "report" of the latter's previous bad behavior, the court decides not to "proceed against him in the most rigorous manner, considering his age and late position, but they condemn him and declare him incapable to perform the functions of a minister and what is connected with them within this province for the time of one year. After this time has elapsed Deft. shall be held to ask for a special 'consent' before he shall be re-admitted to the performance of the said functions."[824] The case against Ralph Doxy is complicated by additional charges. The fiscal makes no direct reference to the unauthorized celebration or to the failure to publish the banns, though from the judgment of the court we perceive that these offenses were considered; but accuses him of entering "in an unlawful manner, into the married state with Mary van Harris, making use for that purpose, of a forged certificate," further alleging that he "hath still a wife alive who resides in New England;" for which delinquencies he ought to be severely whipped and "banished the country forever, with costs." In his reply, Doxy "denies ever having been married to a woman before," but confesses "his guilt as regards the forged certificate," saying "that through love for Mary Harris he had allowed it to be executed by a certain Englishman, now gone to the Barbadoes, and therefore prays forgiveness." The court declared the marriage unlawful on the two counts for which Fabricius was suspended; but "finding the charge against him of having a second (sic) wife in New England unfounded, he is therefore permitted to confirm himself in wedlock with the abovenamed Mary, according to the laws of the government." For the forged certificate "he is pardoned for this time on his promise of improvement, and request for forgiveness[825]." With the exception of the restriction put upon bundling, if that were indeed the purpose of the act of 1658, the Dutch law-makers do not seem to have busied themselves with the regulation of courtship. Sexual transgressions were severely dealt with, although not with the same rigor as in New England or even in early Virginia. Neither the death penalty nor the scarlet letter appears. Fornicators, if single, were required to contract marriage or pay a heavy fine.[826] Adulterers fared worse. Some illustrations from the judicial records in such cases have been gleaned by Cowley from the Colonial Manuscripts. Among these are the sentence to whipping and banishment of Ytie [Yutie] Jansen, "for living in adultery with Jan Parcel, and also the sentence of Laurens Duyts, who, for selling his wife, Yutie Jansen, and forcing her to live in adultery with another man, and for living also himself in adultery, was 'to have a rope tied around his neck, and to be severely flogged; to have his right ear cut off, and to be banished for fifty years.' John Parcel, for living in adultery with this Yutie Jansen, whom he had thus bought from her own husband, was 'to be placed at the whipping-post, with two rods in his arm,' to be banished twenty years and pay a fine of a hundred guilders [forty dollars], with costs. The fourth party, Geesje Jansen, for living in adultery with Laurens Duyts, was 'to be conducted to the whipping-post, and fastened thereto, the upper part of her body being stripped naked, and two rods placed in her hand; to be afterwards conducted, in that wise, outside the city gates, and banished the province for the term of thirty years, with costs.' Moreover, Iva Dircksen, for adultery, was 'to be conducted to the place where justice is administered, and there to witness the punishments inflicted this day, and then to be banished for the term of fifty years.'"[827] Breach of promise suits are not infrequent. Sometimes it is the faithless swain who is prosecuted for his broken troth; as in 1669, when Elizabeth Stedwill called Jan Hendrix van Gunst to account;[828] or when Maria Besems seeks pecuniary satisfaction for the like offense of Boudewyn van Nieuwland.[829] Sometimes it is the maid who asserts the woman's privilege, if not her legal right, to change her mind; as in the case of Pieter Koch v. Annetie Cornelissen van Vorst, which took place in New Amsterdam, 1653-54, and may serve as an example. On February 24 the defendant's stepfather delivers her "papers" to the burgomasters and schepens, who order that each party shall have a copy of the other's papers, and that the defendant shall appear in person. Then the case drags along for nearly a year, over no less than eight sessions of the court, before the pleadings and other preliminaries are finished. At last, on February 19, 1654, the papers are sent by the lower court to the director-general and council for advice. Apparently in consequence of this advice the documents are then submitted to a special committee of three men, who hand in their report on the 18th of the following May. Upon this report the decision of the burgomasters and schepens was based, though they resolved to keep the judgment in "abeyance" until "requested" by the parties to the suit. From the records it appears that there was an oral promise of marriage; that the plaintiff had given presents to his betrothed; and that she, because of his "misbehaviour," was not disposed to keep her engagement. The court, however, decided that a promise once given should remain in force. Neither person without the consent of the other and the approbation of the court should marry. The defendant was allowed to keep her presents until marriage or until, with the knowledge of the magistracy, the betrothed should set each other free. Costs were to be borne equally by the parties.[830] It is not surprising that among a people so thrifty and sensible as the pioneers of New Netherland the remarriage of a widow or a widower should be accompanied, or anticipated, by prudential measures, designed to protect the interests of the children of the first union. For this reason the wills and marriage contracts, specimens of which have been preserved, are of peculiar interest. According to Stiles, a well-known investigator of deeds and wills in Williamsburgh[831] makes the remark "that the old Dutch wills seem not to trust the widow in a second marriage. The restraints placed upon remarriages, by wills, were generally in favor of the children of the first marriage; and the widows thus restricted generally signed consents to accept the bequests in lieu of dower, for the good reason that propriety did not allow them to refuse so soon after the death of their first husband, and because the devises and bequests in lieu of dower vested an estate for life, or three thirds of the estate subject to a contingency in their own control, instead of one third absolutely. The will of Cornelius van Catts of Bushwick, dated in 1726, and expressed in a sort of half Dutch dialect, devises to his wife Annetjie, his whole estate ... while she remains his widow—both real and personal. 'But if she happen to marry, then I geff her nothing of my estate, neither real nor personal. I geff to my well-beloved son, Cornelius, the best horse that I have, or else £7, 10s., for his good as my eldest son. And then my two children, Cornelius Catts and David Catts, all heef [half] of my whole effects, land and movables, that is to say, Cornelius Catts heef of all, and David Catts heef of all. But my wife can be master of all for bringing up to good learning my two children.... But if she comes to marry again, then her husband can take her away from the farm, and all will be left for the children, Cornelius Catts and David Catts, heef and heef.'"[832] It was not, however, the first husband alone who took such precautions. After betrothal careful marriage contracts were often drawn up when either a widow or a widower was about to re-enter wedded life. The following is a sample of these stipulations, dated July 27, 1656: "Appears Geertruyt Jacops, widow of the late Mr. Roeloff de Haes, now betrothed to Jacob Crabbe and declares her intention of proving and assigning their father's inheritance to the children, left by him, Mr. de Haes, and born in wedlock by her, Geertruyt Jacops, to wit Johannes de Haes, old about 10 years, Marrietje de Haes, old about 9 years, and Annitje, old about three years, and assigns herewith to each of the aforesaid children the sum of 6 carolus guilders, declaring at the same time upon her conscience, in place of an oath that she, affiant, hereby satisfies the aforesaid children out of their father's inheritance and this declaration is made in presence and with the consent of her affianced husband Jacobus Crabbe, and she Geertruyt Jacops, has nominated, constituted, and appointed ... as guardians of the aforesaid children the Worthy Oloff Stevensen and Hendrick Kip, both burghers and inhabitants of the Manhattans."[833] b) Law and custom under the Duke of York.—In 1664 New Netherland passed into the hands of the Duke of York, whose patent from Charles II. directed him to establish authority "not contrary to but as neare as conveniently may bee agreeable to, the Lawes Statutes and Government of this our Realme of England."[834] After studying the New England laws, especially those of Connecticut and Massachusetts, Colonel Richard Nicholls, the duke's deputy governor, promulgated a code which was in force on Long Island, or Yorkshire, from March 1, 1665.[835] On August 6, 1674, Governor Andros ordered the duke's laws to be enforced throughout "New York" except "such as shall have apparent inconveniences in them,"[836] and in 1676 they were established in the Delaware region, "except the constables' courts, county rates, and some other things peculiar to Long Island."[837] It follows that for a short time after the conquest, in the province and on the Delaware, the Dutch laws were still observed; and, of course, the old usages and customs long survived. By the duke's code optional civil marriage was established in New York. "Whereas," declares the preamble, "by the Law of England no Marriage is Lawfully Consummated without a Minister whose office it is to join the parties in Matrimony after the Banes thrice published in the Church or a Lycence first had and obtained from some person thereunto Authorized, All which formality cannot be duly practiced in these parts. Yet to the end that a decent rule therein may be preserved It is Ordained that from henceforth the names and surnames of each Party who sue for Marriage shall be Publiquely read in their Parish Church or place of usuall Meeting, where they both then Inhabit, three severall Lords days successively." An optional procedure by license or by ecclesiastical banns was thus introduced; but in one respect the liberality of the Dutch law was not imitated. Unqualified permission to publish intentions of marriage by civil notice, instead of banns in church, was not granted. Yet, in effect, such discretion is often allowed; for "where no Church or Meeting place shall happen to bee," fourteen days written notice on "three doors of each parish" where the parties respectively dwell, namely on the doors of the constable, and two of the overseers, is declared sufficient. Optional religious or civil celebration is established. After proper notice, as already described, the ceremony may be performed by "any minister" or "any justice of the peace," but on one important condition: the parties are required to "purge themselves by oath before the minister or justice that they are not under the bonds of matrimony to any other person living;" and in case of obtaining a "double marriage" by perjury, we catch a glimpse of the influence of New England thoroughness on Colonel Nicholls, in the barbarous provision that the persons "offending shall bee boared through the tongue with a read hot Iron and moreover proceeded against as in Case of Adultery." But the party "approved innocent" and "ignorant of the other's wicked fraud" may recover damages against the "nocent," and is permitted to contract a new marriage as if nothing had happened.[838] For the marriage of any "Daughter, Maid, or Servant" the "known consent" of the parent, master, or dame is required; and for celebration without such consent, or without preceding banns or other legal notice, or the governor's license in place of notice, the minister or justice is to "forfeit twenty pounds and be put out of his office."[839] The declaration of the preamble that "by the Law of England no Marriage is Lawfully Consummated without a Minister" may prove misleading, unless the vital distinction between "legality" and "validity," already emphasized, be kept in mind. In 1665 a marriage in England without a minister was valid, but it was not lawful and might be punished. In the present instance, however, all doubt as to the meaning of the law is set at rest by the further provision that "if any man shall hereafter presume to Marry contrary to these Lawes prescribed the Person offending shall be proceeded against as for Adultery or fornication, ... the Children so begotten shall be Reputed Bastards, And the Parents suffer such paines and penalties by fines or Punishment as they have deserved."[840] Since this provision is clearly contrary to the existing law of England, it would seem to be invalid as transcending the legislative power granted to the duke by the royal charter; and even the king could not have changed the law of England. Later in 1665 provision is made relative to the legal age for matrimony. All persons are to be "accompted of fitt age to Marry, when the Man shall attaine to the age of twenty one, and the Women of Eighteene years."[841] In the next year the not very lucid interpretation is vouchsafed that this law is to be understood "of such persons onely as are under guardianshipp, and itt is not in any wayes to take of the naturall bounds of Duty and obligation which Children owe to their parents."[842] If this declaration has any sense, it may perhaps mean that, without consent, only orphans under guardianship, and not those whose parents are living, have full authority to marry at the ages mentioned. A system of registration is likewise provided for. The names and surnames of all the inhabitants of every parish in the government are to be registered; and "to prevent future inconveniences which may arise about the age of Orphants, The Certaine Marriage of Men and Women or the decease of persons imported into this Country whereof no positive Certificate can be granted, as to the age of one, Marriage of another or the Death of another, The Minister or Town Clark of every parrish shall well and truly and plainly" record all births, marriages, and deaths happening within his district "in a Book to be provided by the Church-wardener for that purpose." If a master of a family or anyone concerned fail, within one month, to report the birth, marriage, or death of a person related to him, he shall pay a fine of five shillings.[843] Another provision reveals the tender solicitude of the English common law for the wife in a way which a century later would have warmed the heart of Sir William Blackstone himself. "No man shall harbour, conceal or detain Contrary to the concent of the Husband any Married woman, upon penalty of five Shillings for every hour" that she "remains under his Roof." Still there really might be occasions when even a "married woman" could reasonably claim some share of public protection. For has not the "common law" itself, in certain emergencies, placed her on a level with the bondwoman? Therefore it is provided "always that any woman flying from the barbarous Cruelty of Her Husband to the House of the Constable or one of the Overseers of the same Parish; may be protected by them in the manner as is Directed for Servants in such Cases, and not otherwise."[844] Again on producing a "sufficient" certificate "from any forraigne parts" under the "hand and seal of some creditable person and known magistrate," that either spouse is dead, the other is free to marry again. The same liberty is accorded the survivor when either party has been absent for five full years without knowledge on a journey by sea or land usually made in "a year or less or in a few days." But in that case a veritable trap is laid for the feet of Enoch Arden, in a provision, imitated from the laws of New England, the stupidity of which is only less surprising than the fact that in substance it has survived in statutes of far more recent times. It is "provided always that if either the man or the woman shall at any time after the Expiration of five years Returne and bring full Testimony that hee or shee have divers wayes endeavoured by writings or Messages to make known to his wife, or her Husband, that Shee or hee were then living, or that they were by Imprisonment or Bond Slavery with the Turks or other Heathen, Lawfully hendred from giving such information;" then such person may "Challenge his or her premarriage, and obtain an order for their Cohabiting as formerly." But "if neither shall sue for such an order," they "may by mutuall agreement Enter a Release to each other in the office of Records, and both remain free from their former obligations."[845] One or two incidents gleaned from the records for the period of the duke's laws may serve to illustrate the difficulties of matrimonial administration on the Delaware. Thus in 1678, in a case similar to that of Laers above cited, the minister, reader, and churchwardens present to the local court at Newcastle Walter Wharton, justice of the peace, for marrying himself or being married "contrary to the Knowne Lawes of England & alsoe contrary to the Lawes and customes of this place and Province;" as likewise for granting certain lands without proper authority. The said "Mr. Wharton not appearing in three following Court dayes, and to the end the Reproach may bee taken away from the River and that Such notorious breatches of ye Lawes and disorders may for the future not passe unpunished, especially in prsons of Lesser qualitys whoe if this [conduct] of Mr. Whartons [whoe" being "in Commission" and bearing "the office of a Justice of ye peace ougt to give good examples to others] had not been Reguarded, migt att all tymes" hold it for a "bad president": the court do therefore submit the "prmisses to the Judgemt. of his Honor. the Governor. for to Inflict such punishment" as he "shall thinke fitt & expedient." We are only informed in the record that the accused is "to bee out of the Commission of Justices & left to the Law."[846] One regrets that we are not told whether the "law" treated his marriage as void. The Delaware papers, for the next year, contain also a long letter to Governor Andros from Luke Watson, of "Whoorekill"—whose spelling is, if possible, more ingenious than usual even for that fertile region—complaining of the many shortcomings of Captain John Avery, magistrate and president of the court. It seems that the captain was fond of having his own way; sometimes, when his colleagues on the bench presumed to give a contrary "judgment," going out of the court "in a greate Rage and feury, ... Cursing and swaring," and even suggesting that they were "ffooles, Knaues, and Rouges." He is accused, moreover, of taking upon himself "to grant a Licence to Marry Daniel Browne to Sussan Garland, widdow, without any publiqueation, which Marrige was effected, notwithstanding it is Generally knowne or at Least the said Daniel confesses that he knows no other but that he haue a wife living in England." This was not the captain's worst indiscretion in the discharge of his official matrimonial duties. We learn that in taking "vpon himselfe to Marry the widdow Clament to one Bryant Rowles, without publiquecation notwithstanding she was out aske at Least a Month to another man, namly Edward Cocke," he prepared a sad tragedy in real life. For when the "said Cocke" heard that the widow had jilted him he said "it would be his death." So he "went home, fell sick, and in forty eight hours after dyed," declaring in his last breath "that her marrying was the cause of his dyeing."[847] At this time Governor Andros, replying to the inquiries of the Lords of Trade, reports that because of the "scarcity of Ministers & [the] Law admitting marriages by Justices no acct cann be giuen of the number marryed." He adds that "ministers haue been so scarce" and "Religions" so many that he can give no statement of the number of births or christenings.[848] In 1695 Mr. Miller, an English clergyman, "complains that many marriages are by a justice of the peace."[849] The duke's code makes no provision for the celebration of marriage except before a minister or a justice of the peace. The Quakers of Long Island, who earlier had suffered severely from the intolerance of the Dutch,[850] continued nevertheless to practice their own simple but solemn rites. For so doing they were harshly dealt with by the courts, as appears in a petition to Governor Andros and his council from two of their number in 1680,[851] praying for the "Remission of a Fine imposed for Contravention of the Marriage Laws." The paper is in the form of an "address from Henry Willis and John Bowne, Concerning the proceedings of a Court of Sessions against vs, who said they fined us 10 lbs a peece for suffering our daughters to marrie contrary to their law, which proceeding we are satisfied is without precedent and we can count it noe lesse but a mistake or hasty oversight and though we have endeaverd for its removall yet Execution is eished forth and Jos. Lee vndershiref hath seazed Hen: Willis barne of corn and since taken from Jo. Bowne 5 good milch cowes and drove them away by night and kept them pownded from food" more than a night and a day, so that the neighbors were "generally troubled at it." Then the petitioners proceed to reason with the enemy, using the soft word which turneth away wrath. "Now in simplisity, we doe seriously entreat all that may be conserned herein seriously to consider it and in the cooleness of your spirits without anger or hard thoughts truly to waye it in the balance of Equity where the witness of God may arise in every Contience to testifie, whether If such things should goe on ... it would not be to the rewenating of families and to the kindling of Gods anger against a place or people which we truly desire may be prevented, by takeing away ye ocation." So they make their appeal to the "cheife," knowing that a magistrate's "authority is to preserve mens persons and Estates, but ye prerogative of the contience that belongs to God and we dare not but yeald obedience thereunto;" for "we do not act—as sometimes resented (sic)—in stobourness obstainancy or contempt of authority but in simplisity."[852] From this evidence it would seem that the magistrates of Long Island were not less thrifty in their zeal than were their brethren in Massachusetts from whose pious robbery and legal cruelty the Wardwells suffered.[853] It is noticeable, too, that only fines are spoken of. Nothing is said of invalidating marriages celebrated in the Quaker fashion. From this the suggestion already made gains support that the nullifying clause in the duke's code was illegal; and we may, perhaps, also infer that it was not attempted to be carried out in practice by the courts. Certain it is that in 1661, only four years before the adoption of the duke's laws, a marriage celebrated in England according to Quaker rites was held legal in a trial which took place at the Nottingham assizes.[854] The marriage law of 1665, at least so far as it was valid, remained in force until the passage of the so-called "Dongan" act of 1684.[855] This statute[856] was one of the thirty-one acts receiving the governor's signature and passed at the second session of the first representative assembly of New York, elected in 1683 under the reluctant and grudging sanction of the Duke of York.[857] By it no striking change is made in the broad outline of matrimonial administration; but in the details several important alterations appear. The provision regarding optional civil or ecclesiastical banns is identical with that of the earlier law, except that posting on the constable's door in each parish, instead of on "three doors," is deemed sufficient. License "under the hand and seale of the governour" in place of banns is still allowed. As before, any minister or justice within the province is authorized to perform the ceremony; but now the persons are required to "bring a Certificate from under the ministers hand that published them or under the Constable hand on whose doores their names were affixed which Certificate shall be sent to the office of the Register of the County and there Entred on Record together with a Certificate of their Marriage with the day and date thereof from the party by whom they were marryed there to remaine in perpetuam rei memoriam;" and it is provided, further, that the persons purge themselves by oath, if required, that they are not already under bonds of matrimony. But in this connection, instead of the clause as to boring through the tongue with a red-hot iron, it is declared that "if it shall afterwards happen to be proved that either ... of the said partyes" has thus contracted a bigamous marriage through false swearing, he "shall suffer as in Cases of perjury and further be proceeded against as in Cases of polygamy."[858] The act is liberal in another respect. At last the Quakers are granted relief in a provision which in substance finds many repetitions in American legislation during the two centuries to come. Nothing, we are told, is "intended to prejudice the Custome and manner of marriage amongst the Quakers, but their manner and forme" shall be judged lawful; provided they allow "none to marry that are restrained by the Law of God contained in the five bookes of Moses; and that they permitt none to be marryed within their Congregation or meeting of any other persuasion then themselves," except after banns or license and record made according to law. There is in this act one essential variation from that of 1665, which it is of the highest importance to note, and which has been entirely overlooked by writers[859] who have discussed the character of the marriage law of New York after 1684. The invalidating clause, unless by implication, in case of neglect of the required forms and procedure, does not appear. It is merely declared that if "any man Shall p'sume to marry contrary to the Law prescribed the person offending shall be proceeded against as for fornication;" and the minister or justice performing the ceremony shall forfeit twenty pounds and be suspended from his benefice or office.[860] The penalty for fornication according to the duke's law, which seems to have been still in force, was "enjoyning Marriage, fine, or Corporal punishment" at the "discretion of the Court."[861] Thus by any fair interpretation of a penal statute, after 1684, an irregular marriage per verba de praesenti was illegal though valid in New York, just as it was in the mother-country. c) Law and custom in the Royal Province.—The Dongan act of 1684, continuing as it does the general provisions of the duke's law, and indeed differing but little—except perhaps in the matter of lay celebration—from the earlier usage of the Dutch, is in harmony with the administrative practice which prevailed in New York until the Revolution; though, as will presently appear, there is good reason to believe that it was repealed in 1691. The provision regarding certificate and registration corresponds with the custom, though the local officers were negligent and the records are far from complete.[862] Perhaps, as a rule, marriage was preceded by banns or civil notice; but license must have been popular, especially among the well-to-do, and a lucrative source of income to the governors, as the forty manuscript volumes of marriage-license bonds, preserved among the treasures of the State Library at Albany, amply bear witness.[863] An instructive piece of evidence as to the importance of the license fee is given by Professor Peter Kalm, the Swedish botanist and traveler, writing in 1748. He mentions the small salary allowed the royal governor by the assembly, the whole of which is sometimes lost through "dissension with the inhabitants;" and he declares that but for three "stated profits" the governor "would be obliged either to resign his office, or to be content with an income too small for his dignity; or else to conform himself in everything" to their inclinations. These extraordinary sources of income are the fees for passports, permission to keep public houses, and marriage licenses. "Few people," he says, "who intend to be married, unless they be very poor, will have their banns published from the pulpit; but instead of this they get licenses from the governor, which impower any minister to marry them. Now for such a license the governor receives about half a guinea, and this collected throughout the whole province, amounts to a considerable sum."[864] In fact, just as in England in our own day,[865] it was "deemed most plebeian, almost vulgar, to be married by publication of the banns for three Sundays in church, or posting them according to the law, as was the universal and fashionable custom in New England." This notice from a New York newspaper, dated December 13, 1765, will show how widespread had been the aversion to the publication of banns: "We are credibly informed that there was married last Sunday evening, by the Rev. Mr. Auchmuty, a very respectable couple that had published three different times in Trinity church. A laudable example and worthy to be followed. If this decent and for many reasons proper method of publication was once generally to take place, we should have no more clandestine marriages; and save the expense of licenses, no inconsiderable sum these hard and depressing times." For another reason the times became more "hard and depressing" and banns more economical, perhaps more patriotic, as Mrs. Earle further shows by an extract from Holt's New York Gazette and Post-boy for December 6, 1765: "As no Licenses for Marriage could be obtained since the first of November for Want of Stamped Paper, we can assure the Publick several Genteel Couple were publish'd in the different Churches of this City last Week; and we hear that the young Ladies of this Place are determined to Join Hands with none but such as will to the utmost endeavour to abolish the Custom of marrying with License which Amounts to many Hundred per annum which might be saved."[866] The character of the governor's license may be seen in the following sample, issued in 1732: "By his excellency William Cosby, Esq., Captain general and governor in chief of the provinces of New York, New Jersey, and territories thereon depending, in America, vice-admiral of the same, and colonel in his majesty's army, &c. "To any Protestant Minister: "Whereas there is a mutual purpose of marriage between Jacob Glenn of the City of Albany, merchant, of the one party, and Elizabeth Cuyler of the same city, spinster, of the other party, for which they have desired my license, and have given bond upon conditions, that neither of them have any lawful let or impediment of pre-contract, affinity, or consanguinity to hinder their being joined in the holy bands of matrimony; these are therefore to authorize and empower you to join the said Jacob Glenn and Elizabeth Cuyler in the holy bands of matrimony and them to pronounce man and wife."[867] A goodly store of folklore relating to wedding customs among the Dutch and English of New York has been gathered by Vanderbilt, Earle, and other writers. There was no lack of feasting and pastime. As in the fatherland, maypoles were set up before the door in honor of newly wedded pairs. The fashion of "coming out bride," "that is the public appearance of bride and groom, and sometimes of entire bridal party in wedding array, at Church the Sunday after the marriage," was observed with due pomp and splendor. Collections for the parish poor or to build a church were received from the guests on the bridal day; and bumpers of "sack-posset" seem to have been as keenly relished by the worthy burghers of New York as by good old Samuel Sewall and his Massachusetts brethren.[868] At wedding time there was "open house" and plenty of feasting; but the festivity does not appear to have reached the excess practiced by the Pennsylvania Friends.[869] Hannah Thompson, wife of the secretary of Congress, while residing in New York in 1786, wrote to John Miflin, of Philadelphia, that the "Gentleman's Parents keep open house just in the same manner as the Brides Parents. The Gentlemen go from the Bridegrooms house to drink Punch with and to give joy to his Father. The Brides Visitors go In the same manner from the Brides to his Mothers to pay their Compliments to her. There is so much driving about at these times that in our narrow streets there is some danger. The Wedding-House resembles a bee-hive. Company perpetually flying in and out."[870] But in the main domestic life was peaceful and prosaic. Family woes were seldom dragged into court. The "capital laws" contained in the duke's code do, indeed, show their New England origin by prescribing death as the penalty alike for denying God or the king's titles, or wantonly smiting a parent; but these were practically a "dead letter."[871] Mrs. Grant bears witness to the happiness and tranquillity of marital life in Albany. "Inconstancy or even indifference among married couples was unheard of, even where there happened to be considerable disparity in point of intellect. The extreme affection they bore their mutual offspring was a bond that forever endeared them to each other. Marriage in this colony was always early, very often happy, and very seldom indeed interested. When a man had no son, there was nothing to be expected with a daughter but a well brought-up female slave, and the furniture of the best bed-chamber. At the death of her father she obtained another division of his effects, such as he thought she needed or deserved, for there was no rule in these cases."[872] So much for custom and the actual legal practice. We may now turn to the controversy as to whether subsequently to 1691 there was any valid statutory regulation of marriage in New York until after the close of the provincial period. The uncertainty arose in consequence of the following resolution of the assembly, April 24, 1691: "Upon an information.... That the several Laws made formerly by the General Assembly, and his late Royal Highness, James Duke of York;" and also "the several Ordinances or reputed Laws made by the preceding Governors and Councils, for the Rule of their Majesties Subjects within this Province, are reported amongst the people, to be still in force;" it is resolved, nemine contradicente, that the first-named laws of the assembly, "not being observed, and not ratified and approved by His Royal Highness, nor the late King, are null, void, and of none effect;" as also are the "several Ordinances made by the Governors and councils, being contrary to the constitution of England, and the practice of the government of their Majesties other plantations in America."[873] The terms of the resolution are very clear; but unfortunately, so far as has yet been discovered, no record exists of its having been placed before the governor and council for approval. Nor does the validity of this resolution or that of the act of 1684 ever appear to have been tested in the provincial courts. Singularly enough, this dual question was not judicially considered until the "Lauderdale Peerage Case," in 1885, which grew out of a marriage solemnized one hundred and thirteen years before—on the very eve of the Revolution. The record of the trial and judgment in this case is really equivalent to a treatise by learned jurists on the matrimonial law of New York, from the Dutch Ordinance of 1654 to the adoption of the constitution of 1777. Moreover, distinguished American lawyers were called as expert witnesses or to submit written opinions.[874] From the record in the case[875] it appears that on July 11, 1772, two days before his death, Colonel Richard Maitland and Mary McAdams were married in New York city by Rev. John Ogilvie, an ordained clergyman of the Church of England, and then assistant minister of Trinity Church. The main question at issue, and the only one with which we are here concerned, was the requisites for a valid marriage in the province of New York in that year. As recited in the syllabus, there were produced, inter alia, in support of the marriage from the custody of the family a certificate in legal form; an affidavit, signed by the mayor of New York, to the effect that the officiating minister had made oath of the truth of the statements in the certificate; a will of date anterior to the marriage, by which Colonel Maitland left all his property to his wife and the children then born; copies of letters showing that one of the executors wrote to his co-executors in England, a brother of the bridegroom, stating that he was a witness to the ceremony of marriage; that the woman signed herself in the man's surname; that the children were recognized and taken care of by members of the man's family; and also war office records showing that the woman received a pension as Maitland's widow.[876] But evidence was not forthcoming of previous license or publication of banns. Did the neglect of license or banns invalidate the marriage? It was contended by the witnesses and advisers of the counter-claimant that the statute of 1665 and that of 1684 rendered license or banns indispensable, and that such continued to be the law of New York down to the marriage in 1772.[877] Thus in his written opinion Mr. Sidney Webster, in answer to the question "whether the law of marriage in New York, in 1772, was contained in Dongan's law of 1684, supplemented, where defective, by the older laws of the Duke of York and of the Dutch?" says that he thinks the "fundamental law" of the colony of New York when the case arose, was made up of so much of the Dutch law as was unrepealed and remained in force; so much of the English common law as had been established after the conquest in 1664; so much of the English parliamentary statutes[878] as had been enacted and specially made applicable; and the colonial statutes legally enacted and sanctioned by the crown. "I have not seen nor heard," he continues, "of a denyal that the ... law of 1684 was a valid enactment" at the date of its passage. "In so far as it covered matters and also punishments embraced in any previous statute, or ruled by the common law, and was inconsistent therewith, it repealed or abrogated both by implication." Any contract of marriage made in "palpable violation" of the requirements of either of these laws, while in force, would be void; and "if it could be found that the marriage law of 1684 was repealed prior to 1828, then, in the absence of any positive law to the contrary," the duke's law "would by implication be revived."[879] So he concludes that in 1772, for a valid contract, there must be previous banns or license, as well as solemnization by a clergyman or magistrate.[880] With this conclusion the opinion of Mr. Evarts coincides. "The statute of the Assembly in 1684," he says, "unquestionably was in force in 1772. The essentials of a valid marriage according to the law of New York in 1772, were that the ceremony should be performed by a minister or a justice of the peace, and that such marriage could be lawfully performed only after the publication of the banns prescribed by the act of ... 1684, or in default of such publication ... , by a license from the governor."[881] For the claimant also a mass of evidence was presented. Important decisions were cited;[882] and it was pointed out that in the acts of the legislature published after 1684 neither the statute of that year nor the duke's law appears; "nor in fact" were "any of the laws prior to 1691" printed in subsequent collections.[883] Sir. F. Herschell, counsel, urged that "unless it is expressly provided that the failure to comply" with the requirement of the statutes in question "shall render a marriage null and void, the courts will not so construe;" and he holds that the resolution of the assembly, 1691, was valid; for "everybody" acted as if the laws repealed by it were not in force.[884] In short, "the substantial effect of the evidence of those called for the claimant," as summarized in the report of the case, was "that the law prevailing in New York with regard to the requisites for a marriage in the year 1772 was the common law of England as interpreted by the American courts, i. e., that there should be a contract of marriage per verba de presenti; and that the 35th article of the constitution of the state of New York, adopted in 1777, ... shewed that the common law of England, as then understood, governed this subject."[885] Such was the unanimous decision of the committee of Lords constituting the court, whose members submitted their opinions separately. The Earl of Selborne doubted whether the acts of 1665 and 1684 were in force in 1772 and significantly suggests that, if they were in force, failure of banns and license would not invalidate a marriage. He further argues strongly that in the present instance there is no absolute proof that banns or license was lacking; for the church records are often imperfect. In any event, therefore, the rule omnia praesumunter rita acta ought to govern the case; for one cannot conceive of any circumstance more properly requiring its application.[886] In harmony with this view was the able opinion of Lord Blackburn, which in effect maintained the validity of the common law in New York subsequent to 1684. The original English settlers, he argues, "carried with them all the immunities and privileges and laws of England.... That being so, from the time when the colony of New York was first settled it had prim facie the marriage law of England such as it was in the latter part of the seventeenth century;" and in England at that time a marriage "solemnized according to the form of the Church of England, and by a clergyman of the Church of England ... was valid to constitute matrimony: although if it was a clandestine or irregular marriage without banns or a license, the clergyman who performed it might be liable to censure" and punishment. In addition his lordship significantly raises a doubt as to whether the Duke of York had power to introduce a new law of marriage essentially different from that of England as regards the absolute requirement of license or banns.[887] Accordingly, the other judges agreeing, the laws of 1665 and 1684 were set aside as not in force; and the claim of Major Frederick Henry Maitland, descendant of Colonel Richard Maitland, to the earldom of Lauderdale was sustained.[888] There can be little doubt that this was a righteous judgment, in harmony with the entire history of the English decisions down to the case of the Queen v. Millis, whose character has already been considered.[889] Furthermore, its justice is rendered almost certain by a witness, not called in the trial, but whose evidence given in 1773, the very next year after the marriage in question, is assuredly worthy of more attention than any produced by the American experts in 1885. This testimony is given by Rev. John Rodgers, in a paper read before the "Reverend General Convention of the Delegates from the Associated Churches of Connecticut, and the Synod of New York and Philadelphia," met at Stamford, September, 1, 1773; the manuscript being found in the cabinet of President Stiles by the historian, Abiel Holmes: "There has no law been made in this province relating to marriages, nor do any of the English statutes concerning them extend to it. They stand therefore on the common law of the land; and as words de presenti constitute a marriage by that law, the courts of judicature, on any contest, must leave the question married or not to the jury of the county upon the proofs that are offered, as they do with respect to any other enquiry relating to matter of fact. This is attended with some inconvenience; but the politicians contend that they would be greater, if the legislature should interpose by a law to prevent clandestine marriages; and it is much to be doubted, whether the several branches would be brought to any unanimity on the subject, were it attempted. The rites of marriage were at first celebrated by the justices of the peace, as well as the clergy, either upon the governor's licence, or the publication of bans thrice in some place of worship. This was the case till the year 1748, before which time the licences ran, to all Protestant ministers; but upon application of the Episcopal clergy who meant to monopolize this business, they are since directed to all Protestant ministers of the Gospel, and from the time of this alteration the justices do not intermeddle, except in such counties where clergymen are scarce. But marriages are celebrated by clergymen of all denominations without distinction, and yet for any law to the contrary, a marriage with or without licence or publication, and with or without the aid of a clergyman or magistrate, will be valid in law. A contract in words de presenti, proved by witnesses and subsequent cohabitation as man and wife, constitutes a marriage of legal validity, as already suggested."[890] After this it seems only necessary to add that if it should appear strange that the legal practice in the administration of matrimonial law, during the provincial period, harmonizes in the main with that prescribed by the laws of 1665 and and 1684, it is sufficient to say that this is so by force of custom; while, so far as license is concerned, that was maintained by virtue of the power granted to the royal governors in their instructions.[891] II. NEW JERSEY, PENNSYLVANIA, AND DELAWARE a) Law and custom in New Jersey.—The population of New Jersey was far more homogeneously English than was that of New York and Pennsylvania. It was composed of members of various religious sects. Some Quakers settled in East New Jersey and more in West New Jersey, but they were never numerically strong. The vast majority of the people were Scotch Presbyterians and New England Congregationalists; so that family law shows decided traces of Puritan influence.[892] Circumstances, however, favored toleration in this regard; and hence only in details were the New Jersey matrimonial law and custom different from those which existed in New York. The legal history of the province begins in the year of the English conquest of New Netherland. In 1664 a very liberal plan of government, called the "Concessions and Agreement," was established by the proprietors, Lord Berkeley and Sir George Carteret. All "faithful subjects of the king" are admitted to "plant and become freemen" of the said province of New Jersey. No one is to be "molested, punished, disquieted or called in question, for any difference in opinion or practice in matters of religious concernments," provided he do not disturb the "civil peace."[893] Under this instrument in 1668 the first matrimonial legislation appears. "For the preventing of unlawful marriages, it is ordered ... that no person or persons, son, daughter, maid, or servant, shall be married without the consent" of parents, masters, or overseers, "and three times published ... at some public meeting or kirk, where the party or parties have their most usual abode;" or their "purpose" be set up in writing "on some publick house where they live," there to "abide" for the space of fourteen days before the celebration, which, "if possible" is to be performed in a public place. "None but some approved minister or justice of the peace within this Province, or some chief officer, where such are not, shall be allowed to marry or admit of any to join in marriage, in their presence;" under the penalty of twenty pounds[894] and removal from office for neglect. But in place of banns or civil notice, the governor may grant his license to "any that are at their own disposing," if they "clear themselves by oath or certificate;" or to any others "under tuition," provided the parents, masters, or overseers are present to give their consent, or such consent be "attested by some public officer" before the license is issued.[895] This act, which, it may be noted, does not contain a clause expressly invalidating a marriage for non-observance of its provisions, seems to have remained in force for fifteen years. But in 1682 "that part of the province called East New Jersey came by purchase into the possession of William Penn and other Quakers," who formed an association called the Twenty-four Proprietors. By these a body of rules known as the "Fundamental Constitutions" was established, containing a provision for the celebration of marriage, after the Quaker fashion, very similar to the law for Pennsylvania made in England the same year by Penn and his associates.[896] All marriages "not forbidden in the law of God shall be esteemed lawful where the Parents or Guardians being first acquainted, the Marriage is publickly intimated in such Places and Manner as is agreeable to Mens different Perswasions in Religion, being afterwards still solemnized before creditable Witnesses, by taking one another as Husband and Wife, and a certificate of the whole, under the Parties and Witnesses Hands, being brought to the proper Register for that End, under a Penalty if neglected."[897] In March of the same year a statute was passed differing in several respects from the preceding. Parents or guardians are to be consulted and give their consent. "Intentions" are to be published for "at least three weeks" before solemnization, which "shall be performed by and before some justice of the peace or other magistrate," unless he "refuse to be present;" the certificate shall be entered "in the register of the town and county" where the marriage takes place; and a record of publication is likewise to be kept by the clerk of the "assembly" or public place where it occurs.[898] Cook thinks this statute may "have been a compromise between the Quaker and the Puritan practice, that left out the very feature in each which was most desirable. For the parties were to take each other as husband and wife, but not 'before creditable witnesses;' while, on the other hand," by the terms of the law, if the "justice or magistrate refused to be present, it would appear that the parties could marry themselves."[899] But that they could undoubtedly do under the former law, since there is no nullifying clause, and the only penalty mentioned is clearly for failure to file the certificate. Already in 1676[900] West New Jersey was also acquired by Quaker proprietors; and in May, 1682, by an act of the general assembly, "for the preventing of clandestine and unlawful marriages," a system much like that of the eastern province was established. Justices within their jurisdictions are authorized to solemnize, when the persons have caused their intentions to be previously published for fourteen days in "some public place appointed for that purpose," and the "parents or trustees" show "no lawful reason against it." For celebrating without such consent, if it "may be reasonably obtained," the magistrate is to be fined at the discretion of the general assembly. Provision is likewise made for registration.[901] It will be observed that in all these measures for the two provinces of New Jersey civil marriage is recognized. It is optional under the act of 1668; but under the Quaker rÉgime, of course, solemnization by a minister is not mentioned. For about twenty years after the legislation just presented the proprietary rule was maintained in the two provinces. During the latter part of the period there was more or less friction and dissatisfaction. The jurisdictions, though not the property rights, were turned over to Governor-General Andros in 1688. Four years later all the interests of the proprietors were absolutely surrendered to the crown. The united colony was then joined with New York under the same governor, but with a council and assembly of its own; and this arrangement was continued until 1738, when New Jersey became an independent royal province.[902] After the union with New York, with characteristic intolerance, the Church of England was established; "but as the Episcopalians were a small minority of the population, and had but little zeal, the Establishment remained barely more than nominal."[903] To the "end the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the said Lord Bishop of London, may take place in our said province, so far as conveniently may be"—run the instructions to Governor Cornbury in 1702—"we do think fit that you give all countenance and encouragement to the exercise of the same, excepting only the collating to benefices, granting licences for marriages, and probate of wills, which we have reserved to you." The table of marriage according to the English canons is to be "hung up in every orthodox church, and duly observed." For its "strict observance" the governor is to try to get a law passed by the assembly, if none already exists.[904] The attempt to force the rites of the English church and the jurisdiction of the bishop of London on the people of New Jersey proved a failure. So, March 27, 1719, a new act appears, which shows that serious abuses, notably in the issue of licenses, must have existed during the orthodox rule. "Whereas of late Years," says the preamble, "several Young Persons have been, by the Wicked Practices of evil disposed Persons, and their Confederates, inticed, inveigled and deluded, led away and clandestinely so Married," to the "great Grief of their Parents and Relatives," it is therefore enacted that, under forfeit of five hundred pounds, no license shall be granted to a person under twenty-one years of age without consent of the parent or guardian, "signified by a certificate in writing" under his hand; which certificate must be filed in the office of the secretary of the province. The person presenting the certificate of parental consent, before issue of license, must "take an Oath upon the Four Holy Evangelists, of Almighty God, or if really of Tender Conscience, shall make a Solemn Affirmation and Declaration," that it is genuine; and besides, as in New York, he is required to execute a bond to the governor, with two sufficient sureties, in the penal sum of five hundred pounds.[905] In case of celebration by banns instead of license the procedure is the same. The certificate of consent must be presented by the persons to the clerk of the peace or to the county clerk; they must take the oath on the evangelists, and execute a bond of the same tenor as that already described. Thereupon the clerk, within fourteen days, "shall affix a Writing in a fair legible Hand, in the English Tongue, at three the most publick Places in said County, setting forth the Persons names, Places of Abode, and Intentions of Marriage." All religious societies may celebrate according to their own rites; and by implication ministers of the gospel, justices of the peace, and "others" may perform the ceremony.[906] At this point legislation rested. No further change was made in the matrimonial law of New Jersey until long after the Revolution.[907] However, in 1765 a vain attempt was made by the Episcopal clergy, though a small minority in the province, to monopolize the income derived from the celebration of marriages on the governor's license, showing that they were not less greedy nor selfish than were their brethren of New York seventeen years before. In a letter to the Lords of Trade the "Bishop of London at the request of the clergy of ... New Jersey begs leave to represent, ... that by an old Law the Licences for Marriages are directed to any Protestant Minister or Justice of the Peace, which however necessary at the first Establishment of the Colony to facilitate Marriages, when there were few Ministers in the Country, seems at present not only prejudicial to the clergy, who are depriv'd of a considerable part of their Income, but gives occasion to many Inconveniences and abuses." It appears, as the letter further shows, that in 1760 the clergy petitioned Governor Boone to "alter the Direction of the Licences." The petition was declined on the ground that authority to make the change belonged to the Lords of Trade on application of the bishop of London. The request being now made to the bishop, the latter hopes that the lords "will take the matter into Consideration, and if they see no particular Objections will give their Instructions to the Governor of that Province, that for the future Marriage Licences may be directed only to a Protestant Minister of the Gospel." The Bishop's communication was forwarded by the Lords of Trade to Governor Franklin of New Jersey, with a sensible letter in which certain pertinent questions are so forcibly raised as seemingly to bring the correspondence to a speedy end. Their lordships see no objection to what the bishop proposes, "if there is no Law in force by which the Civil Magistrate is authorized to perform the Marriage Rites, or if long usage and custom has not established such a practice." But they add, "as it does not appear to Us from any Information we can collect here, how the case stands in respect to this matter, we desire you will by the first opportunity acquaint Us, whether the civil Magistrates in New Jersey do or do not perform those Ceremonies; and if they do; whether it is by virtue of any declared Law or by usage only; and if the latter, whether such practice may in your opinion be altered in the manner proposed by the Bishop of London without Inconvenience or Complaint."[908] It is evident what a truthful answer from the governor must have been; but we hear no more of the matter. b) Law and custom in Pennsylvania and Delaware.—It was one of the many false charges originally brought against the Quakers by their orthodox adversaries that they did not celebrate marriage in an orderly and decent way. They were even accused of repudiating the marital relation and of indulging on principle in licentious conduct.[909] There is no ground whatever for such slanders, unless the rejection of the ring, with the peculiar observances of the English church, and the insistence that marriage, as a divine ordinance, is a matter between man and his own conscience, in which the priest shall have nothing to do, may be counted a justification. The Quakers always held the institutions of marriage and the family in great esteem. From the beginning they have exacted due publicity in the celebration which was attended by a modest, though devout and severe, ceremonial. So important, indeed, was the nuptial contract in their eyes, as will presently appear, that the Pennsylvania Friends were too much inclined to extravagant display in the wedding festivities. One may well marvel what was Masson's notion of a religious rite when he wrote that the Quakers "had no religious ceremony in sanction of marriage."[910] "Professor Masson, as his context proves, had ample opportunity to avoid this blunder, and it can only be accounted for on the theory that his mind is prejudiced by the still popular notion that the presence and offices of an ordained minister are necessary to make a marriage ceremony religious and to secure the Divine sanction of the nuptial rites. The Quakers thought otherwise. They repudiated the claims of the clergy, and believed that God alone can join men and women in the solemn covenant."[911] From their founders we may learn their doctrine of matrimony. "We marry none," says George Fox, "but are witnesses of it; marriage being God's joining not man's."[912] In harmony with this is Penn's declaration that the Quakers believe marriage to be "an ordinance of God, and that God only can rightly join men and women" in wedlock.[913] Elsewhere he declares that ceremonies the Friends "have refused not out of humor, but conscience reasonably grounded; inasmuch as no Scripture-example tells us, that the priest had any other part, of old time, than that of a witness among the rest, before whom the Jews used to take one another; and therefore this people look upon it as an imposition, to advance the power and the profits of the clergy; and for the use of the ring, it is enough to say, that it was an heathenish and vain custom, and never practiced among the people of God, Jews or primitive Christians."[914] Again, he claims that wedlock is a union which should only grow out of mutual inclination. "Never marry but for love," is his advice, "but see that thou lovest what is lovely."[915] Similar evidence is given by Sewel, the Quaker historian. "In their Method of Marriage," he says, "they also depart from the common Way: For in the Old Testament they find not that the Joyning of a Couple in Marriage ever was the Office of a Priest, nor in the Gospel any Preacher among Christians appointed thereto. Therefore it is their Custom, that when any intend to enter into Marriage, they first having the Consent of Parents or Guardians, acquaint the respective Mens and Womens Meetings of their Intention, and after due Enquiry, all Things appearing clear, they in Publick Meeting solemnly take each other in Marriage, with a Promise of Love and Fidelity, and not to leave one another before Death separates them. Of this a Certificate is drawn, mentioning the Names and Distinctions of the Persons thus joyned, which being first signed by themselves, those then that are present sign as witnesses."[916] Commenting on this passage, Hallowell says: "This custom is still in force, and with some unimportant verbal amendments, the phraseology of early Friends is still preserved. After an appropriate silence, the groom and bride rise, and taking each other by the hand, each in turn repeats, 'In the presence of the Lord and this assembly, I take thee to be my wife (or husband), promising, with Divine assistance to be unto thee a loving and faithful husband (or wife) until death shall separate us.' For religious solemnity and tender, touching simplicity, the Quaker marriage ceremony has always challenged comparison, and if anyone desires to feel and realize the presence of God in a public or private gathering, let him attend a Quaker wedding."[917] These principles are revealed in the early legislation for Pennsylvania; for, while believing it an ordinance of God, the Friends held that the regulation and protection of marriage belong to the civil authority. In the "Laws agreed upon in England" May 5, 1682, it is provided "that all marriages (not forbidden by the law of God, as to nearness of blood and affinity ...) shall be encouraged; but the parents or guardians shall be first consulted, and the marriage shall be published before it be solemnized, and it shall be solemnized by taking one another as husband and wife, before credible witnesses, and a certificate of the whole, under the hands of parents and witnesses, shall be brought to the proper register of that county, and shall be registered in his office."[918] This is a clear statement of the desires of the proprietor and his associates. Accordingly in a law enacted by the assembly in December, 1683, there is a provision regarding marriage only differing in details from the declaration made beyond the sea. The purpose of the act, as expressed in the preamble, is "to prevent Clandestine, Loose, and unseemly proceedings" in the province and its "territories." As before, marriage is to be encouraged; parental consent is required; the parties must clear themselves "from all other engagements assured by a Certificate from some Credible persons where they have lived;" affix their "intentions of Marriage on the Court, or Meeting-house Door of the County where they Dwell, one Month before the solemnization thereof;" the marriage shall be celebrated "by taking one another as husband and wife, before Sufficient Witnesses;" and a "certificate of the whole under the hands of parties and witnesses (at least twelve,) shall be brought to the Register of the County" where the marriage takes place and be with him filed for record. For neglect of the requirements of law the parties are to be fined ten pounds, and the "person so joining others in Marriage" twice that amount.[919] The "Great Law" of 1682, punishes adultery severely, sanctions divorce for that offense,[920] and contains the declaration, unique since old English days, that "no person, be it either widower or widow, shall contract marriage, much less marry, under one year after the decease of his wife or her husband."[921] This provision of 1682 is declared fundamental, and by it in fact the main principles of the marriage law of Pennsylvania were defined. Still one or two important changes were subsequently made. Thus, in 1684, the certificate of their "clearness of all engagements" is to be produced to the "religious society" to which the persons "relate;" or to a justice of the peace of the county where they live.[922] From this requirement it may doubtless be inferred that either civil celebration before a magistrate or religious celebration according to the rites of any denomination was contemplated. Such is expressly declared to be the case by the act of 1693, which runs in nearly the same words as the preceding, except that now, after mentioning the twelve witnesses, it is provided that at least one justice of the peace of the county must be present at the solemnization; and provided also that "this Law shall not extend to any who shall marry or be marryed by any person authorized by the Church of England, so as they observe the methods of publication, Licensing & Solemnization" required by English law, "nor to any persons that marry in their own Society in the absence of a Justice of the peace."[923] With the exception of a provision in 1730, forbidding the justice in case of minors to subscribe as witness without a certificate of parental consent,[924] the law of 1693, re-enacted in 1700 and again in 1701,[925] still governs the nuptial celebration in Pennsylvania;[926] and previous to 1788 the marriage law of Delaware was practically the same.[927] It remains to give a few illustrations of administrative practice and social custom. So far as it appears, the courts and magistrates were not given much employment in domestic controversies. But the provincial council seems to have exercised jurisdiction in divorce and matrimonial causes. For example, in 1685 we learn that "information being given to this board of ye unlawfull Marriage of Rd Noble, of ye County of New Castle, Ordered that ye Justices of that County have notice given by ye Secrtrs, to Inspect the same and give report thereof to this board."[928] Again, in 1703 Andrew Bankson, one of the justices of Philadelphia county, on complaint of the president, got himself into trouble "for irregularly marrying a couple lately according to law, but against ye Prohibitions of ye Parents." When called to account before the council, the justice declared that he was "wholly ignorant of its being illegal, & was heartily sorry for what was done, promising that wether he should continue in Commission, or otherwise, this should be such a caution to him as to prevent him of committing the like for ye future, & being severely checked was dismissed."[929] Celebration on the president's license in place of civil notice similar to the plan existing in the royal provinces was introduced as early as 1684 and the practice was continued to the Revolution;[930] although marriages thus solemnized were looked at askance by the Quakers as hardly orthodox,[931] and there are the usual complaints of extortion.[932] The marriage certificate was itself an elaborate document of historical interest, not only because of the full statement therein of all the previous stages in the transaction, but because in simple phrase we catch many a glimpse of Quaker sentiment and teaching in regard to the nuptial covenant. Sometimes even at the marriage of persons of humble station, this instrument was signed by many persons; as in the case of John Roades and Hannah Willcox, in 1692, whose wedding certificate bears the names of fifty witnesses.[933] In the first half of the eighteenth century the Pennsylvania Friends, like the New England Puritans, were much worried over the question of forbidden degrees. They were sorely disturbed concerning marriage "between first cousins, or one person marrying two sisters, or a man marrying his wife's first cousin, or justices of the peace undertaking to marry people by virtue of licenses obtained to that end, or marriages by members of the sect with others not of that persuasion, in young couples 'keeping company' without the consent of their parents. In 1725 and 1731, Chester and Burlington Monthly Meetings sought the advice of Yearly Meeting upon these subjects," and decisions were subsequently rendered in the negative on every point.[934] A register of marriages was kept through a custodian appointed by the monthly meeting. From the records of the Philadelphia society, which have been preserved "for the first thirty-two years of the city," it appears that the first marriage solemnized was that of Thomas Smith and Priscilla Allen in 1682; and they, says Watson, "had before passed one Meeting in the Isle of Wight."[935] The monthly meeting was a mighty power, and it kept a sharp eye on all the social goings and comings of its members.[936] In fact, the constant surveillance of the meeting over the daily life of the individual reminds one of the way in which domestic conduct and private business were dealt with by provincial law and town ordinances in the New England colonies.[937] Courtship, espousal, and marriage were looked after much in the same spirit. The Quaker maid was lucky if she might receive her lover on the "stoop" in presence of father and mother.[938] The Friends were not content with the publicity given by posting the intention of marriage as prescribed by the law. In addition, it was the duty of the betrothed couple to ask their own banns, or to "pass the meeting," as it was called in solemn phrase. "In the intense silence of the Quaker assembly the man arose from his seat on his side of the meeting and said formally: 'I intend to take Dorcas Macy to be my wife if the Lord permit.' Dorcas then arose on the woman's side of the aisle or partition and said in turn: 'I intend to take Jonathan Coffin to be my husband if the Lord permit.'[939] A committee of 'weighty men and women' was then appointed to learn 'the conversation and clearness of the parties'—that is to learn specially whether either were entangled in any other matrimonial engagement. If the report of these inspectors proved favorable, the 'continuance of the intention of marriage' was permitted, they were 'liberated to proceed according to the devout order of truth,' and the engaged pair were said to have 'passed meeting.' But sometimes the committee of inspectors discovered obstacles, or 'disorderly walking,' or a previous flirtation. There still was redress; the offender had to make a self-condemnation and apology for his offense, in meeting, the next First day, in some such words as these: 'Friends, I am very sorry for my transgression, and desire mercy from God and forgiveness of all the people of God whom I have offended.' The marriage was usually then permitted. If a sober young Friend sought a wife in another town, his home meeting sent him off fortified with a certificate enumerating his virtues. One such ran partly thus: 'He is of sober and orderly behaviour; a frequenter of our Meetings and in good Eunity with us; is clear of all Women hereaway on account of Marriage so far as we can find; soe we recommend him to your further Care in accomplishing their Intending Marriage.'"[940] Faithful Friends were enjoined by the meeting not to marry out of the society; and so the worldly lover was sometimes forced to turn Quaker or "lose his bride." On the other hand, says Earle, if a Friend took a wife "out of meeting, he might by profoundly humbling himself, and acknowledging his error, still be retained in the society, though for a time not in good report. No Quaker groom could express contrition for an offense in 'marrying out of meeting,' nor indeed submit patiently to discipline for it without unmanly disloyalty to his confiding consort.... One reads thus: "'To the Monthly Meeting of friends now in meeting at So. Kingston. I through Inattention to the Lights of Christ have Married a wife out of the good order of Friends, neither was she a member of their Society. Therefore now being Sincible that their Rules and orders therein is Consistant with truth, and Seeing the Error of My Doings, am sorry for my Transgression therein, and Desire friends to pass by my offense, and still Continue their Care for me, desiring I may be preserved to walk according to good order for time to come.'"[941] As already suggested, the Pennsylvania Friends indulged in much good cheer and sometimes in lavish display at the wedding time. A description given us by the annalist Watson may serve for the purpose of comparison between their nuptial festivals and those practiced by their New England contemporaries. "The wedding entertainments of olden times, he says, "were very expensive and harassing to the wedded. The house of the parent would be filled with company to dine; the same company would stay to tea and to supper. For two days punch was dealt out in profusion. The gentlemen saw the groom on the first floor, and then ascended to the second floor, where they saw the bride." Every man present, even though hundreds were invited, was privileged to kiss the bride and to repeat the process each day while the feast lasted. These were the same persons who had signed the marriage certificate in the meeting. Sometimes the "married pair for two weeks saw large tea parties at their home, having in attendance every night the groomsman and bridesmaids." All this was not enough. "When these ... entertainments were made, it was expected also that punch, cakes, and meats should be sent out very generally in the neighborhood even to those who were not visiters in the family."[942] In some towns another writer tells us, "the custom was after a wedding to set a table in front of the house and feast all passers-by. In the country Quaker brides had an 'infare' or wedding treat, often so liberal as to be a serious drag on the family that provided it." Moreover, it should be noted that the great wedding festival had been preceded by a similar feast or "treat" at the first "passing of the meeting," when the banns were published.[943] Such excesses seem inconsistent with traditional Quaker sobriety. One is astonished that they could have been tolerated so long. But at length it was decided that "passing" in one meeting should suffice.[944] To lessen the expenses the Philadelphia society in 1716 "advised no extraordinary provision for weddings, and the avoidance 'as much as may be of inviting those not under our discipline.'"[945] So the old frivolities "were relegated to the limbo of exploded vanities, and matrimonial alliances were attended with no other ceremony than that of the parties taking each other by the hand in public meeting and avowing their willingness to enter the connubial state." The certificate was then entered in the record book of the meeting and the celebration was complete.[946]
CHAPTER XV DIVORCE IN THE AMERICAN COLONIES [Bibliographical Note XV.—The most valuable original material for the history of divorce in Massachusetts during the period of the first charter is afforded by the decisions of the court of assistants in the exercise of its primary jurisdiction. These may be found in Vol. I of the Colonial Records, to September 7, 1641; the Barlow MS. Records of the Court of Assistants, October 28, 1641, to March 5, 1643/44; published by Whitmore in Bibliographical Sketch of the Laws of the Mass. Colony (Boston, 1890); and, after an interval for which the record is missing, in Noble's Records of the Court of Assistants, March 3, 1673, to March 23, 1691/92 (Boston, 1901). A number of cases have been found in the MSS. Early Court Files of Suffolk, supplemented by the MSS. Records of the County Court of Suffolk, and the MSS. Records of the County Court of Middlesex. The Massachusetts Colonial Records are, of course, very important. There is an instructive passage in the first volume of Hutchinson's History of Mass. (Salem, 1795); and much aid has been given by Whitmore in the work already cited; Newhall, Ye Great and General Court (Lynn, 1897); Goodwin, Pilgrim Republic (Boston, 1888); and Cowley, Our Divorce Courts (Lowell, 1880). The last-named work in part had already appeared in the Albany Law Journal, XX (Albany, 1879). It may be read in connection with the same writer's Famous Divorces of All Ages (Lowell, 1878); and his Browne's Divorce and its Consequences (Lowell, 1877). For the period of the second charter the divorce record is missing until 1739. Between that date and 1760 the Suffolk Files already mentioned yield eleven cases. From 1760 to 1786 there is a continuous and apparently complete record in a MS. "Divorce" book in the office of the clerk of the supreme judicial court for Suffolk county. An interesting petition may be found in the eighth volume of the Collections of the New Hampshire Historical Society; and in general for all the New England colonies the records and the various collections of laws mentioned in Bibliographical Note XII have been used. Durfee, Gleanings from the Judicial History of Rhode Island (Providence, 1883), and Arnold, History of the State of Rhode Island (New York, 1874), are also helpful. Trumbull, Appeal to the Public (New Haven, 1788), gives some statistics in connection with the alleged laxity of Connecticut divorce laws; but historically his statements are misleading and very inaccurate. In the southern colonies the English divorce laws were in abeyance, except in case of separate alimony. The meager materials existing for a "negative" sketch are therefore derived almost wholly from the judicial decisions. Among these—cited more fully in the footnotes—the most instructive are: for Virginia, Fulcher v. Fulcher, in 1 Palmer's Calendar of Va. State Papers (Richmond, 1875), 29; Purcell v. Purcell, 4 Hening and Munford's Reports (Richmond, 1854), 506; and Almond v. Almond, 4 Randolph's Reports, 662, or 15 American Decisions, 781. For Maryland, Galwith v. Galwith, 4 Harris and McHenry's Md. Reports (Annapolis, 1818), 477; Farnshill v. Murray, 1 Bland's Reports, 479, or 18 American Decisions, 344; Helms v. Franciscus, 2 Bland's Reports, 544, or 20 American Decisions, 402; Wallingsford v. Wallingsford, 6 Harris and Johnson's Reports, 485; Macnamara's case, Scott's case, Govane's case, all in 2 Bland's Reports, 566, 568, 570; Crane v. Meginnis, 1 Gill and Johnson's Ch. Reports, 468, or 19 American Decisions, 237; Wright v. Wright's Lessee, 2 Md. Reports, 429, or 56 American Decisions, 723; and Jamison v. Jamison, 4 Md. Ch. Reports, 289, 295. For Georgia see Finch v. Finch, 14 Georgia Reports, 362; and especially Head v. Head, 2 Kelly's Reports, 191. The New York Colonial MSS. preserved in the State Library at Albany have yielded several documents of importance for the chapter. Cadwallader Colden, the last governor of the province, has an instructive passage in his Letters on Smith's History of New York: Collections New York Historical Society, Fund Series, I, 1868, showing that in the early period divorces were granted by the royal governors. Various cases and illustrations have been gleaned from Gerard, The Old Stadt Huys; Valentine, Manual of the Corporation; Records of New Amsterdam; Munsell, Annals of Albany; Duke of Yorke's Book of Laws; New Jersey Archives; O'Callaghan, Ordinances; and especially O'Callaghan and Fernow, Documents—all of which have been described in Bibliographical Note XIV. A number of extracts from old records have been borrowed from Alice Morse Earle's excellent book Colonial Days in Old New York (New York, 1896); and among the decisions cited, Chancellor Kent's opinion in Williamson v. Williamson, Johnson's Chancery Reports, 488, 491; and that of Chancellor Walworth in Wood v. Wood, 2 Paige's Chancery Reports, 108, 111, bearing on the validity of the common law in the province, are of special interest. The materials for Pennsylvania are furnished by Linn, Charter and Laws; the Colonial Records of Pennsylvania; Bioren, Laws (Philadelphia, 1803); and Gordon, History of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, 1829). Lastly, for the entire group of colonies, Kent, Commentaries (Boston, 1884); Story, Commentaries (Boston, 1891); and particularly Bishop, Marriage, Divorce, and Separation (Chicago, 1891), have been of service.]
I. IN NEW ENGLAND Under normal conditions civil divorce is the counterpart of civil marriage. Naturally, in the New England colonies the same influences which determined the rise of civil marriage secured also the adoption of a liberal policy respecting divorce. In each case there was a reaction against the forms and abuses of the ancient canonical and ecclesiastical systems; while at the same time the innovations were in a measure sustained by appeal to the Levitical code. Everywhere as a result the ideas of the Reformation Fathers—the general trend of Protestantism—found effective expression in statute and judicial decree. For in most respects throughout New England the broad modern doctrines of the Reformatio Legum of Edward VI.'s commission, though scarcely even now completely victorious in the mother-land, were from the outset put in practice by both Puritan and Separatist. The American legal conception of divorce as pertaining, not to the criminal, but exclusively to the civil jurisdiction, had its birth in the seventeenth century.[947] In all the New England colonies the canonical decree of separation from bed and board was practically, though not entirely, abandoned. On the other hand, a dissolution of the bond of matrimony was freely granted for various causes, such as desertion, cruelty, or breach of the marriage vow; and usually, though not always, the husband and wife were dealt with as equals before the law. These general principles will be illustrated, somewhat in detail, by reference to the history of the particular provinces. a) Massachusetts.—For the Bay Colony we have a concise summary from the pen of Governor Hutchinson, who presided in the divorce court for many years. "In matters of divorce," he says, "they left the rules of the canon law out of the question; with respect to some of them, prudently enough. I never heard of a separation, under the first charter, a mensa et thoro. Where it is practised, the innocent party often suffers more than the guilty. In general what would have been cause for such a separation in the spiritual courts, was sufficient, with them, for a divorce a vinculo. Female adultery was never doubted to have been sufficient cause; but male adultery, after some debate and consultation with the elders, was judged not sufficient. Desertion a year or two, when there was evidence of a determined design not to return, was always good cause; so was cruel usage of the husband. Consanguinity they settled in the same degrees as it is settled in England and in the levitical laws."[948] By the code of 1660 the court of assistants, sitting twice a year, is given authority to hear and determine "all causes of divorce."[949] This is the only extant law on the subject for the period of the first charter. It is, however, almost certain that the assistants in the "quarter courts," or other tribunals, possessed such jurisdiction from the beginning. It is probably intended to be covered by the authority conferred on the quarter courts in 1639;[950] and the evidence of the Halsall case shows that as early as 1656 "the power of divorce doth properly belong" to the court of assistants. From the same case it has been inferred that the code of 1649 may have contained a like provision.[951] Neither the right of appeal nor the causes or kinds of divorce are defined by the statutes. Information regarding these important points must be sought in the cases themselves. As a result of the failure of positive legislation, there is a lack of precision and harmony in the judicial practice of the entire colonial and provincial eras. For the period 1639-92, as shown in Table I, forty actions for divorce or annulment of marriage have been discovered. Thirty-one of these are mentioned by Newhall, Whitmore, Goodwin, and Cowley, not less than eighteen being found by the latter in the assistants' records for the years 1673-92, since edited by Mr. Noble.[952] The remaining nine cases are here added from further search in the court records and the Suffolk Files. The records of the court of assistants from 1644 to 1673 are missing; else doubtless the list might be considerably enlarged. The first case thus far brought to light is that of James Luxford, elsewhere considered. On December 3, 1639, his bigamous marriage was declared void by the "Court of Assistants or Quarter Court;" and very righteously "all that he hath" as a kind of alimony was given to the woman last married and to her children.[953] A similar instance of having two wives was dealt with in November, 1644.[954] TABLE I Cases of Divorce and Annulment of Marriage in Massachusetts, 1639-92 No. | Where Found[955] | Date | Case | Cause | Court | Decree | 1 | C.R., I, 283 | Dec. 3. | Second wife v. | Another | Assistants | Marriage | | | 1639 | Jas. Luxford | wife | | void | 2 | W., 42 | Mar. 5, | Anne v. | Desertion, | Assistants | Mar. | | | 1643/4 | Dennis Clarke | adultery | | dissolved | 3 | W., 42; | Nov. 13, | Eliz. Frier v. | Another | Assistants | Marriage | | C.R., II, 86 | 1644 | J. Richardson | wife | blh | void | 4 | C.R., IV, i, 32 | Oct. 16, | Wm. v. | Deser., | General | Mar. | | | 1650 | Eleanor Palmer | remarriage | court | dissolved | 5 | C.R., III, 277, | May 26, | Dorothy v. | Long | General | Leave to | | IV, i, 89 | 27,1652 | Wm. Pester | absence | court | marry | 6 | C.R., III, 350, | May 14, | Dorcas v. | Desertion, | General | Mar. | | IV, i, 190 | 1654 | Jno. Hall | adultery? | court | dissolved | 7 | Suff. Files, 257 | Before | Sam. and Apphia | None given | Assistants | See text | | | 1656 | Freeman | | | | 8 | Suff. Files, 257 | 1655-59 | Joan v. | Adultery | Assists. to | Mar. | | C.R., IV, i, | | Geo. Halsall | | general ct. | dissolved; | | 272, 380, 401 | | | | | reversed on ap. | 9 | C.R., I, 85, | June 9, | Petition of Wm. | None given | Co. ct. on | Denied | | IV, i, 259, 269 | 1656 | Clements | | ref. of g. ct. | | 10 | C.R., IV, i, 282 | Oct. 14, | Petition of | Deser., | Co. ct. on | None | | | 1656 | Mary Batchiler | remarriage | ref. of g. ct. | appears | 11 | C.R., IV, ii, 8 | May 22, | Rachel v. | None given | General | Mar. | | | 1661 | Jos. Langton | | court | dissolved | 12 | C.R. IV, ii, 91 | Oct. 21, | Mary v. | Deficiency | General | Denied | | | 1663 | E. White | | court | | 13 | Suff. Files, 651 | Sept. 9, | Petition of | Deser., | Assistants | Mar. | | | 1664 | Sarah Helwis | remarriage | | dissolved | 14 | Suff. Files, 913 | Jan. 28, | Christ. and | Adult., | Assists. | None | | | 1668/9 | Eliz. Lawson | cruelty of h.; | from co. ct. | appears | | | | | bad cond. of wife | | | 15 | Plym. Rec., | Aug. 3, | James v. | Desertion, | General | Mar. | | v, 33 | 1670 | Eliz. Skiffe | adultery | court | dissolved | 16 | C.R. IV, | Oct., | Eliz. v. | Desertion, | General | Mar. | | ii, 465 | 1670 | Henry Stevens | adultery? | court | dissolved | 17 | Suff. Files, | Oct., | Kath. v. | Adultery, | Assistants | Mar. | | 1148; N., 32 | 1672 | Ed. Nailer | cruelty | | dissolved | 18 | Suff. Files, | Mch. 4, | Mary v. | Deser., | Assistants | Mar. | | 1360; N., 30 | 1674/5 | Wm. Sanders | remarriage | | dissolved | 19 | Suff. Files, | 1673-77 | Hugh and | Disease | Assistants | Sep. b.b.? | | 1644; N., 91 | | Mary Drury | and imp. of h. | | | 20 | Rec. Suff. co. | Before | Philip and | See text | See text | Mar. | | ct., 506 | 1678 | Mary Wharton | | | dissolved | 21 | Suff. Files, | Sept. 9, | Hugh v. | Another | Assists.; | Denied on | | 1741; C.R., V, | 1678 | Dorcas March | husband | app. to g. ct. | app. | | 205; N., 127. | | | | | | 22 | C.R., V, 188 | May 9, | Mary v. | Long | General | Leave to | | | 1678 | Henry Maddox | absence | court | marry | 23 | N., 127 | 1678 | Hope v. | Desertion, | Assistants | Mar. | | | | Sam. Ambrose | adultery, failure | | dissolved | | | | | to provide | | | 24 | N., 138 | 1678 | Rebeckah v. | None given | Assistants | Mar. | | | | Rich. Cooly | | | dissolved | 25 | Suff. Files, | Oct. 15, | Mary v. | None given | General | Mar. | | 1807; C.R., V, | 1679 | Aug. Lyndon | | court | dissolved | | 248, 249 | | | | | | 26 | N., 144 | 1679 | Mary v. | Deser., | Assistants | Mar. | | | | Job Bishop | remarriage | | dissolved | 27 | N., 147 | 1679 | Mary v. | Assistants | | | | | | Jos. White | | | | 28 | N., 168 | 1680 | Sus. v. | Deser., | Assistants | Mar. | | | | Ed. Goodwin | fail. to prov. | | dissolved | 29 | N., 197 | 1681 | Sam. v. | Adultery, | Assistants | Mar. | | | | Mary Holton | desertion | | dissolved | 30 | N., 200 | 1681 | Dorcas v. | Deser., | Assistants | Mar. | | | | Christ. Smith | fail. to prov. | | dissolved | 31 | N., 208 | 1681 | Rachel v. | | Assistants | Mar. | | | | Lawrence Clenton | | | dissolved | 32 | N., 227 | 1682 | Eliz. v. | Bigamy | Assistants | Mar. | | | | Robt. Street | | | dissolved | 33 | N., 229 | 1683 | Petition of | | Assistants | Denied | | | | Ann Perry | | Assistants | Denied | 34 | N., 240 | 1683 | Eliz. v. | Incest, | Assistants | Mar. | | | | Nich. Maning | desertion | | dissolved | 35 | N., 256, 258 | 1684 | Sarah v. | | Assistants | Mar. | | | | Thos. Cooper | | | dissolved | 36 | Suff. Files, 2347 | Sep. 17, 1685 | Petition of | Adultery | Assistants | Mar. | | | | Thos. Winsor | | | dissolved | 37 | N., 326 | 1690 | Phillip v. | Deser., | Assistants | Mar. | | | | Hannah Goss | remarriage | | dissolved | 38 | N., 242 | 1690-91 | Mary v. | Adultery, | Assistants | | | | | Sam. Stebbins | desertion | | | 39 | N., 361 | 1691 | Hannah and | Affinity | Assistants | Marriage | | | | Josiah Owen | (bro's wife) | | void | 40 | N., 342 | 1690 | Sam. and | Affinity | Assistants | Marriage | | | | Reb. Newton | (uncle's wid.) | void | |
Earlier in the same year "Anne Clarke" was released from her husband Dennis for desertion, "refusing to accompany with hir," and for living in adultery with another woman.[956] The case of Joan and George Halsall, 1655-59, is especially enlightening regarding the early law and procedure in divorce suits. Joan's original petition was presented to the general court, by which, as already noted, the matter was referred to the assistants for "final determination." In a later petition to the last-named tribunal the injured wife complains not only of her husband's "frequent abusing himself with Hester Lug," but "also of his wicked, constant & unsufferable expense" in "mulled sack and otherwise" with another woman of equally bad reputation, humbly asking that she "may be dismissed from her intolerable burden—an uncleane yoake-fellow."[957] The decree of the court is missing, but elsewhere we learn that her prayer was granted.[958] The fact is noteworthy; for seemingly this marriage was dissolved solely for the man's adultery.[959] If so, down to 1776, as will later appear, it is the only known clear exception to the rule mentioned by Governor Hutchinson. The case was, however, not yet ended. Halsall appealed to the general court; and so, on November 12, 1659, after the decree of the assistants had been in force for three years, it was declared void and George was allowed to "have and enjoy the said Joan Halsall, his wife, again."[960] Jurisdiction on appeal thus belonged to the general court. This is further shown by the peculir case of Hugh and Dorcas March. In 1678, for "ye peace & satisfaction" of his conscience, Hugh asked the court of assistants to decide whether he might legally retain Dorcas as his wife, alleging that her former husband was living and hinting that a divorce from him had never been secured. With much parade of law and logic, in a long and vague petition, probably drafted by his attorney, he betrays far more anxiety to get rid of his spouse than to quiet the throes of an outraged conscience. The secret of this is clearly disclosed by Dorcas in the counter-petition, written by her own hand, and proving her to be a better lawyer than her husband's counsel. It seems she had been "for some yeares ye wife of Benoni Blackleach," with whom she had formerly lived in Connecticut. About nine years before the present action Blackleach "was taken in a crime worthy of death by ye Law," but he escaped from his captors. Six months thereafter he sent her a letter saying he dared not call her his wife, and subscribing himself her "friend not husband." Later, not knowing for six years whether he was living or dead, Dorcas came to her friends in Massachusetts, bringing with her, on the advice of "ye honored Gouernor Winthrop," the "testimonys" sworn against her guilty consort. These, together with a petition for the determination of her status, she laid before "ye honord Court in Boston," Governor Winthrop being present when the case was "agitated." This tribunal adjudged her a "free woman," as "some of ye honored Magistrates did tell" her.[961] Presently she was solicited in marriage by March, he giving her an "Ingagement vnder his hand of one hundred pounds of ye best of his estate," promising "yt he would remove his children from him yt they might not make any disturbance between" them. Then they were "published," joined in wedlock "by ye honord Deputy Governor," and thereafter "Lived comfortably." Next we reach the heart of the business. Hugh's children "liveing in ye familie" did "shamefully slight" her, purloining from her box the said "writing" of a hundred pounds; and their father disowned her as his wife. This conduct, she suggests, is due to a desire to "please his children" rather than to the scruples of a tender conscience. The magistrates were not moved by her plea. According to the record, "It was put ... whither Hugh March & said Dorcas might still lawfully live as man & wife;" and "the Court Resolved it in the Negative."[962] With this decree Hugh was not content. So on October 2, 1678, he prays the general court "to put a full Determination to the case." After a fortnight that body responded by overruling the lower court's decision, and declaring that the "sajd March ought to take the sajd Dorcas & reteyne hir as a wife, and to obserue & fullfill the marriage covenant according to his Engagement."[963] In 1668 a petition to the county court of Suffolk for a "bill of divorce" was referred to the assistants, because it "was not proper to the cognizance" of the former body.[964] On the other hand, in the exercise of its superior authority a case might be sent to the lower court with power to render a final decree. Thus in May, 1656, was so referred "unto County Court of Charlestown" the petition of William Clements of Watertown, "craving a divorce from his wife who for several years hath refused marriage fellowship with him."[965] The lower court proved conservative. Not only was a divorce denied, but the couple were commanded to "own each other according to their marriage covenant," on pain of being "severely punished" for refusal.[966] The general court was at once the legislature and the supreme judicial tribunal of the colony. In relegating the trial of divorce suits to the court of assistants it by no means surrendered its right to exercise the primary jurisdiction. A number of cases make it almost certain that it entertained and decided such cases in the first instance. William Palmer was so divorced in 1650.[967] Two years later Dorothy Pester, having waited "wth patience tenn yeeres for the retourne of her husband" William, prays "that she might not still be held in such bondage." Whereupon the court mercifully granted her "libertje to marry when God by his providence shall afoord her an Oppertunitje."[968] In the same way in 1654 Dorcas Hall was released on account of the desertion and other misconduct of her spouse.[969] "Rachel Langton, or Verney," was set "free from her late husband, Joseph," in 1661, no cause being assigned.[970] In 1663 the petition of Margaret Bennet in behalf of her daughter Mary White was denied.[971] A decree was granted in a peculiar form in 1670. In answer to the petition of Elizabeth Stevens, whose husband had deserted her and been guilty of "familiarity" with another woman, the "Court judgeth it meete to declare, that the petitioners marrying again another man shall not be indangered thereby as a transgression of our lawes."[972] The petition of Mary Maddox in 1678 alleges that her husband Henry had been absent unheard of for "a thirteen yeares." She was accordingly freed from the conjugal bond and put "at liberty to dispose of herself as she shall see meete."[973] Very generous alimony is sometimes allowed the injured woman. On October 15, 1679, because Augustine Lyndon "hath in so many Particulars Broken Covenant," his wife Mary is granted a full divorce, besides being awarded two-thirds of her husband's lands and the "small matter that now Remaineth in Deacon Allen's hands" for the use of herself and children, "till the County Court shall take further Order." The next day, on a second petition, additional property is decreed to the "late wife of Augustine Lyndon now Mary Sanderson," showing apparently that she was permitted to resume her maiden name.[974] The eight[975] divorces just enumerated are all granted by the general court on petitions precisely similar to those regarding other matters dealt with by that body in the first instance. To all intents and purposes they are "legislative" divorces; as much so, in fact, as are those so often sanctioned by the state legislatures during the present century. The remaining cases mentioned in the table are for the most part very simple and require but little comment here. Two are only known from incidental notice in other records.[976] Four are contained in the Suffolk Files.[977] In one of these the divorced husband, who had broken the marriage vow and been guilty of "Inhuman Carriage & Satanic Cruelty" toward his wife and children, was banished ten miles from Boston; and later, when he was permitted to visit that town on business, he was required to give bond "to be on good behavior towards his late wife."[978] It is significant that during the seventeenth century not a single clear case of divorce from bed and board has been discovered in any of the Massachusetts records.[979] During the period of the second charter divorce controversies and all matrimonial questions are to be "heard and determined by the governour and council,"[980] whose decrees may be executed by arresting and committing the "body" of the person disregarding them.[981] By a law of 1641 it had already been provided that the divorced wife, if the innocent party, should retain her right of dower in one-third of the husband's real property for life.[982] A later act makes provision for alimony. The "superior court of judicature" is empowered in case of divorce or nullity to assign the woman "such reasonable part of the estate of her late husband as in their discretion the circumstances of the estate may admit, not exceeding one-third part thereof."[983] As in the earlier period, the causes and kinds of divorce are not determined by legislation; but an act of 1695 declares that the penalty for "polygamy"—at this time death—shall not apply to those who marry when the husband or wife has been absent wilfully or unheard of "by the space of seven years together."[984] Three years later the term of absence is shortened, the law taking the form it sometimes has in the other colonies. It is provided that "if any married person, man or woman, has lately or shall hereafter go to sea in a ship or other vessel bound from one port to another where the passage is usually made in three months' time, and such ship or other vessel has not been or shall not be heard of within the space of three full years ... , or shall only be heard of under such circumstances as may rather confirm the opinion, commonly received, of the whole company's being utterly lost, in every such case the matter being laid before the governour and council, ... the man or woman whose relation is in this manner parted from him or her may be esteemed single and unmarried; and upon such declaration thereof, and license obtained from that board, may lawfully marry again."[985] After 1692 the legislature does not seem to have interfered in divorce suits either on appeal or in the first instance. In a few cases the county court of general sessions of the peace is found granting separate maintenance. Thus in 1710/11, on petition of Elizabeth Goddard, two men are appointed to examine certain accounts of her husband John, and to "take into their hands for the use of the Petitioner what shall appear to be due to him."[986] In 1725 Dorothy, "the wife of John Jackson of Boston Starchmaker," asks for separate maintenance, alleging that her husband had utterly refused to provide for her support, and that she "would run the hazzard of her life in case she should attempt to Enter into his house." The court orders Jackson to take his wife home, support her according to his ability, "and keep his Majesty's Peace." On refusal, he is required to enter into recognizance in the sum of fifty pounds to make Dorothy a weekly allowance of eight shillings.[987] TABLE II Divorce Cases Before the Governor and Council of Massachusetts, 1739-60 (Found in MSS. Files of Suffolk County, Vol. DCCXCIII) No. | No. of File | Date | Case | Cause | Decree | Hus. Occupation | Years Mar. | 1 | .29726 | 27-12-38 | Gill v. Mary Belchar | Coer. to mar. | | Yeoman | | 2 | .29727 | 24- 6-40 | Jesse v. Grace Turner | Incapacity | M. void | Farmer | 5 | 3 | .29728 | 27- 4-44 | Eliz. v. Jos. Bredeen | Incapacity | | Carp't'r | 11 | 4 | .29729 | 5-12-52 | G. v. M. Rainer [Raymond] | Adultery | M. diss. | Husb'n | | 5 | .29730 | 13- 6-51 | Eliz. v. Ezekiel Eldridge | Bigamy | M. void | | 1 | 6 | .29730 | 26-12-52 | Susanna v. Ezek. Eldridge | Deser., remar. | M. diss. | | 8 | 7 | .29731 | 20- 2-53 | Ben. v. Jemima Green | Adult., bast. | M. diss. | | | 8 | .29732 | 9- 4-54 | Petition of Hannah Wood | 5 yrs. absence | Lv. tom. | Mariner | | 9 | .29733a | 1-11-54 | Mary v. Wm. Clapham | Adult., bast. | Sep. b.b. | Gent. | | 10 | .29733b | -12-54 | Mary v. Geo. Arthur | Cr'l., was. est. | Sep. b.b. | Gent. | 13 | 11 | .29734 | --57 | Dan v. May McCarthy | Adultery | Mariner | | | The history of divorce legislation is a complete blank for nearly half a century under the provincial charter. Between 1692 and 1739 the record of the governor and council in such suits is entirely missing. For the next twenty-one years, 1739-60, eleven cases have been gathered from the court files (Table II); while during the following twenty-six years, 1760-86, a continuous and apparently complete record, showing ninety-six cases, is contained in a manuscript volume preserved in the office of the clerk of the supreme judicial court for Suffolk county (Table III). TABLE III Divorce Cases Before the Governor and Council, or the Council, of Massachusetts, 1760-86 (From MS. Book of "Divorces" in Office of Clerk of Supreme Judicial Court, Suffolk County) No. | Page | Date of Decree | Case | Cause | Decree | Husband's Occupation | Years Married | | | | | Charge[988] | Specifications | | | | 1 | 1 | 22- 4-60 | Wm. v. Eleanor Arbuthnot | | Adultery, elopement | Mar. dissolved | Soldier [officer] | 3 | 2 | 2 | 9- 6-60 | Henrietta v. Hugh Cane | | Bigamy, desertion, cruelty | Deferred | | | 3 | 4 | 10- 6-60 | Jane v. Joshua Eustis | | Adultery, desertion | Mar. dissolved | | ¾ | 4 | 5 | 5- 6-60 | Petition of Eunice Coffin | | Five years'absence | Leave to marry | Mariner | | 5 | 6 | 8-10-60 | Mary v. Rich. Hunt | | Cruelty | Accommodated | Truckman | 12 | 5a | 7 | 14- 2-61 | Mary v. Rich. Hunt | | Cruelty, failure to provide | Separate b. b.[988] | | | 6 | 11 | 11- 3-61 | Stephen v. Tabitha Lufkin | | Adultery, wasting estate | Mar. dissolved[988] | Mariner | 6 | 7 | 15 | 21- 4-62 | Petition of Ruth Woodberry | | Four years' absence | Leave to marry | Mariner | | 8 | 16 | 29- 7-62 | Wm. v. Hannah Davidson | | Bigamy | Marriage void | Gardener | 4 | 9 | 18 | 14- 2-63 | Ed. v. Rebecca Holman | | Adultery | Mar. dissolved[988] | Husbandman | 8 | 10 | 21 | 13- 7-63 | James v. Mary Torrey | | Adultery, elopement | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 8 | 11 | 24 | 15- 2-64 | Eliz. v. Mark Keith | | Cruelty, refuses bed | Separate b. b. | | 2 | 12 | 27 | 7-11-64 | Elias v. Bethia Parmenter | | Adultery, bastard | Mar. dissolved[988] | Soldier [captive] | 9 | 13 | 29 | 10- 4-65 | Ben. v. Lydia Ingersoll | | Adultery | Mar. dissolved[988] | Mariner | | 14 | 32 | 20- 6-65 | Margaret v. Fred Knodle | | Cruelty | Dismissed | Yeoman | | 15 | 33 | 14- 8-65 | Rachel v. John Wormley | | Bigamy | Marriage void[988] | | 8 | 16 | 35 | 24- 9-66 | Russell v. Mary Knight | | Adultery | Mar. dissolved | Cooper | 14 | 17 | 37 | 6- 5-67 | Thos. v. Abigail Hammet | | Adultery | Mar. dissolved | Yeoman | 17 | 18 | 40 | 16-12-67 | Mary v. Jno. Fairservice | | Cruelty, adult., att. to poison | Separate b. b. | Trader | 13 | 19 | 44 | 5- 2-68 | Ann v. Cornelius Vansise | | Desertion, failure to provide | Separate b. b. | | | 20 | 45 | 15- 6-68 | Jas. v. Mary Dougherty | | Adultery | Mar. dissolved[988] | Trader | 11 | 21 | 48 | 14- 9-68 | Lucy v. Scipio Purnan | | Cruel., sells wife, fail. to prov. | Separate b. b. | Truckman | 7 | 22 | 51 | 17- 4-70 | Jno. v. Anna Bragg | Adultery | Adultery | Mar. dissolved[988] | Cordwainer | 17 | 23 | 54 | 16-7-70 | Wm. v. Susanna Chambers | | Adultery | Mar. dissolved[988] | Mariner | 15 | 24 | 57 | 18-10-70 | Sam. v. Sarah Lefebure | | Bigamy | Marriage void[988] | Mariner | 1 | 25 | 59 | 9- 5-71 | Mary v. Henry Bates | | Bigamy, desertion | Marriage void[988] | | 6 | 26 | 62 | 19- 9-71 | Mehetable v. Josh. Nicholson | | Bigamy | Marriage void[988] | Mariner[?] | 2 | 27 | 64 | 23-10-71 | Jno. v. Jane Crosley | | Adultery | Mar. dissolved[988] | Ropemaker | 6 | 28 | 66 | 28-10-71 | Cadwell v. Charlotte Ford | | Adultery, drunkenness | Mar. dissolved | Husbandman | 3 | 29 | 68 | 17-10-71 | Abagail v. Jos. Bradstreet | | Desertion, sequest. fruits of wife's estate | Separate b. b. | Physician | 1½ | 30 | 70 | 10-12-72 | Jas. v. Hannah Richardson | | Adul., threats to life and pr'ty | Mar. dissolved | Esquire | 20 | 31 | 73 | 3- 2-73 | Jos. v. Eunice Price | | Adultery, elopement, bastard | Mar. dissolved[988] | Yeoman | 7 | 32 | 75 | 4- 3-78 | Sarah v. Enoch Kingsley | | Desertion, remarriage | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 13 | 33 | 78 | 2- 3-73 | Sarah v. Wm. Gould | | Cruelty, adult., ven. disease | Mar. dissolved[988] | Merchant | 13 | 34 | 80 | 4-11-73 | Martha v. Adam Air | | Cruelty, adult., fail. to prov. | Mar. dissolved | Turner | 4 | 35 | 83 | 15- 6-74 | Martha v. Wm. Jones | | Desertion, remarriage | Mar. dissolved[988] | Tailor | 12 | 36 | 85 | 15- 6-74 | Abigail v. John Pell | | Adult., ven. dis., fail. to prov. | Mar. dissolved | Gentleman | 10 | 37 | 87 | 21-11-76 | Asaph v. Naomi Leonard | Adultery | Adultery, elopement | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 28 | 38 | 90 | ?-12-76 | J. C. v. Mary Lewis | Adultery | Adultery | Mar. dissolved[988] | | | 39 | 92 | 27- 5-77 | Isaiah v. Mary Thomas | Adultery | Adultery | Mar. dissolved | Printer | 7 | 40 | 96 | 5- 9-77 | Rosanna v. Wm. Scott | Adultery | Adultery | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 11 | 41 | 101 | 30- 1-78 | Joshua v. Sarah Jay | Adultery | Adultery | Mar. dissolved[988] | Innholder | 19 | 42 | 104 | 14- 7-78 | Wm. v. Sarah Sturgis | Adultery | Adultery | Mar. dissolved | Mariner | | 43 | 107 | 15-10-78 | Jas. v. Hannah Thompson | Adultery | Adultery, squandered estate | Mar. dissolved[988] | Mariner | 2 | 44 | 110 | 25- 2-79 | Eliz. v. Samuel Bemis | Adultery | Adult., cruelty, fail. to prov. | Mar. dissolved[988] | Yeoman | 3 | 45 | 113 | 30-12-79 | Ed. v. Isabella Dawes | Adultery | Adultery, elopement | Mar. dissolved[988] | Peruke maker | 9 | 46 | 117 | 28- 2-80 | Rose v. Timothy Corles | Adultery | Adultery, failure to provide | Mar. dissolved[988] | Yeoman | 9 | 47 | 120 | 20- 2-80 | Deborah v. Ashael Owen | Adultery | Ad., des., remar., fail. to prov. | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 28 | 48 | 122 | 19- 9-80 | Chloe v. Luke Welch | Adultery | Adult., deser., fail. to prov. | Mar. dissolved[988] | Laborer [soldier] | 10 | 49 | 126 | 21- 9-80 | Alice v. Wm. Gray | Adultery | Adultery, failure to provide | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 10 | 50 | 128 144 | 21- 9-80 | Sarah v. Valentine Wheeler | Adultery | Adultery, desertion | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 34 | 51 | 131 | 6-10-80 | Mary v. Jno. Marshall | Adultery | Adultery, desertion | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 26 | 52 | 134 | 22-12-80 | Rebecca v. Jacob Dunnell | Adultery | Adultery, desertion, bastard | Mar. dissolved[988] | Mariner | 7 | 53 | 137 | 24- 1-81 | Geo. v. Phebe Shearman | Incapacity | Incapacity | Mar. dissolved[988] | | | 54 | 140 | 25- 1-81 | Eliz. v. Samuel Bemis | Adultery | Cruelty, ven. dis., adult. | | Husbandman | 1½ | 55 | 145 | 26- 5-81 | Mary v. Geo. Lobb | Cruelty | Cruelty, failure to provide | Separate b. b. | Mariner | 2 | 56 | 149 | 29- 9-81 | Amzi v. Jerusha Doolittle | Adultery | Adultery, elopement | Mar. dissolved | | | 57 | 150 | 29- 2-81 | Belah v. Amos Marsh | Adultery | Adultery, desertion, | Mar. dissolved | Husbandman | | 58 | 153 | 29-11-81 | Abigail v. Jno. Daniels | Adultery | Cruelty, adult., wasted estate | Mar. dissolved | | 31 | 59 | 156 | 3- 5-82 | J. P. v. Eliz. Barrere | Adultery | Has bastard | Mar. dissolved | | | 60 | 158 | 3- 5-82 | David v. Mary Hoit | Adultery | Adult., bastard, elopement | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 11 | 61 | 161 | 5- 6-82 | Rhoda v. Ben. Pidgin | Adultery | Deser., remar., fail. to prov. | Mar. dissolved | | 14 | 62 | 163 | 23-12-82 | Eliz. v. Thomas Finnecy | Adult., cruelty | Adultery, cruelty | Mar. dissolved | Mariner | 4 | 63 | 165 | 25- 2-83 | Ebenezer v. Anna Tarbox | Adultery | Has bastard | Mar. dissolved | Sailor [captive] | 3 | 64 | 166 | 15- 4-83 | Squire v. Dorcas Baker | Adultery | Has bastard | Mar. dissolved[988] | Soldier | 12 | 65 | 168 | 14- 5-83 | Ann v. David Gardner | Cruelty | Cruelty, failure to provide | Separate b. b. | | 22 | 66 | 170 | 4- 6-83 | Mary v. Stephen Holman | Adultery | Adultery, disease, desertion, failure to provide | Mar. dissolved | | 5 | 67 | 172 | 11- 6-83 | Z. W. v. Juda Thayer | Adultery | Desertion, bastard | Mar. dissolved[988] | Yeoman | 11 | 68 | 173 | 18- 6-83 | Thos. v. Rosanna Crippen | Adultery | Adultery, elopement | Mar. dissolved | | | 69 | 175 | 18- 6-83 | Alice v. Lemuel Hill | Adultery | Adultery, deser., remarriage | Mar. dissolved | | | 70 | 176 | 19- 6-83 | Mime v. T. J. Carnes | Adult., cruelty | Cruelty, bastard | Mar. dissolved | | 6 | 71 | 178 | 3- 7-83 | David v. Mary Harwood | Adultery | Adultery, elopement | Mar. dissolved | Husbandman | | 72 | 179 | 3- 7-83 | Sarah v. Stephen Temple | Adultery | Adultery, esp. with daughter | Mar. dissolved | | 25 | 73 | 181 | 17-10-83 | Sam. v. Margaret Crafts | Adultery | Adultery, elopement, bastard | Mar. dissolved[988] | Laborer | 15 | 74 | 184 | 17-10-83 | Puella v. Sam Kelly | Adultery | Adultery, another wife | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 5 | 75 | 186 | 27-10-83 | Albert v. Ann Fitch | Adultery | Adultery, elopement | Mar. dissolved[988] | Mariner | 6 | 76 | 188 | 29- 1-84 | Phin. v. Sybil Chamberlain | Adultery | Adultery | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 7 | 77 | 189 | 16- 2-84 | Sarah v. Abel Sawyer | Adultery | Adultery, venereal disease | Mar. dissolved | | 21 | 78 | 191 | 26- 2-84 | Jeremiah v. Mary Higerty | Adultery | Adultery | Mar. dissolved[988] | Mariner | 14 | 79 | 192 | 26- 2-84 | Andrew v. Eliz. Gage | Adultery | Bastard children | Mar. dissolved | Mariner | 18 | 80 | 194 | 4- 3-8 | Mary v. Wm. Pedley | Adult., cruelty | Adultery, cruelty | Mar. dissolved[988] | Mariner | 5 | 81 | 196 | 16- 3-84 | Hannah v. David Dudley | Adultery | Coresp. in 73, desertion | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 24 | 82 | 198 | 16- 3-84 | Hannah v. Nehemiah Adams | Adultery | Turned wife out; took another woman | Mar. dissolved[988] | Husbandman | 11 | 83 | 199 | 18- 3-84 | Sarah v. Francis Rust | Adult., cruelty | Adultery, cruelty | Denied | Trader | 5 | 83a | 204 | 11- 6-84 | Sarah v. Francis Rust | Cr
uelty | Cruelty | Separate b. b. | | | 84 | 201 | 10- 5-84 | Helena v. Jas. Bayard | Cruelty | Cruelty | Separate b. b. | Mariner | 27 | 85 | 202 | 4- 6-84 | Sibbla v. G. W. Babcock | Another wife | Another wife | Mar. dissolved[988] | Mariner | 4 | 86 | 205 | 6- 7-84 | Mary v. Thos. Smith | Adultery | Adult., deser., fail. to prov. | Mar. dissolved[988] | Husbandman | 12 | 87 | 206 | 18-10-84 | Sarah v. Wm. Vernon | Adult., cruelty | Adult., cruelty, fail. to prov. | Denied | Merchant | 6 | 87a | 214 | 21- 7-85 | Sarah v. Wm. Vernon | Adultery | Adultery with negress | Mar. dissolved | | | 87b | 222 | 1-11-85 | Sarah v. Wm. Vernon | | Suit for alimony | Denied | | | 88 | 208 | 27-10-84 | Appey v. Jno. Pumpelly | Adultery | Deser., remar., fail. to prov. | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 24 | 89 | 209 | 16- 2-85 | Patience v. Wm. Cornell | Adultery | Adultery, turned wife out | Mar. dissolved | Cordwainer | 21 | 90 | 211 | 3- 3-85 | Sarah v. Jno. Backus | Adultery | Adult., deser., fail. to prov. | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 6 | 91 | 212 | 3- 3-85 | Jacob v. Hannah Millard | Adultery | Adultery, elopement | Mar. dissolved[988] | Yeoman | 17 | 92 | 216 | 26-10-85 | Hannah v. Moses Elwell | Adultery | Adultery, desertion | Mar. dissolved[988] | Yeoman | 12 | 93 | 218 | 23-11-85 | Domin. v. Martha Record | Adultery | Adultery, elopement | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 17 | 94 | 220 | 24-11-85 | Jno. v. Hannah Wales | Adultery | Adultery, intoxication | Mar. dissolved | | 4 | 95 | 224 | 8- 2-86 | Anna v. Ebenezer Pelton | Adultery | Bas., remar., des., fail. to pro. | Mar. dissolved[988] | | 5 | 96 | 226 | 18- 2-86 | Rebec v. Ebenezer Simpson | Adult., cruelty | Adult., cruelty, fail. to prov. | Mar. dissolved[989] | Blacksmith | 20 |
A glance at the tables exhibiting the more important details connected with these actions discloses several important facts. For the period covered by Table III the average yearly number of cases is less than four, although the number rapidly increases after 1780. It is significant that in twenty-three out of seventy-six instances, for both tables, when the occupation is known, the husband is entered as a "mariner." The wife is plaintiff in sixty-one out of one hundred and seven petitions; and in fifty-three of the ninety-six cases listed in Table III the defendant, though summoned, fails to appear at the trial. The courts, as in the early period, still hesitate to grant the wife a divorce when the husband's adultery is the sole ground assigned. Before 1776 there is not a single clear instance[990] of such a divorce, although after that date marriages are freely dissolved for this cause. Another important innovation is of somewhat earlier date. Twelve out of the one hundred and seven cases entered in the two tables—about one in nine—are separations from bed and board, the two earliest occurring in 1754. In five of these the petitioner asks for either partial or absolute divorce, as the court may determine. Thus in 1767 Mary Fairservice, whose husband was guilty of adultery and cruelty with attempt to poison, "humbly prays ... that the Bonds of Marriage ... may be dissolved, or otherwise if ... this cannot by Law be done, that she may be divorced from Bed and Board." According to the record the husband appears to have been overanxious for a complete release; so the court granted only partial divorce and gave the wife alimony, although she had not asked for it in her petition. On the other hand, in each of the other four cases a full dissolution of the marriage bond was decreed.[991] Separation from bed and board was prayed for and granted in one instance which reveals the fact that cruelty, however aggravated, was not regarded as sufficient ground for a full divorce. This is the case of Lucy and Scipio Purnan, free negroes, decided in 1768. Although Scipio was in "good business" and lived "in good fashion," as we are told in the petition, he turned his wife out of doors and refused to provide for her support. Furthermore, in 1765, he "sold her to one William Alford who with the help of another man seized bound and gagged her at midnight and carried her off to Province of New York and there sold her 'being a black woman.'" After again being sold "she ran away back to Boston." Nevertheless Lucy sued for a mere separation with alimony and the custody of her child. The court granted her prayer, except that the child is not mentioned in the decree.[992] The conservatism of the court regarding this cause is further disclosed by the case of Sarah Rust in 1784. In her petition she asks for a dissolution of wedlock on the double ground of adultery and extreme cruelty. For lack of evidence as to the first-named offense sufficient to warrant either full or partial divorce, her prayer was denied, nothing being said in the decree concerning the charge of cruelty. Sarah then brought suit for cruelty alone, alleging that on the fifth of June, "as she was going into the yard of a dwelling house where a pitying friend has given her license to take shelter," Francis "waylaid & with a club beat & mangled her in a most atrocious and cruel manner," attempting to take her life. Accordingly the court allowed her a separation from bed and board.[993] An earlier case constitutes a notable exception to the policy of the court touching another ground of action. In 1771 Abigail Bradstreet got a partial divorce from her husband Joseph, who had abandoned her because he had "married a woman with less money than he might have expected." This case is unique; for in no other instance is separation granted where desertion alone without adultery or cruelty is charged.[994] A few other cases illustrating general facts or principles may be mentioned. In only one instance is the common-law action against the adulterer referred to.[995] Suits for divorce or nullity on the ground of bigamous marriages are of frequent occurrence.[996] On October 15, 1751, Ezekiel Eldridge, indicted for feloniously taking two wives, pleaded guilty and "pray'd the Court that he might be allow'd the Benefit of the Clergy which was Granted him." He was "thereupon burnt in the hand in the face of the Court" and allowed to "go without day Paying Costs." Thereafter one of his victims secured a divorce and his marriage with the other was declared null and void.[997] In six cases the decree is preceded by previous written or oral agreement by the parties.[998] The petition in cases of long absence under the act of 1698 is illustrated by the case of Eunice Coffin, in 1760, whose husband had been absent on a whaling voyage for five years without word. "The Petitioner hath the highest reason to imagine that the sloop ... was lost at Sea, for ... a few day[s] after they sailed there was the most terrible Storm that had been known since Nantucket hath been settled." So the court adjudged Eunice single and granted her "license" to marry again.[999] Finally it may be noted that in one instance a negro slave was granted a divorce by the governor and council in the regular way.[1000] b) New Hampshire, Plymouth, and New Haven.—The Massachusetts act of 1698 regarding desertion or long absence in precisely the same terms is embodied in the laws of New Hampshire,[1001] whose policy respecting divorce seems to have been identical with that of the Bay Province. The causes of divorce, except desertion, are not defined by law. As early as 1681, after the establishment of the independent government, the president and council appear to have possessed jurisdiction in such controversies. In that year a quaint petition is presented by Sarah Pearce, "not knowing where to find redress under Heaven but from your honorable council of this province," praying to be "disobliged" from her union with Hubbartus Mattoon with whom for "sundry years past she was married;" because, owing to more than seven years' wilful desertion, aggravated by unfaithfulness, she has been sadly disappointed in her hope of "a comfortable living with him;" and since, unless she mistake, by the "unerring rule of God and the laws of our nation," either or both of the causes assigned should free her from the nuptial bond. At the same time she humbly requests their honors in their justice to weigh "his strange embracement" of her estate while she lived with him; and his "solemn threatenings" since desertion to destroy her "by poison, or knocking of the head" if she come near him. Whether the court granted the petition does not appear.[1002] For the other New England colonies a point of special interest is the existence of legislative divorce. The popular assemblies, bearing the name of "general courts," are seen freely passing decrees of divorce, and this function is usually exercised concurrently with the law tribunals or by way of supplementing their jurisdiction.[1003] From the record of proceedings in such cases many an interesting glimpse is obtained of the social life of the times. Thus the general court of Plymouth grants dissolution of wedlock for desertion and adultery; but the conservatism of public sentiment in this regard is shown by the fact that for the seventy-two years during which that colony existed as a separate jurisdiction only six instances of divorce have been discovered. The first case occurred in 1661, when Elizabeth Burge on the scriptural ground was released from her husband Thomas, who for his misconduct was sentenced to be severely whipped at Plymouth and again at Sandwich. The court took care that Elizabeth's temporal interests should be protected. Not only did she receive one-third of her late husband's "estate, viz., lands, goods, and chattles, as her proper right forever;" but with his consent she got also "an old cotton bed and bolster, a pillow, a sheet, and two blankets ... with some other smale thinges ... to the vallue of forty shillings."[1004] The experience of William Tubbs, of Scituate, is unique. His wife Marcye was notoriously unfaithful to her nuptial vow and eventually eloped with another man. So he sought a divorce; and accordingly in 1664, "after the patriarchal style," as Goodwin observes, William Paybody of Duxbury gave him a "writing of divorcement," with Lieutenant Nash and John Sprague as witnesses. This document the general court treated as a nullity, fining Paybody five pounds and each of the witnesses three pounds for their resort to self-help. But four years later that court came to his relief in the regular way. In July, 1668, after serving due notice on the libellee through letters addressed to the government of "Road Iland"—where "Goodwife Tubbs" had fled with her paramour—he was pronounced "legally cleare from his couenant of marriage formerly made with Marcye, his late wife," with the privilege of marrying again, "if hee see fit soe to doe;" while she is solemnly declared to have cut herself off from the "[p=]son" and "estate of the said William."[1005] For similar cause and on the same conditions John Williams was released from his wife Sarah in 1674.[1006] The next year "Edward Jenkins, of Taunton, petitioned that his daughter Mary be divorced from Marmaduke Atkinson, who had been out of the Colony and made no provision for her during seven years or more. The decision was a singular one; namely that while the court sees no cause to grant a divorce 'yett they doe apprehend her to be noe longer bound, but doe leave her to her libertie to marry if she please.'"[1007] This was probably the court's homely way of saying that, the common-law term of seven years' absence without word having expired, it regarded the marriage as ipso facto dissolved without judicial process, though a formal decree was the more prudent course in case a second marriage were contemplated.[1008] In the Plymouth records, as often elsewhere, the term "divorce," following common-law usage, is employed for a sentence of nullity in case of a void or voidable marriage. Thus in 1680 Nicholas Wade, of Scituate, and his daughter, Elizabeth Stevens, present a petition "wherein they complaine of a great and sore crosse," her husband being a man of "debauged life, expressed by his plurallitie of wifes." Elizabeth was therefore "dismissed" from her conjugal bond; while the "debauged" Stevens for his "abominable wickedness" was "centansed to be seueerly whipt att the post."[1009] The last case is that of John Glover of Barnstable whose marriage with Mary his wife was dissolved in 1686 on account of her unfaithfulness.[1010] It is significant that four of the six petitions just enumerated are brought against the wife on the scriptural ground and none against the husband for the same cause. From this fact it may perhaps be inferred that in Plymouth Plantation, as at that time in Massachusetts, male adultery was not recognized as a legal ground of divorce.[1011] Similar illustrations of the life and thought of the times are afforded by the records of New Haven colony. In that "biblical commonwealth" it is, of course, not surprising that the influence of Judaism should be strongly felt. By the "capital laws" adultery is punished with death; so, before 1648, it is ordered that if "any marryed person proved an Adulterer, or an Adulteresse, shall by flight, or otherwise, so withdraw or keep out of the Jurisdiction, that the course of Justice (according to the mind and Law of God here established) cannot proceed to due execution, upon the complaint, proof, and prosecution, made by the party concerned, and interessed, a separation or Divorce, shall by sentence of the Court of Magistrates be granted," and the innocent party "have liberty to marry again." For physical incompetency marriage may be "declared void and a nullity;" and here we get a glimpse of the carnal motives for wedlock handed down from the Mosaic code and tenaciously surviving in all modern systems of law. Avoidance of marital "duty" is the real ground of action. Therefore should the man deceive the wife as to the fact, then such "satisfaction shall be made to the injured woman, out of the estate of the offender, and such fine paid to the Jurisdiction, as the Court of Magistrates shall judge meet."[1012] In like spirit an unusually stringent rule as to desertion is laid down. If either party shall wilfully abandon the other, "peremptorily refusing all Matrimoniall society, and shall obstinately persist therein, after due means have been used to convince and reclaim, the husband or wife so deserted, may justly seek and expect relief, according to 1 Cor. 7:15."[1013] Here no definite term of wilful desertion is fixed. But in 1663 divorce with remarriage is permitted in case of seven years' absence, when the deserted consort has "noe certaine intelligence" of the other's being alive or purposing to return.[1014] Whether this comprehends the case of wilful desertion we are not told. c) Connecticut.—The laws of Connecticut relating to divorce gained a surprisingly early maturity. Perhaps in none of the other colonies was so liberal, and on the whole so wisely conservative, a policy adopted. That plantation almost deserves the patriotic eulogy bestowed upon it by Swift, who declares in 1795 that the "institution of a court for the decision of such controversies, and the limitation of their power to such cases as the public good requires to be remedied, gives the practice adopted by" the Connecticut "laws, a decided preference to the practice of all other nations, and renders our mode of granting divorces, as favourable as the other modes have been unfavourable, to the virtue and happiness of mankind."[1015] Certainly in the middle of the seventeenth century no state, with the possible exception of Holland, possessed a system so modern in its character. Separation from bed and board was rejected. Only in one instance, it is said, and that by the assembly, was such a decree ever granted.[1016] Reasonable and fairly liberal causes of divorce a vinculo were clearly specified; husband and wife were treated with even justice; and, although legislative divorce, always liable to abuse, was permitted, the greater part of litigation seems always to have been intrusted to the regular courts. In short, Connecticut, in all the more essential respects, anticipated the present policy of civilized nations by nearly two hundred years. By the act of 1667 the court of assistants is empowered to grant bills of divorce from the bond of matrimony to either party, with the privilege of remarriage, for adultery, fraudulent contract, three years' wilful desertion with total neglect of duty, or for seven years' "providential" absence unheard of.[1017] This law was re-enacted in 1677;[1018] and the four causes, with scarcely the change of a word in the terms of the statute, appear in the revision of 1715,[1019] and again and again in the succeeding compilations until 1843, when two new grounds—"habitual intemperance" and "intolerable cruelty"—were added.[1020] The real scope of this singularly liberal provision for divorce thus early adopted cannot, however, be fully appreciated unless two important facts be kept in mind. First, in judicial practice adultery acquired a very broad meaning. Not only did it cover the misconduct of the husband as well as that of the wife, but the statute was interpreted to allow the latter a divorce for the "criminal connection" of the man with any single women.[1021] Secondly, "fraudulent contract" was construed "according to its plain and natural import, that is a contract obtained by fraud," and not in the very restricted and conventional sense which the courts, perhaps misled by a remark of Blackstone, have in later years sometimes adopted.[1022] Long before the act of 1667, and for one hundred and eighty-three years thereafter, the legislative assembly of Connecticut, side by side with the court of assistants or its successors, reserved to itself the right of granting bills of divorce. This power seems in the main to have been exercised with caution, though there are not lacking signs that it was sometimes abused. The general policy, according to Swift, was only to grant relief in this way in "cases of intolerable cruelty, and inveterate hatred, and such gross misbehaviour and wickedness as defeat the design of marriage, and presumptive proof of a criminal connection ... , where the positive proof required by law cannot be had."[1023] Yet this wise rule, if legislative divorce is to be allowed at all, does not in all cases seem to have been rigidly followed. The first instance of action by the general court in such questions found in the records occurs in 1655. "Considering the sad complaint of Goody Beckwith of Fairfield, in reference to her husband," and weighing the evidence presented "of ye manner" of his "departure and discontinuance," the assembly declares that if the "said Goody Beckwith, wife of Thomas, shall uppon her oath testifie to the Magistrates that are shortly to keepe Courte at Strattford, that her husband's departure was as others have testified it to bee; and yt shee hath not heard from him nor of him any wayes since hee deserted her, the said Magistrates may give her a bill of Divorce."[1024] This is, of course, an example of granting the court jurisdiction in a particular case where perhaps the evidence was otherwise insufficient to warrant a decree. Two years later the general court frees Robert Wade of Seabrook from his "Couenant of marriage" with Joane his "late wife," because of the evidence presented to them of her "unworthy, sinfull, yea, unnaturall cariage" in staying in England and "disowning fellowship" with him for "neare fifteene yeares."[1025] Again in 1660, taking time by the forelock in the behalf of Sarah North, the same body orders that if she "hear not of her husband by that ye seauenth year be expired, (he haueing bene absent six already) ... then, she shalbe free from her coniugal bonds."[1026] So also two years later, "vpon good consideration and solid reasons"—of what nature the record saith not—Bridget Baxter is likewise released; and because the estate which her late husband left with her "is sold to pay debts, all excepting a bed and her wearing aparell," the creditors of "ye said estate" are prohibited from "seizing extending or any way troubleing ye remainder, vntil ye Court see cause to ye contrary."[1027] In 1670 Hanna Huitt "is at liberty to marry if shee see cause," for the absence of Thomas during "eight years and better."[1028] The case of Elizabeth Rogers is of special interest; for it is much to be feared that the worthy deputies and magistrates regarded "free thinking" as a sufficient cause for dissolution of wedlock. In 1675 she laid her petition before the court of assistants, which found "some difficulties as to a present issue finally." Yet the case being one which called "for compassion to the woman under so great distress and hazard," it was referred for settlement to the general court, Mrs. Rogers having liberty meanwhile to dwell with her father.[1029] Accordingly, at its next session the assembly, accepting the "allegations and proofes presented to clear the righteousness of her desires," released Elizabeth from her "conjugall bond."[1030] A year later provision is made for alimony with custody of the children; and now at last the reason for Goodwife Rogers's "great distress and hazard," thus far carefully omitted from the record, is clearly divulged. "Her husband," runs the order, "being so hettridox in his opinion and practice," and having even "in open Court declared that he did vtterly renounce all the vissible worship of New England, and professedly declare against the Christian Sabboth as a mere invention," the court grants the mother and her father, Mathew Griswold, the care and custody of the children "to be brought up and nurtured by them (in the admonition and fear of the Lord)," also ordering John Rogers to pay "towards the mayntenance of his children, the sume of twenty pownds" in four equal annual instalments. In case "he fayle of payment, the reversion of the land by sayd John Rogers made ouer to Elizabeth his late wife, at Mamacock" is to be held as security.[1031] Another case, that of Richard Edwards, deserves notice, for as late as 1690 it affords us an example of the reference of public questions to the elders. In October of that year Edwards presented a petition for divorce from his wife Elizabeth. The general court "declare they doe not find reason to grant" it.[1032] But Richard is bound to have "releife therein if the law of God or man will affoarde it him." So he comes before the court again "desireing that a councill of able diuines upon his charge might be called to consider his case and giue their resolves upon the same to the court." The latter, though not "fully sattisfyed to alter their apprehensions from what they were formerly, yet considering the deplorable state of the petitioner, and the many intolerable temptations he lyes open too, are willing to doe what they can for his releife, and to recomend it to the Genll Court October next to consider the case, and doe desire that the Reuerend Mr. Hooker" and five other ministers give their attendance upon the court "to hear the case and grant what light they can come at" to guide the issue.[1033] No definite ground for the petition, it will be observed, is assigned; but one may safely hazard a guess that "hettridox" opinions were again involved. At any rate, Richard's plan was successful. The next October he was released "from his conjugall tye," the court first "haueing considered the case with seriousnesse and taken the best advice they could com at by the word of God and learned and worthy diuines."[1034] As time went on, the cases of legislative divorce became few and far between. The courts were felt to be the proper place for such business.[1035] In 1753 Mary Larkum was freed from her husband Job on account of his "barbarous and inhuman carriage toward her."[1036] In 1761 the assembly set aside a divorce granted two years before by the superior court for alleged wilful desertion;[1037] and at rare intervals that body was appealed to during the next seventy-five years.[1038] There was a sudden increase of business in 1837.[1039] From that date until 1850 the annual crop of legislative divorces is surprisingly large.[1040] Sometimes the "resolve" granting the petition is curt and informal; while often it is entirely silent as to the exact cause of complaint.[1041] It would seem that the practice of intrusting proper judicial business to popular political bodies was yielding the usual evil fruit; for at last, in 1849, a statute provides that the "Superior Court shall have sole and exclusive jurisdiction of all petitions for divorce."[1042] d) Rhode Island.—It is, however, in the judicial history of Rhode Island that legislative divorce has left its deepest mark and had its worst consequences. In the American colonies and states this practice has perhaps never caused the same hardships or flagrant injustice as it did in England previous to the act of 1857. Ordinarily, as in that country, relief has not in effect and of necessity, owing to the cost of the proceedings, been entirely denied to anyone because he was poor. On the other hand, popular political assemblies, such as American state legislatures, are on other grounds ill fitted for judicial functions. Their ignorance or carelessness may produce results bad for society. For they possess nothing like the legal knowledge and experience of the House of Lords, in which petitions for divorce were first considered. Before the legislative trial, as in England, the facts have not already been fairly well ascertained in the law and spiritual actions; and if the same harsh discrimination between rich and poor does not appear, there is at least equal opportunity for jobbery and favoritism. It is well that the custom practically has long ceased to exist in the United States. The legislation of Rhode Island begins with a conservative measure in 1650. It is "ordered, that no bill of divorce shall stand legall ... butt that which is sued for, by the partie grieved" and not "for any other case but that of Adulterie." This cause may be proved by the injured person, "eyther by the man against the woman, or by the woman against the man, before the Generall Assemblie" which by the act is given exclusive jurisdiction in such questions. After separation "each partie shall be as free from" the other as "before they came together."[1043] But in 1655 a change is made in jurisdiction, as also by implication, in the legal grounds of divorce. First we have a striking example of the tendency of Rhode Island to vest important functions in the officers of the local community. "It is ordered, that in case of adulterie, a generall or towne magistrate may grant a bill of divorce against ye partie offendinge uppon ye demand of ye partie offended." Furthermore, other grounds of complaint are contemplated, though they are not clearly expressed; for it is declared that "in all other cases of separation or divorce between man and wife, all persons shall addresse themselves for release to ye Generall Court of Commissioners"—the name which the assembly bore during the parliamentary charter. Here we have the usual reservation of special cases to the legislature, among which, it seems clear, separation from bed and board is had in view.[1044] In the early days the assembly did not lack business. At the June session, 1655, John and Elizabeth Coggeshall, who had separated "by mutuall and voluntarie consent," were each allowed on separate petition to contract further marriage.[1045] Two other cases occurred the same year;[1046] and later examples have been collected. In 1665 the assembly "granted a divorce for the adultery of the wife on her own confession, and at the same time sentenced her to pay a fine and be whipped."[1047] At this time is also recorded the pathetic story of Horod Long. In her petition addressed to the royal commissioners,[1048] then in the colony, she says: "I was upon the death of my father sent to London by my mother in much sorrow and griefe of spiritt, and then taken by one John Hickes vnknown to any of my friends, and by the said Hickes privately married in the vnder Church of Paules, called Saint Faith's Church, and in a little while after, to my great griefe, brought to New England, when I was betweene thirteene and fourteene years of age." After living two years and a half at Weymouth the pair came to Rhode Island in 1640. "Not long after," Horod continues, "there happened a difference betweene the said John Hickes and myselfe, soe that the authority that then was vnder grace, saw cause to part vs, and ordered I should have the estate sent me by my mother." Evidently she was allowed to resume her maiden name. Here we catch a glimpse of the earliest known divorce in Rhode Island. After the separation Hickes fled to the Dutch,[1049] taking with him, in defiance of the court's order, most of the wife's property. Thus she was "put to great hardshipe and straight;" for she was friendless and "not brought up to labour." To gain a maintenance, therefore, without any formal celebration or other proceedings, she allowed herself to be "drawne by George Gardener," and lived with him as his wife, being so reputed by the neighbors, for near twenty years, bearing him "many children." Clearly, as further shown by the testimony, we have here a case of "common-law" marriage. Yet during this time Horod alleges she had "much oppression of spiritt" regarding her questionable condition; but Gardener, who had enjoyed the remnant of her estate and all her labor, refused either to allow her a separate support or to cease to trouble her. So in her distress of mind she appealed to the commissioners for relief, asking separate maintenance for herself and child, and that "hee may bee restrained from ever meddling with" her. The commissioners referred the matter to the governor, requesting him to "doe justice to the poore petitioner;" and the governor placed it in the hands of the assembly. That body was without compassion; for the woman had "impudently" discovered "her owne nakedness." She and her partner were treated as ordinary offenders, being each fined twenty pounds, and warned henceforth not "to lead soe scandalous a life, lest they feel the extreamest penalty that either is or shall be provided in such cases."[1050] To this same eventful year, 1667, belongs the only case of partial divorce yet discovered. Richard and Mary Pray joined in a petition asking a complete dissolution of their nuptial bond. The assembly denied their prayer, but allowed them to live apart without the right of remarriage.[1051] On the powers of the general court at this time Arnold makes the following comment: "Not only were divorces granted and a separate maintenance awarded to the wife, but the whole property of the husband was attached and held by the Assembly, until the provisions of the decree had been satisfied. In the case of John Porter ... they went even further, and annulled all transfers of property ... made by him since the separation from his wife, which had not already been recorded. Upon his settling a satisfactory estate upon his wife these disabilities were removed."[1052] After the establishment of the royal charter the ordinary jurisdiction in divorce matters was vested in the court of trials, composed of the governor and assistants who formed a part of the assembly; but the latter body continued to act when it saw fit. But "it would seem," says Arnold, "that the separate powers of the magistrates were not distinctly defined or well understood, for a censure was passed upon John Green, Assistant of Warwick, for having granted, by his own authority, a bill of divorce. This proceeding was sharply reproved by the Assembly, as being a usurpation of judicial power in superseding the action of the Court of Trials. The town of Warwick declared the divorce to be legal, and protested against this censure upon their leader."[1053] In this case it may perhaps be right to infer that a reminiscence existed of the order of 1655, already cited, vesting jurisdiction in the principal cases of divorce in a single "town" or "general" magistrate, the latter term applying to an "assistant" under the royal charter. The assembly in 1676 released John Belou "from all matrimonial engagements" to his wife Hannah.[1054] An entry in the records of Muddy River, Mass., for July 30 of the same year, informs us that John "Lewis came from Road Island where his wife gave him a paper of dismission from her in Novr. last & libertie to marrie another woman & he is now engaged to ye widow Williams to marry her, by theire own confessions."[1055] In 1683 we have an interesting example of the summary punishment of a divorced man by the legislature, doubtless for the misconduct which led to the decree. "The power of the Assembly to expel its members was rarely exercised, but at the adjourned session, a deputy from Warwick, against whom complaints were brought and a divorce granted on petition of his wife," at this time, "was deemed unfit to hold his seat, and was therefore expelled."[1056] Two years thereafter a law was passed making "five years neglect or absence of either party" a ground for divorce;[1057] but the period was extended to seven years in 1749.[1058] According to Judge Durfee, after power to grant divorces came to the superior court in 1747[1059] the jurisdiction of the assembly "languished;" but "it continued, nevertheless, to be invoked in exceptional cases,[1060] which either were not provided for by the statute or were too flimsey or too whimsical for judicial treatment. There is an uncanny tradition, still vaguely surviving, that in such cases grave legislators were sometimes plied in the lobby with solicitations and arguments too peculiar for public discussion. After the constitution the more usual course for the assembly was, not to hear the petition, but to authorize the supreme court to hear it by special act, if without such act the court was incompetent. Divorces, however, were granted as late as 1850. In January, 1851, the assembly had several petitions pending before it and transferred them, together with all documents and depositions in support of them, to the supreme court, 'where,' the resolution of transfer tartly remarks, 'the said petitions should have been filed,' and at the same time authorized and required the court to try them."[1061] II. ENGLISH DIVORCE LAWS IN ABEYANCE IN THE SOUTHERN COLONIES It is an established principle of jurisprudence that colonists settling in an uninhabited land take with them all the laws of the mother-country which are suited to their new circumstances.[1062] This doctrine is sustained by the decisions of the Courts.[1063] It follows, according to the views strongly supported by Bishop, "that all such laws of England, relating to marriage and divorce, by whatsoever names there known, are, as they existed at the respective times of the settlements here, common law in our several states."[1064] The law of divorce which the American colonists brought with them in the seventeenth century allowed a separation from bed and board by decree of an ecclesiastical court, and for two causes only, adultery and cruelty. Absolute divorce was not recognized. But while the colonists carried with them the English law, they did not bring likewise the English courts. Therefore it "results that these laws can practically be administered with us only as far and as fast as tribunals are established on which, directly or by implication, is conferred the jurisdiction." The laws slumber, so to speak, until quickened through the creation of courts by the legislature. "Between the arrival in a colony of the law from the mother-country, and the organization of courts for its enforcement, some space of time must intervene. And during such space the law must be practically in abeyance, or inoperative." Should a "tribunal be created with jurisdiction extending to a part only of the law, such part will become operative, but the rest will remain inert as before."[1065] Besides, for our present purpose it is highly important to note that the English courts "have specifically held, that the matrimonial law of the ecclesiastical tribunals is a branch of the law which colonists take with them."[1066] Since, therefore, the church courts were never established in any of our American provinces, it follows by the foregoing rule that there was no tribunal competent to decree a divorce or separation in such of them as had not assigned the jurisdiction in question to some other body. This was the case throughout the southern colonies. Their statute books are entirely silent on the subject of divorce jurisdiction. Judicial separations from bed and board did not exist; nor prior to the Revolution has there been discovered a single case of absolute divorce by legislative act—a practice so common in New England during the same period—although Parliament had set the example before the close of the seventeenth century. On the other hand, separations by mutual consent, or on account of bad conduct, or parol[1067] separations in some form, did occur, as they always do occur in any society; and it is from the meager records of judicial actions regarding separate maintenance in such cases that one learns something concerning the state of southern law and custom before the Revolution. In Virginia we find the county court, which had gained a share of the equity jurisdiction,[1068] hearing and granting petitions for separate alimony. Thus in 1691 the prayer "of Ruth Fulcher for separate maintenance against her husband, John Fulcher," was referred by the governor and council, constituting the "general court,"[1069] to the justices of a county court, "who, after hearing the testimony, decided in favour of the plaintiff."[1070] Now, by the English law alimony could not be granted in an independent action, but only as incident to a divorce by decree of the ecclesiastical court. Moreover, in Virginia no colonial statute had ever conferred this portion of the ecclesiastical jurisdiction upon the local courts or upon any other tribunal. How, then, consistently with the principles just stated, could a petition for separate maintenance be entertained by the county magistrates as falling within their equity jurisdiction? From two decisions in the early part of the present century the dual innovation is represented as the result of justifiable self-help under the stress of circumstances; while, in the absence of a statute authorizing it, the assumption of the power of the ecclesiastical court by the equity tribunal is looked upon as a natural and logical course. In the first of these cases, arising in 1810, the superior court of chancery affirms its own jurisdiction in suits for alimony. The chancellor, after conceding that the authorities are in doubt and divided, holds "that in every well-regulated government there must somewhere exist a power of affording a remedy where the law affords none; and this peculiarly belongs to a court of equity; and as husband and wife are considered as one person in law, it is evident that in this case the law can afford no remedy; which is universally admitted to be a sufficient ground to give this court jurisdiction, and therefore it must entertain the bill."[1071] Thirteen years later this "reasoning of the chancellor on the point of jurisdiction" is pronounced "sound," in a suit for separate maintenance which was carried from the chancery court of Fredericksburg to the Virginia court of appeals. In his opinion Judge Carr says: "I find no case with us, in which the subject has been before this court. Having no Ecclesiastical Tribunal, the powers of that court seem to have been considered as vesting originally in the old General Court. From thence, some of them have been distributed to other courts, as they were branched out.... I know of no law which has given to any court the trial of matrimonial causes, except so far as relates to incestuous marriages, as to which a power is given to the Court of Chancery to annul them." Judge Tucker, he continues, in his edition of Blackstone,[1072] "says with respect to suits for alimony after a divorce a mensa et thoro, as there is no court in Virginia which possesses jurisdiction in such cases, there can be no room for suits of this nature; unless, perhaps, the High Court of Chancery should sustain them as incidental to its equitable jurisdiction." "I believe," adds Judge Carr, "that in practice the County Courts, sitting as courts of equity, have assumed the power of giving separate maintenance in cases of separation; but by what rule they have been regulated, I know not."[1073] But the colonial and state courts of equity, in "exercising the authority, not of granting divorces, but alimony, where the latter was the only relief prayed," seem to have acted contrary to the more approved legal rule; and Bishop suggests that their course may have been influenced by a misunderstanding of the policy of the commonwealth. In the time of Cromwell "the ecclesiastical courts were abolished; thereupon the equity judges were expressly authorized, it appears by a clause in their commissions,[1074] to decide causes of alimony, and after the Restoration their decrees were by statute confirmed. Misapprehensions of this matter have sometimes led to the inference that the equity courts took cognizance of the question simply as of their own appropriate jurisdiction, because of the extinguishment of ecclesiastical tribunals, or as succeeding to them. But this obviously was not so; since, had the jurisdiction been theirs, they would have exercised it as well when there were ecclesiastical courts as when there were none, for the latter never claimed it, their alimony being only an incident in the divorce suit; and since any jurisdiction which they might assume as successors of the defunct ecclesiastical courts could have been only to decide causes of divorce, with their incidental alimony, not to grant an alimony before unknown." The granting of separate alimony without a divorce is now common in the states;[1075] and, from whatever source the courts have derived their power, it is entirely justifiable as satisfying a social need. In the absence of statutory sanction justice may demand that some existing body shall promptly grant relief; though it is doubtless true that the authority to do so cannot be logically assumed as the legitimate inheritance of equity tribunals from the ecclesiastical courts. The colonial law of Maryland on the subject does not differ essentially from that of Virginia, although there are some divergences of interest. Judicial divorces were not granted. A number of early cases show that the high court of chancery took cognizance of suits for separate alimony as naturally belonging to its jurisdiction in the absence of ecclesiastical courts. Of these perhaps the most important for the facts presented, though the precise ground of the judgment is not clearly expressed, is the action of Galwith v. Galwith which in 1689 came before the provincial court on appeal from the court of Calvert county. The record of the lower tribunal states that at the June term, 1685, "the appellee, being the wife of the appellant," presented a petition "setting forth, that within a few years certain false, evil, and scandalous reports were raised and spread abroad against her by some malicious persons," causing "great dissention and difference between her husband and herself, insomuch that he refused to entertain her in his house, or allow her a competent maintenance elsewhere, by which she was reduced to great poverty and want." Whereupon, in June, 1684, she "applied to the county court for relief and redress therein, at which time the court hearing and considering the premises, granted an order that her husband should allow ... her 2000 wt. of tobacco for her maintenance the year next ensuing." Now the "year was completed and ended, and her said husband not being reconciled nor willing" to take back either herself or the child, "which she hitherto had maintained," she "would in a short time be brought to extreme poverty and necessity without further assistance from the court." Therefore she prayed that the court would give order that her husband might "take her home to dwell with him, which she was desirous to do, or else that he might be enjoined to allow her a competent maintenance for herself and child." Accordingly the "said John Galwith" was commanded to "take home his said wife Jane Galwith, to dwell with him as man and wife ought to do; otherwise to allow ... her 3000 wt. of tobacco a year, commencing from that day." John then appealed to the higher tribunal, assigning for errors: (1) that the county court passed judgment against him upon reading the petition without calling him to answer, "so that he is condemned unheard contrary to the law, and against the statute of Magna Charta;" (2) that the county court had "no jurisdiction of the matter in difference ... , being touching Alimony, which is not recoverable there but in chancery, or the court of the ordinary;" (3) that the county court cannot take "cognizance of matters relating to causes of separation and divorce between man and wife, but such matters are only triable and examinable in the court of the ordinary."[1076] The judgment was reversed, but on what particular ground we are not told; so that from the apparent inconsistency of the last two specifications, one might be in doubt, were the fact not well established, whether the high court of chancery had jurisdiction; for surely alimony is strictly a matter "relating to causes of separation and divorce," cognizance of which is said in the report to belong in effect to the bishop of London as ordinary. One point, however, seems clear: the county court had no power in such causes; and that is what one would infer according to the doctrine of the Virginia judges before quoted; for, unlike the county courts of Virginia, those of Maryland had no equity jurisdiction.[1077] Some other decisions of a later date throw light on the colonial practice. In Macnamara's case, involving alimony, decided before the Revolution, "the defendant claimed an appeal to the Arches Court in England. His right thereto seems to have been acknowledged, it does not appear on what principle."[1078] Again, in 1828, it was declared in Farnshill v. Murray that "there never having been an ecclesiastical court, and no power to grant a divorce by annulling for any cause, a contract of marriage which was originally valid ever having been conferred upon any of the courts of justice, it follows that a divorce can only be granted by an act of the general assembly;" but in the provincial era alimony was customarily granted by the court of chancery.[1079] Similar evidence two years later is afforded by the opinion in Helms v. Franciscus, where the parties had a written agreement to live apart. In the absence of the ecclesiastical court it is affirmed, "the high court of chancery always had, even under the provincial government, entire jurisdiction of such claims for alimony, or for separate maintenance out of the husband's estate founded on his misconduct," but chancery may not meddle with causes of marriage and divorce. Moreover, it is laid down, apparently as the rule in the colonial as well as in the modern period, that separate maintenance may be assigned by the equity court only on the two grounds of misconduct admitted in the ecclesiastical tribunals as proper reasons for a divorce a mensa et thoro.[1080] It may also be noted that the jurisdiction in suits for alimony, assumed prior to the Revolution by the courts of equity, was later confirmed by statute. In 1777 it was enacted that the "chancellor shall and may hear and determine all causes for alimony, in as full and ample a manner as such causes could be heard and determined by the laws of England in the ecclesiastical courts there."[1081] Commenting on this act Bishop remarks that "as the ecclesiastical courts in England had no power over alimony except in connection with divorce, it would not have been an extravagant interpretation to derive from this statute authority to decree both divorce and alimony, to the extent exercised in those courts. But it was held, instead, that the wife could have under it the sort of alimony we are considering, for any cause authorizing in England a divorce from bed and board, and even sometimes for other causes;[1082] yet not the divorce."[1083] It is just possible, finally, that absolute divorces were granted in Maryland by the colonial assembly—a common practice after the Revolution. "In this state," it was held in 1829, "the act of divorcing man and wife has been performed by the legislature, for the want, perhaps, of ecclesiastical authority to effect it, or borrowing, perchance, the power from the parliament of Great Britain.... However this may be, divorces in this state, from the earliest times have emanated from the general assembly, and can now be viewed in no other light than as regular exertions of legislative power." But no evidence is forthcoming for the "earliest times."[1084] The law and custom prevailing in the Carolinas are in harmony with those of Virginia and Maryland, and need not here be considered. The same is probably true of Georgia, as appears from the case of Head v. Head, which will receive some notice in another connection.[1085] From the opinion in this suit we infer that in the colonial period the English common law, including the law administered by the ecclesiastical courts, governed the subject of divorce. By an act of February 25, 1784, the common law and such statutes as were in force "in the Province of Georgia in 1776, so far as they were not contrary to the constitution, laws, and form of government of the state," were adopted. Accordingly, up to 1784 an absolute divorce could not be given, and the only causes recognized for a partial divorce were those of the common law. But even such limited divorces were not granted; for there had been no legislation on the subject, and therefore no courts existed in the colony competent to act. Through exercise of its sovereign power the legislature might, indeed, have granted divorces, partial or complete, after the British model; and according to the opinion in this case the legislature had exercised this function for some time prior to 1798, when the constitution transferred the primary jurisdiction in all cases from the legislative body to the courts. "We have searched in vain," says Justice Nisbet, "for any legislation upon the law of divorce before 1798. If the legislature had passed laws declaring what would be good cause for divorce at any time anterior to 1798, without controversy those laws would have repealed the common law, and the legal principles mentioned in the constitution would have been referable to them. But there were no such laws passed. It is true that, before 1798, the legislature ... did grant divorces upon special application.... These acts do not even exhibit the grounds upon which they were passed." Thus far the judge, apparently, is speaking of the period between the Revolution and the constitution of 1798. We are not told by him whether any legislative divorces were granted in the colonial era, though that is highly improbable. At any rate, it is nearly certain that the common law was not repealed by any provincial statute. For "no such laws have come down to us. If there were any ... they are too deeply buried beneath the deposits of time for our power of revelation;" though, probably, a "diligent search in the colonial records preserved in England, but not accessible to this court, might convict us of error."[1086] III. ARBITRATION AND DIVORCE IN THE MIDDLE COLONIES Touching the question of divorce the Middle Colonies held a place much closer to the extreme conservatism of the South than to the broad liberalism of New England. In New Netherland, indeed, it was natural that the Reformation doctrines on this subject should prevail. The civil courts exercised every kind of matrimonial jurisdiction. Already we have seen them trying cases of breach of promise and annulling marriages for the lack of legal forms.[1087] So also they possessed full power to dissolve the nuptial bond. As early as 1655 John Hicks obtained a divorce on account of his wife's adultery, with leave to remarry. Two years later John George Baldingh was granted a similar decree on the same ground. Anneke Adriaens was released from her husband for bigamy in 1664.[1088] In 1674, the year of interregnum, Governor Colve, with the fiscal and council, heard the petition of Catrina Lane for "letters of divorce" from her husband Daniel, who, being accused of committing a heinous crime, had broken jail and absconded. After due consideration, the court ordered that a "divorce and separation" should be granted if the husband do not within six months appear and "purge" himself of the charge.[1089] The allowance of this delay before a decree of divorce shall take effect, in case of absence of the defendant, appears to be the rule; for in the same year the prayer of Abigail Messenger, deserted wife of Richard Darlin, for divorce with the privilege of remarriage, is for "cogent reasons, provisionally postponed ... six months, during which time the supplicant's husband is commanded to purge himself from this accusation," or in default the supplicant shall be permitted to urge her suit.[1090] Thirteen years earlier Laers, the Finnish priest who later got himself into trouble by performing his own wedding ceremony, is said, in a "meeting," to have secured a divorce from his wife on account of her elopement with Jacob Jongh.[1091] In 1659 we find what appears to be a cause of separation from bed and board with assignment of alimony. Since "Nicolaas Velthuyzen cannot resolve to live any more in love with his wife," therefore it is decreed "that he shall provisionally supply her with one fat hog, two skepels of maize, according to his own offer for her support, and further disposition shall be made for the maintenance of her and her children."[1092] To this same year, also, belongs a case which seems to be the complement of the English action for jactitation. The plaintiff brings suit because the defendant has privately accused him of having another wife; whereupon the court orders the accuser to prove his charge.[1093] There is also mention of a separation by mutual agreement made originally before the local commissaries at Albany. A record of the higher court at New York in 1670 recites: "Whereas strife and difference hath arisen betweene Albert Andriesen and Gertruyde Vosburgh his wife with ye which ye commissaryes at Albany being acquainted" and, finding their "Inclinations averse from living together as man and wife ought to doe they did by consent make an Agreement of their Seperation as likewise how their estates are to be divided betweene them." Therefore the court doth "Ratifye and Confirme what hath beene Already ordered as to that perticular by ye which each partye is to res[t] satisfyed without giving any further trouble upon this occasion."[1094] "Tender parents," writes Mrs. Earle, "could not unduly shelter a daughter who had left her husband's bed and board. He could promptly apply to the court for an order for her return to him, and an injunction to her parents against harboring her. It has been plain to see in all such cases which I have chanced upon in colonial records that the Court had a strong leaning towards the husband's side of the case."[1095] This fact appears in a case coming before the local authorities of New Amsterdam in 1665, which, moreover, affords an illustration of the sensible Dutch custom of arbitration in such domestic differences. A trouble having arisen between Arent Jureaensen Lantsman and his spouse Beletje, the burgomasters and schepens refer the matter for adjustment "to reverend Dome. Johannes Megapolenses and Dome. Samuel Driesius." If the arbitrators fail to settle the difficulty by next court day, warning is given that "proceedings may be expected according to the Style and custom of law, as an example to other evil housekeepers." Later Lantsman avers that his wife's parents will not listen to the arbitrators; and so he prays that the court may order his wife to return to him. Thereupon Beletje appears and says she will not return because her husband has often broken his promises to amend. So the court takes a hand on the husband's behalf, forbidding the wife's father, Lodowyck Pas, to keep her above fourteen days, during which time the consorts must be reconciled or else apply to the court again. At the same time Lantsman is duly warned that if further complaint of bad behavior be made, he shall be handed over to the "Honorable Governor General to be punished by his Honor in such manner whether by separation from bed and board imprisonment or otherwise as by his Honor shall then be deemed proper as an example to other householders." But the wife's parent seems to have disregarded the mandate. For, later, sworn jurymen decide that "Beletje Lodowyck" must return to her husband, and that her father shall no longer harbor her without the husband's consent; and this verdict is approved by the court.[1096] "A curious feature of this marriage quarrel," adds Mrs. Earle, "is the fact that this Lantsman, who was so determined to retain his wife, had been more than recreant about marrying her. The banns had been published, the wedding-day set, but Bridegroom Lantsman did not appear. Upon being hunted up and reprimanded, his only proffered excuse was the very simple one that his clothes were not ready."[1097] A few other cases of separation, occasionally with arbitration, have been gleaned, some of them occurring long after the English rule began. For example, William Hallet petitions "that his wife may be obliged to live with him agreeably to the decision of referees, or in the case of her refusal to comply, that he be granted a divorce."[1098] Whether his prayer was allowed we are not told. In 1697 Daniel Vanolinda prayed "that his wife be 'ordyred to go and live with him where he thinks convenient.' The wife's father was promptly notified by the Albany magistrates that he was 'discharged to shelter her in his house or elsewhere, upon Penalty as he will answer at his Perill;' and she returned to her husband."[1099] The same writer from whom the record of this case is borrowed says "Nicasius de Sille, magistrate of New Utrecht and poet of New Netherland, separated his life from that of his wife because—so he said—she spent too much money," and also because "she was too fond of schnapps,—which her respected later life did not confirm."[1100] Likewise "when Anniatje Fabritius requested an order of court for her husband to vacate her house with a view of final separation from him, it was decided by the arbitrators that no legal steps should be taken, but that 'the parties comport themselves as they ought, in order that they win back each others affections, leaving each other in meanwhile unmolested'—which was very sensible advice. Another married pair having 'met with great discouragement' (which is certainly a most polite expression to employ on such a subject), agreed each to go his and her way, after an exact halving of all their possessions."[1101] But the most remarkable case of reconciliation through help of the court is that of Anneke Schaets, daughter of Domine Schaets, first minister at Fort Orange. It seems, according to Mrs. Earle, that her conduct had in some way scandalized her father's congregation, so that she "refrained from contaminating attendance at communion;" whereupon the dominie, out of resentment, quarreled with the brethren and persisted in "ripping up new differences and offences." At last, after being removed from his clerical office for disobeying a judicial summons, matters were adjusted. Anneke "was ordered off to New York to her husband, 'with a letter of recommendation; and as she was so headstrong, and would not depart without the Sheriff's and Constable's interference, her disobedience was annexed to the letter.'" The record of the court made in July, 1681, runs as follows: "Tho: Davidtse promisses to conduct himself well and honorably towards his wife Anneke Schaets, to Love and never neglect her, but faithfully and properly to maintain and support her with her children according to his means, hereby making null and void all questions that have occurred and transpired between them, but are entirely reconciled: and for the better assurance of his real Intention and good Resolution to observe the same, he requests that two good men be named to oversee his conduct at New York towards his said wife, being entirely disposed and inclined to live honorably and well with her as a Christian man ought, subjecting himself willingly to the rule and censure of the said men. On the other hand his wife Anneke Schaets, promises also to conduct herself quietly and well and to accompany him to New York with her children and property, not to leave him any more, but to serve and help him and with him to share the sweets and the sours as becomes a Christian spouse: Requesting all differences which had ever existed between them both may be hereby quashed and brougt no more to light or cast up, as she on her side is heartily disposed to. Their Worships of the Court Recommend parties on both Sides to observe strictly their Reconciliation now made."[1102] If one may judge from the scattered fragments of court records thus preserved, the little settlements in New Netherland and early New York were afflicted by their fair share of domestic ills. In the main, however, family life was placid and prosaic. Few cases of absolute divorce, or even of permanent separation, occurred; and this is probably due, at least in part, to the system of friendly arbitration and to the kindly paternalism of the Dutch magistrates. After the conquest, according to the weight of legal authority,[1103] the people of New York province acquired the rights and privileges of the English common law. The ecclesiastical courts were "regular tribunals of England, and the law administered in them" a part of the general law of the land.[1104] But so far as divorce is concerned, in New York, as in the southern colonies, this law was practically in abeyance throughout the entire provincial era. The code of the duke of York, it is true, does contain a provision on this subject. It is there declared that "In Cases of Adultery all proceedings shall bee accordinge to the Lawes of England which is by Divorce (if sÙrd) Corporall punishment or fine and Imprisonment."[1105] In substance, therefore, separation from bed and board, not complete divorce, is thus sanctioned for the scriptural ground. But this provision in its practical result does no more than say that the English law regarding judicial separation a mensa et thoro shall be recognized in the colony, and such would have been the case without it. From the beginning it must have been a "dead letter;" for no tribunal was clothed by statute with adequate jurisdiction to enforce it. Possibly for a time the old Dutch law and customs were in practice accepted as partially binding. We have just seen evidence of the survival of arbitration in cases of separation, and of marital reconciliations managed and recorded by the courts. But, unless granted on this authority in the brief period of transition, judicial divorce a vinculo ceased in New York with the English conquest. According to Chancellor Kent, who may not be quite accurate, "during the period of our colonial government, for more than one hundred years preceding the Revolution, no divorce took place in the colony of New York; and for many years after New York became an independent state, there was not any lawful mode of dissolving a marriage in the lifetime of the parties, but by a special act of the legislature."[1106] Subsequent to the meeting of the first assembly of the province in 1683 the writer has found no evidence of a legislative divorce, though there is preserved a copy of what appears to be a circular letter from King George III. in 1773, commanding the provincial governors "not upon any pretence whatsoever" to give their assent to any bill "that may have been or shall hereafter be passed by the Council and Assembly of the Province under your government for the naturalization of Aliens, nor for the divorce of persons joined together in Holy marriage nor for establishing a Title" to lands originally acquired by aliens before naturalization.[1107] But if the legislature declined to interfere, during the early period the executive stepped into the breach. Cadwallader Colden, who died in 1776, tells us that "the Governors of New York took on them the power of granting divorces which has been in disuse at least ever since the revolution neither is there any court in this province that can give this remedy tho' in the neighboring Colonies a divorce is more easily obtained than perhaps in any other Christian Country;" and he significantly raises the "Query whether this may not be for the advantage of a new country which wants people. It is certain that the natural increase of People in New England has been very great perhaps more than in any other of the English Colonies."[1108] Colden's declaration that divorces, even by authority of the governor, were not granted after the revolution of 1689 harmonizes with the statement of Chancellor Kent. A petition for such executive relief is preserved among the New York Colonial Manuscripts. In this case Richard Wood, who avers that he has lived in Westchester "about fifteen years," during all which time he "hath endeauoured to demeane himselfe as a true and loyall subject and serviceable in his generation," prays for separation from his wife Mary on account of "her most abominable words and actions" purposely designed to "breed difference" between them. The petition is addressed to Governor General Andros; but no record of his excellency's action in the premises is forthcoming.[1109] The granting of divorces by executive authority is unprecedented; and it is just possible that the governors immediately after the English occupation believed their action in such cases in a way sustained by the duke's law; though this hypothesis is scarcely probable. For the other middle colonies the story is soon told. New Jersey is in the same position as New York under English rule. The statute book is silent on the subject of divorce. If divorces were permitted at all, it must have been by legislative authority; unless, indeed, in the early period, as in the sister-province, the governors assumed the power to act. The Great Law of 1682 for Pennsylvania authorizes divorce on the scriptural ground. The punishment for adultery prescribed by this statute may be compared with the penalties mentioned in the early New England and New York codes. One convicted of that crime "shall for the first offence be publicly whipt and suffer one whole year's imprisonment in the house of correction, at hard labor, to the behoof of the publick, and longer if the Magistrate see meet. And both he and the woman shall be liable to a Bill of Divorcement, if required by the grieved husband or wife, within the said term of one whole year after Conviction." For a second offense the penalty is "imprisonment in manner aforesaid, During Life." If the husband or wife sins with a person who is unmarried, then for the first offense either shall suffer half a year's imprisonment; and for a second transgression, imprisonment for life.[1110] Nearly the same penalties are imposed for incest[1111] and for bigamy.[1112] It will be noticed that the Great Law, which was re-enacted in later statutes, deals with divorce much in the same spirit as does the duke of York's code. In each case divorce is allowed for the one scriptural cause; but whereas the New York statute plainly intends the separation to be merely from bed and board, "according to the law of England," on the other hand, by its peculiar terms, the Pennsylvania act seems to authorize "bills" for complete dissolution of wedlock. However that may be, in this case, as in the other, the law has no practical significance; for, with one exception below named, the jurisdiction of the English spiritual courts was not devolved upon any of the provincial tribunals. Accordingly, the historian Gordon, in his summary of the laws of the colony, is able to say that these "made no general provision for the dissolution of marriage; and divorce from bed and board was allowed in case of bigamy only, on request of the first wife or husband, made in one year after conviction."[1113] Absolute divorces were, however, granted by legislative authority. Of these an example occurs in 1769, when there was laid before the council a "Bill sent up by the Assembly for the Governors concurrence, entitled 'An Act to Dissolve the Marriage of Curtis Grubb, of the County of Lancaster, Iron Master, with Ann, his wife, late Ann Few,'" and to enable them to contract further matrimony. After amendment this bill was approved, and Curtis was allowed to "take to Wife any other woman during the Natural Life of the said Anne, in the same manner as he might or could do if she, the said Anne was actually Dead."[1114] In the same way, on March 21, 1772, the "marriage of George Kehmle of the City of Philadelphia, Barber, with Elizabeth, his wife," was dissolved; but on April 27, 1773, the decree was declared void by the king in "an Instrument of Writing under the Privy Seal;" and on the 11th of next October the royal veto was published by a proclamation of the governor, Jonn Penn.[1115] There is also extant an example of annulment of wedlock by the legislative body. On March 20, 1772, a bill to declare void the "pretended marriage of Rebecca Vanakin with a Certain John Martin" was presented to the governor; but after six months' deliberation, on September 19, it was returned to the assembly with his excellency's veto.[1116] There is no evidence to show, however, that divorces either partial or absolute were at all common in the Quaker province.
CHAPTER XVI A CENTURY AND A QUARTER OF MARRIAGE LEGISLATION IN THE UNITED STATES, 1776-1903 [Bibliographical Note XVI.—For this chapter all the statutes relating to marriage enacted in fifty-two states and territories since the Revolution have been examined and compared, Hawaii not being included. The session laws and various compilations of statutes consulted are described in the Bibliographical Index, V, and need not here be named in detail. Hitherto a history of matrimonial legislation in the United States has not appeared; but summaries of the laws of the various states have been made for particular periods. Of these the most important is the accurate digest for 1887-88—the time of compilation—contained in Wright's Report on Marriage and Divorce (Washington, 1889; reprinted without change, 1897). There is also a summary in Stimson, American Statute Law (Boston, 1886), I, 664 ff.; and for the sake of completeness may also be mentioned Vanness, A Digest of the Laws of New York and New England, on Marriage, Dower, Divorce, etc. (Hartford, 1877); Noble, A Compendium and Comparative View of the Thirty-Eight State Laws of Marriage and Divorce (New York, 1882); with the discussion of Cook, "Reform in the Celebration of Marriage," in Atlantic Monthly, LXI (Boston, 1888); Convers, Marriage and Divorce in the United States (Philadelphia, 1889); Snyder, The Geography of Marriage or the Legal Perplexities of Wedlock in the United States (New York, 1889); Ernst, The Law of Married Women in Massachusetts (2d ed., Boston, 1897); and Whitney, Marriage and Divorce (Philadelphia, New York, Boston, and Chicago, 1894). Consult the parliamentary return of Marriage Law and Divorce Law in foreign countries and the colonies (London, 1894); and see also Bibliographical Note XVIII.] I. THE NEW ENGLAND STATES The foundation of the marriage law of the United States was laid long before the War of Independence. Some features have since been pruned away, and others have been changed or added; but the existing forms of celebration, the modes of registration, and the leading principles of matrimonial jurisprudence had already been developed. The century has produced a great mass of legislation; but so far as it is new it is concerned largely with administrative details, often of very great importance as determining the effective character of the law. a) The solemnization.—In New England before the end of the colonial period the religious ceremony had long since been made optional with the lay celebration before a magistrate, which was the only form allowed in the beginning. This system is continued after the Revolution. As elsewhere in the country, the minister and the justice of the peace now share the business between them. The earlier statutes are generally more strict than the later regarding the place of residence and the territorial jurisdiction of the persons authorized to celebrate matrimony. For example, by the Massachusetts act of 1786 any justice of the peace may solemnize lawful wedlock within his own county; while a minister of the gospel, if "stated and ordained," may act only in the "town, district, parish, or plantation where he resides," provided one of the persons lives there too. If a place be destitute of a minister of any denomination, then a neighboring clergyman of the same society may serve; but only in the town or district where the bride or bridegroom dwells.[1117] In 1821 such ordained and stated minister, although living outside of the district over which he is settled, may conduct the ceremony at his own place of residence or at that of either of the persons, provided one or both of them is a member of his congregation. If there be no such minister in the place, then the couple desiring to be married may go to any other clergyman in the commonwealth, who in such case is authorized to act.[1118] All previous laws on the subject are repealed in 1834, when a new statute empowers the minister or justice, each in his own place of residence or in that of either of the persons, to perform the ceremony, if at least one of them lives in his official district.[1119] The present law is still broader in its terms. A marriage may now be solemnized in any place within the commonwealth by Jewish rabbis duly accredited; Friends according to their rites; any minister of the gospel, ordained according to the usage of his denomination, who resides in the commonwealth and continues to perform the functions of his office; or, until a few years ago, by any justice of the peace.[1120] By the act of May 23, 1899, an important change is made. Henceforth no justice of the peace may solemnize a marriage unless he also holds the office of city or town clerk, city registrar, clerk of a court, or that of assistant in either case; or "unless he shall have been specially designated by the governor." The latter may at his discretion name justices of the peace "who may solemnize marriages in the city or town in which they severally reside." Each place is to have at least one such designated magistrate; but otherwise the number is not to exceed one for every five thousand of its inhabitants. No justice may act without a certificate of designation, which the governor is authorized to revoke whenever he thinks fit; and every year in January the secretary of the commonwealth is required to send to the respective clerks or registrars a list of the justices to which authority is thus granted.[1121] However, by the Massachusetts law is prescribed the wise, though unique, condition that the ceremony may be conducted only by a person who is able to read and write the English tongue.[1122] The course of legislation in the other states has been much the same as in Massachusetts previous to 1899. In all of them throughout the century, except in Rhode Island, justices of the peace in their respective counties have had authority to solemnize marriages. In that commonwealth any justice of the supreme court may now act,[1123] as earlier could the assistants, justices of the peace, and justices of the courts of common pleas.[1124] For over fifty years the judges of the county and higher courts in Connecticut have had the same power;[1125] and so during the assumption period had the councilors, judges, and even the governor and deputy governor, in Vermont.[1126] But in that state, after the admission to the Union, the justice of the peace has always been the only lay officer empowered to conduct the ceremony. The law governing the ecclesiastical celebration has been a matter of slower growth and of much experimentation. That of Massachusetts has already been described. The New Hampshire statute of 1791 provides that marriage may be celebrated by any "ordained minister" in the county where he is settled or has his permanent residence.[1127] For many years thereafter no change was made in that requirement.[1128] But in 1833 every resident "ordained minister," if in "regular standing" with his denomination, is authorized to act throughout the state, after causing the "credentials of his ordination to be recorded in the office of the clerk of common pleas, in the county where he shall solemnize any marriage."[1129] The present law is the same in substance, except that the filing of credentials is not mentioned. A non-resident minister, similarly qualified, may now officiate anywhere in the state, on receiving a commission from the governor acting on the advice of the council; and within his own parish, when having a pastoral charge wholly or partly within the state.[1130] Authority in the state to join persons in wedlock is granted to "settled" or "ordained" ministers or elders of the leading churches by the Rhode Island laws of 1798;[1131] to the ministers or elders of any religious denomination who may be "domiciled" in the state, by the revision of 1844;[1132] and by the present law the same elder or minister may obtain a license to join persons in marriage, when he shall have registered his residence, the name of the parish with which he was last "associated, if any, and the name of the religious denomination to which he belongs, in the office of the town clerk of the town in which he resides ... in a book to be provided for that purpose," and "shall have subscribed his name thereto."[1133] By the first laws of Maine like authority, in the counties where they dwell, is conferred upon ordained ministers, who shall be duly appointed and licensed during pleasure by the governor with the advice and consent of the council; provided either of the persons resides in the same county.[1134] In 1828 this restriction is removed; and the ministers of any denomination of Christians may be so commissioned for counties other than those in which they dwell.[1135] The law has since taken a different form. Power is now granted, during the pleasure of the executive, to every ordained minister of the gospel and to every person licensed to preach by an association of ministers, religious seminary, or ecclesiastical body, who shall be duly appointed and commissioned for that purpose by the governor.[1136] Moreover, in this state women, otherwise eligible under the constitution, may in the same way be commissioned to celebrate matrimony.[1137] In Vermont during the assumption period similar authority was granted to "settled" ministers in their respective towns while they continue in the ministry.[1138] The district of the "ordained" minister was extended to the county in 1797.[1139] Three years later, because "irregular itinerant preachers, under pretence of being ordained ministers of the gospel," in remote parts of the county, practiced impositions, and marriages solemnized by them were wholly illegal, it was again restricted to the town;[1140] but the act making this change was itself repealed in 1802.[1141] By a statute of 1806 a minister is required to file credentials of his ordination with the clerk of the town where he shall solemnize any marriage.[1142] But a more liberal provision appears in the revision of 1839, any resident minister of the gospel being then authorized to celebrate wedlock throughout the state.[1143] By the law as it now stands the same power is conferred upon a clergyman, ordained according to the usage of his denomination, who resides in the state, or else "labors statedly therein as a minister or missionary."[1144] Ordained ministers of the "several plantations" of Connecticut, as already seen, in 1694 were first allowed to share with the justices of the peace the function of joining persons in marriage. Their power was restricted to their respective towns in 1702. It was extended to the county in 1783;[1145] and the clergyman is to have authority "while he continues settled in the work of the ministry." In 1820 the word "settled" was dropped. In the revision of 1821 marriages celebrated according to the rites of any religious denomination were declared valid.[1146] Authority to solemnize was granted in 1847 to any clergyman regularly licensed according to the forms and usages of the denomination to which he belongs, and having charge of a society for one year or more.[1147] Finally, since 1855, the same power has been conferred upon all ordained or licensed clergymen of Connecticut or any other state while engaged in the work of the ministry.[1148] The law of Connecticut still retains the broad provision that marriages celebrated according to the rites of any religious society within the state are valid.[1149] This, of course, includes the Quakers, who in each of the other New England states are expressly permitted to follow their own usages in this regard, as also are the Jews in Rhode Island.[1150] No form of ceremony is anywhere prescribed; nor, except in Rhode Island, are any witnesses required by the statute.[1151] In New Hampshire persons living together and acknowledging each other as husband and wife, and generally reputed to be such for the period of three years or until the death of one of them, shall thereafter be deemed to have been legally married.[1152] Various penalties are prescribed in the different states for unauthorized celebration;[1153] but in Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Rhode Island it is expressly provided that when a marriage has been solemnized by a person professing to be legally authorized, although not so authorized, its validity shall be unaffected by such lack of authority, if it is valid in other respects, and entered into by the parties or one of them in the belief that they were lawfully wedded.[1154] It is also enacted in Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island that the validity of a marriage shall not be affected by any omission or informality in entering the intention to marry.[1155] b) Forbidden degrees: void and voidable marriages.—In none of these states is any definition of marriage laid down in the statutes; but in effect matrimony is treated as a relation partaking of the nature of both status and contract.[1156] The age of valid consent to marriage—not to be confused with the so-called "age of consent" under the criminal laws enacted to protect a child from legally agreeing to its own ruin[1157]—is prescribed only in New Hampshire, where it is fourteen for males and thirteen for females.[1158] Elsewhere in New England the common-law rule of fourteen for boys and twelve for girls probably obtains. On the other hand, in all these states, except New Hampshire, the age below which parental consent is necessary for a legal contract is named in the statute. For males it is everywhere set at twenty-one years. For females it is eighteen years in Maine, Massachusetts, and Vermont; and twenty-one years in Connecticut and Rhode Island. But in Maine and Massachusetts consent is required only when the minor has a parent or guardian living in the commonwealth. The Rhode Island law expressly provides that a license may be issued to a person of over eighteen years when such person has no parent or guardian residing in the state;[1159] and the same is true in Connecticut of a female under age when a selectman of the town where she has last resided six months gives his consent.[1160] Massachusetts has taken wise precaution regarding the marriage of minors below a certain age. By an act of 1894 no town or city clerk is permitted to receive a notice of the intention of marriage of any male under eighteen or any female under sixteen years of age, unless the "judge of probate in each county after due hearing" shall "make an order allowing the marriage under the age specified;" but such order may be issued only when the minor resides in the county where the judge holds court, or when the father, mother, or guardian gives consent.[1161] A law of March 28, 1899, amending the above act, allows the probate judge to make a similar order in case of a person of either sex whose age is alleged to exceed that just specified, but who is unable from any cause to produce an official record of his or her birth, to overcome the reasonable doubt of the town or city clerk or registrar. On receipt of a certified copy of this order such local officer is required to receive the notice of intention and issue a certificate, as in other cases.[1162] The statutes of all of these states contain a list of kindred by blood or affinity with whom marriage is prohibited. The restrictions, of course, invariably include all persons in the ascending or descending line; and also, as a rule, those related within the third degree of collateral consanguinity.[1163] Only in New Hampshire are first cousins now forbidden to marry;[1164] but throughout New England the inhibition extends to unions between aunts and nephews or uncles and nieces. In Connecticut for a time we find a survival of mediÆval prejudice regarding affinity. Marriage with the daughter of a wife's sister or brother was there first permitted in 1750.[1165] But it was not until 1793 that the prohibition of wedlock with a deceased wife's sister was dropped;[1166] while, curiously enough, it was retained with respect to a deceased brother's wife until 1816.[1167] By the existing law of all these states marriage with a step-parent is forbidden; and in them all, save Connecticut, a person may not, with impunity, wed a father-in-law or a mother-in-law. Marriage within the forbidden degrees is everywhere void;[1168] the children illegitimate, and the offenders liable to severe penalties.[1169] In Connecticut until some years after the beginning of the last century, just as in old colonial days, offenders against the law of prohibited degrees were "set upon the gallows" and condemned to wear the "scarlet letter." The statute of that state still required the adulterer to carry the halter round his neck during life;[1170] and similar penalties were yet prescribed in some other New England commonwealths.[1171] Marriages may also be void or voidable on grounds other than the forbidden degrees. Such grounds are want of lawful age of consent, in Maine, Vermont, and Massachusetts;[1172] insanity or idiocy, in those same states and in Rhode Island;[1173] physical incapacity, fraud, or violence, in Vermont;[1174] and bigamy everywhere except in Connecticut where the statute is silent.[1175] In Maine[1176]—as formerly in Rhode Island[1177]—a marriage between a white person and a negro, Indian, or mulatto is void without legal process. Until 1843 Massachusetts had a similar law; and its repeal at that time seems to have been preceded for several years by much popular interest and discussion. Petitions for and against the repeal, numerously signed, were presented to the legislature. These were referred to committees, and several formal reports thereon were made. One of them, earnestly favoring the abrogation of the existing law, alleges that the petitions considered were in the aggregate signed by 3,674 men and 5,032 women. On the other hand, a House report in 1839 strongly opposes the proposed change and treats the petition of many good women of Lynn, Brookfield, Dorchester, and Plymouth with unseemly levity and ridicule.[1178] In Connecticut a marriage attempted to be solemnized by an unauthorized person, whether the parties act in good faith or not, is likewise void without decree.[1179] Furthermore, in Maine, Vermont, and Massachusetts marriages are void when residents, "intending to return, go into another state and have their marriage solemnized with intent to evade the prohibition against incestuous or bigamous marriages, or against marriage with an insane person or idiot, and afterwards return and reside in the home state."[1180] It should also be observed that unions which in some states are void or voidable, in others may be merely prohibited or placed under penalty. The laws of New England in this regard, like those of the other commonwealths, are sometimes confusing and far from uniform in their provisions; and, as Wright suggests, marriages which by the language of the statute appear to be simply forbidden or punishable may nevertheless be construed as void or voidable by the courts.[1181] For when the statute is silent the common law may be in force. Bigamous marriages are so prohibited and punished in Connecticut;[1182] the marriage of a female, procured by force, menace, or duress, in Maine;[1183] and the clandestine marriage of a girl under sixteen years of age, in Massachusetts.[1184] A recent act of Connecticut has set up a bar to matrimony which would be welcomed by the social reformer in other states. Hereafter a couple, either of whom is epileptic, imbecile, or feeble-minded, is forbidden to marry, when the woman is under forty-five years of age; and any selectman or other person aiding in procuring such a union or the marriage of a pauper, when the woman is below that age, is liable to a fine of not less than one thousand dollars or to imprisonment for not less than one year, or to both penalties, as the court may decide.[1185] The laws of Maine also put some check upon the propagation of paupers, the town clerk being forbidden to issue marriage licenses to such persons when the overseers deposit in his office a list of the paupers in their charge.[1186] A statute somewhat similar exists in Vermont.[1187] On the other hand, the New England states afford no example of direct statutory encouragement of wedlock such as exists in a few instances elsewhere in this country; though in all of them, except Rhode Island, indirect encouragement is given through providing that illegitimate children may be legitimized by the marriage of their parents.[1188] Agreements in consideration of marriage are generally void unless made in writing.[1189] c) Certificate and record.—With respect to the notice of intention required by law before a marriage may be solemnized, the century may be divided into two very nearly equal periods. During the first half in all of the New England states proclamation by oral banns in the ancient ecclesiastical manner, or a written notice through posting by the town clerk, is left to the option of the persons; while during the second half the simple license or certificate of the clerk is deemed sufficient. In Connecticut the institution of banns according to the form observed in colonial times was very tenacious. By the statute of 1784 intentions of marriage must either be "sufficiently published in some public Meeting, or Congregation on the Lord's Day, or on some public Fast, Thanksgiving, or Lecture Day in the Town, Parish, or Society where the Parties, or either of them do ordinarily Reside;" or else be "set up in fair Writing upon some Door, or Post of their Meeting-House, or near the same in public View, there to stand, so as it may be read," eight days before the wedding.[1190] This provision—arising in a modification of the act of 1640 made in 1672[1191]—appears in the revision of 1750 and each following edition of the laws until 1854, when it gave place to the modern usage.[1192] The New Hampshire plan is somewhat different. In that state there is a sort of blending in one of the ecclesiastical and lay notices. By the act of 1791 publication is to be made by the clerk; but at three "several public meeting days, or three sabbath days," in the respective towns of the bride and groom.[1193] This plan was retained until 1854.[1194] On the other hand, the Massachusetts law of 1786 is typical in this regard. Intentions must be announced in three public religious meetings, at intervals of three days' distance exclusively, or they must be posted by the town clerk during fourteen days. Should the banns be forbidden and the reasons therefor assigned in writing, the clerk is to "forbear issuing a certificate" until the matter has been examined by two justices of the county, quorum unus. But the person forbidding the banns must cause the question to be determined within seven days, unless the justices certify to the clerk that more time is needed. If the objections to the marriage are not sustained, the complainant must pay the costs of the proceedings, and the clerk shall issue the license. For pulling down or defacing a marriage notice a penalty of twenty shillings or of one hour in the stocks is imposed.[1195] This dual system of notice, with little change in the trial of banns, appears in the statute-book until 1850.[1196] The experience of the other three states is very similar: optional publication in church or by posting being retained until the middle of the century, or in some cases even to a much later time.[1197] The various formalities to be observed in getting married and in registering the facts connected therewith, as required by the existing system, may now be briefly set forth. The first step is application to the town clerk or registrar for a license, or "certificate" as it is usually called. This takes the place of the certificate of publication issued by the minister, clerk, or other person asking the banns or posting the notice, provided for in the earlier laws. By the Massachusetts statute persons intending to be joined in marriage shall "cause notice of their intention to be entered in the office of the clerk or registrar of the city or town in which they respectively dwell, or, if they do not dwell within the commonwealth," then with the similar officer of the place "in which they purpose to have the marriage solemnized. If there is no such clerk or registrar in the place of their residence, the entry shall be made in an adjoining city or town." The certificate is issued at the time the notice is filed; but certificate to a minor[1198] is forbidden except upon the application or consent in writing of the parent, master, or guardian, if living in the state, under penalty of not to exceed one hundred dollars. To protect himself, the clerk or registrar "may require of an applicant for such certificate an affidavit setting forth the age of the parties;" which "affidavit shall be sworn to before a justice of the peace, and shall be sufficient proof of age to authorize the issuing of the certificate." For a false statement in the affidavit the penalty is not to exceed two hundred dollars.[1199] In this state a town of more than two thousand inhabitants is allowed to choose a person other than the clerk to be registrar.[1200] The laws of Vermont and Maine differ but little in the leading points from those of Massachusetts; but in Maine the notice of intention must be recorded with the town clerk where each person resides, if both live in the state, at least five days before the marriage.[1201] More elaborate are the provisions of the Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and Connecticut statutes, requiring the clerk to enter on the certificate the various facts gathered as statistics, to which reference will again be made.[1202] In all cases a penalty, severe under some recent enactments, is imposed upon the minister, justice, or other officer who presumes to celebrate a marriage without first receiving the certificate signed as the law requires.[1203] Provision is everywhere made for a "return" or report by the persons or religious societies solemnizing marriages.[1204] In Connecticut, Vermont, and Rhode Island the return is made by indorsement upon the certificate, which is then sent to the clerk or registrar of the city or town whence it was issued or in which the celebration took place.[1205] By the Connecticut law of 1899 the return must be made before or during the first week of the month following the ceremony.[1206] In Maine and Massachusetts the societies or persons authorized to celebrate marriages are required to keep a record, and from it make periodical return to the clerk or registrar of the town in which the license was issued. By the Maine law the return must be made by the fifteenth day of each month, and a similar report sent to the clerk of the town where the intention was entered.[1207] The Massachusetts statute orders that between the first and tenth days of each month the certificate of each marriage celebrated shall be sent to the clerk or registrar of the city or town issuing the same, and if the marriage be solemnized in a city or town other than the place or places in which the persons reside, then a copy of the certificate, or of either certificate in case two were issued, must be returned to the proper officers of their respective places.[1208] The Massachusetts laws provide also that when marriages take place in another state between persons living in the commonwealth, such persons shall within seven days after their return file with the clerk or registrar of the town in which either lived at the time a certificate or declaration of the marriage, including the facts relating thereto required by law.[1209] A like return of marriages celebrated outside the state is prescribed in Maine[1210] and New Hampshire.[1211] In Vermont a "male resident" so married must within sixty days thereafter deposit with the clerk of the town where he resides a certificate embracing the statistics required by law.[1212] The statutes of Vermont also provide that the head of a family who moves into the state to become a permanent resident may cause a certificate of his marriage, including the same statistics, to be recorded in like manner.[1213] In recent years most of the New England states have made wiser provision than in the earlier period for the collection and preservation of statistics relating to marriage. The town clerk or registrar is required to keep a more complete record. The statutes prescribe a large number of details which must be entered by him, sometimes even as a condition of granting the license. An illustration is afforded by the Massachusetts act of 1897. Clerks are commanded in each case to enter and report the date of the record; the date and place of the marriage; the name, residence, and official station of the person solemnizing; the name, place of birth, residence, age, and color of each of the parties; the number of the marriage, and whether either party is widowed or divorced; the occupation of each; the names of the parents, with the maiden names of the mothers; and the maiden name of the bride in case she be widowed or divorced.[1214] A similar list of facts is called for in New Hampshire;[1215] while the recent enactments of Maine,[1216] Connecticut,[1217] and Rhode Island[1218] on this subject are especially painstaking and elaborate. Finally it may be noted, as a sign of the growing appreciation of the needs of social and statistical science, that throughout New England statutory provision has been made for state registration of marriages. The local clerks and registrars are required to make annual report of the facts collected and recorded by them to the general registrar, who is usually the secretary of the commonwealth or the secretary of the state board of health.[1219] By the Rhode Island statutes the original indorsed certificates, returned to the town clerk and by him recorded, are to be sent to the secretary of the state board of health, who is to cause abstracts of them to be made and published. Thereafter they are to be deposited in the office of the secretary of state, where they shall be properly indexed and remain subject to inspection.[1220] Connecticut is doing still better in this regard. By a series of acts, beginning in 1893, that state is making a praiseworthy effort to complete her marriage records from the date of the first incorporation of the various towns to the present time;[1221] and Maine has provided for the collection and publication of the records of births, deaths, and marriages.[1222] Vermont by an act of 1898 requires the secretary of the state board of health to prepare and furnish the town and city clerks blank forms to be used as books of records of "births, marriages, divorces, and deaths." Return is to be made by the local officers, from which every second year the secretary of the state board of health is to publish a report.[1223] II. THE SOUTHERN AND SOUTHWESTERN STATES[1224] Throughout this period in the South matrimonial legislation has moved more slowly than in New England and the West, but toward the same goal. Sentiment has been more conservative regarding innovation; and in general equal progress has not been made in remodeling and improving the details of administration or the safeguards of marriage law. Originally, as elsewhere shown,[1225] the English ecclesiastical forms were established in Virginia and nominally, in a varying degree, in the neighboring colonies. Dissenters were illiberally, often tyrannically, treated; and to satisfy their consciences in this regard they were compelled to take the law into their own hands. Still, at the Revolution, it was apparent that the American type of matrimonial legislation, as in its essential features already existing in New England, must eventually triumph in the South. a) Solemnization.—Old ideas were especially tenacious in Virginia. For the first time, in 1780, as already suggested,[1226] the monopoly of the Anglican clergy was restricted through legislation. By the statute of that year, for the purpose of "encouraging marriages" and "removing doubts concerning the validity" of those heretofore celebrated by dissenting clergymen, not only are all such marriages declared "good and valid in law," but for the future ministers of "any society or congregation of Christians," as well as the Quakers and Menonists, are permitted to conduct the celebration according to their own rules and usages. License and banns are dispensed with in the case of Menonists and Quakers,[1227] but the act limits the number of dissenting ministers who may take advantage of its provisions. On recommendation of the "elders of the several religious sects," the court of each county is authorized to license not more than four ministers of each dissenting society to solemnize marriages; and the licenses are to be "signed by the judge or elder magistrate under his hand and seal."[1228] Four years later a new marriage act appears, by which the ordained ministers of all societies of Christians are placed on the same level. The provision for licensing a limited number is not retained. Any minister may celebrate marriages of "any persons" within the state, provided he first produce to the court of the county or borough in which he resides credentials of his ordination, and also of his being in regular communion with the society of which he is reputed a member, take the oath of allegiance to the commonwealth, and enter into bond, with two or more sufficient securities, in the sum of five hundred pounds current money for the true and legal performance of his trust. A "testimonial" is then issued to him by the court.[1229] "Itinerant" ministers, however, are not entitled to a testimonial. If any minister shall voluntarily decline, or be ejected from, his office, or "if any of his securities shall give him notice in writing that they desire to be released from their suretyship, in either of these cases," should he refuse or neglect "to give up his testimonials to the court from which they were obtained, any one of his securities, without instituting a suit, may proceed against him as if they were his special bail in an action of debt until he is thereunto compelled or gives them sufficient caution for their indemnification."[1230] By this act also irregular marriages already contracted are made valid. Its provisions regarding solemnization are retained in the elaborate statute of 1792.[1231] Thus far the religious ceremony only had been acknowledged by law. A step toward civil marriage was taken in 1783. It is recited that, since "it hath been represented ... that many of the good people in the remote parts of this commonwealth are destitute of any persons, authorized by law, to solemnize marriages," therefore when it shall seem necessary, in the scarcity of clergymen, the court of any county "on the western waters" is empowered "to nominate so many sober and discreet laymen as will supply the deficiency." It is noticeable that such layman, "upon taking the oath of allegiance" to the state, is to receive a license to celebrate the rites of matrimony "according to the forms and customs of the church of which he is reputed a member." It appears from this statute that magistrates in such places had already been in the habit of celebrating marriages; and these marriages are now legalized.[1232] In consequence of the scarcity of ministers, persons desiring to be married were sometimes compelled to travel long distances across the mountains, exposed to danger from the Indians. Hence in 1794 the courts of Lee and Randolph counties were authorized to nominate two resident laymen in each to perform the ceremony within the county where they respectively resided. These commissioners[1233] were to take an oath of fidelity to the commonwealth; and each was to "enter into bond for sufficient security in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars" for the "true and faithful performance of his trust." This act differs from that of 1783 in being silent as to the use of the religious ceremony; and so marks a step in advance toward full civil marriage.[1234] The foundation of the law of Virginia regarding the marriage celebration, both civil and religious, as it still exists, was thus laid more than a hundred years ago. A few changes, most of them of minor importance, have been made in later years. From time to time, by special law, the benefits of the act of 1794 were extended to other counties;[1235] and in 1830 this plan was adopted for the whole state. The court of every county which should suffer "inconvenience" through lack of ministers was then authorized to name one or two persons to solemnize matrimony, on condition of giving satisfactory bond, as required by earlier statutes.[1236] As the law now stands, "the court of every county which deems it expedient, may appoint one or more persons resident in such county to celebrate the rites of marriage within the same, or a particular district thereof, and upon any person so appointed giving such a bond as is required of an ordained minister, may make a like order" empowering him to act. But the court may rescind this order at pleasure.[1237] It appears, therefore, contrary to the usual custom, that in Virginia the justice of the peace as such has no authority to perform the marriage ceremony. Regarding the religious celebration, the law remains very nearly as it was in 1784, except in one or two important provisions. At least since 1819 Jews have enjoyed the right of using their own marriage rites;[1238] while already in 1812 ordained ministers in regular standing with any society of Christians, residing in any adjacent state, were authorized to solemnize wedlock in Virginia on filing credentials and giving bond in the court of the county where the marriage takes place, the oath of allegiance not being required.[1239] The law was further liberalized in 1831. Any ordained minister in regular communion, as before, "who by the government and discipline of the church of which he is a member, has been assigned to a circuit, station, or district for the period of one year at the least," is allowed, on the same conditions as other ministers, to obtain a "testimonial" from any county or corporation court within such area authorizing him to perform the marriage rites.[1240] With these changes the law of Virginia is complete, except that it is couched in more general phrase. "When a minister of any religious denomination shall, before the court of any county or corporation in this state, produce proof of his ordination, and of his being in regular communion with the religious society of which he is reputed a member, and give bond in the penalty of five hundred dollars, such court may make an order authorizing him to celebrate the rites of marriage." No ceremony is prescribed; but each religious body, though having no minister, may use its own forms.[1241] West Virginia, made a separate state in 1863 by dismemberment of the Old Dominion, has taken a much more conservative course. In 1868 "any minister of the gospel," on presenting the credentials of his ordination and of being in regular communion, according to the plan of the mother-commonwealth, is authorized to "celebrate the rites of marriage in all the counties of the state;" and no person other than a minister who has thus "complied" with the law shall hereafter be permitted to perform the ceremony.[1242] No provision whatever is made for the lay celebration. This reactionary policy was, however, temporarily abandoned in 1873. By a statute of that year the minister, otherwise to be qualified as under the act of 1868, is required in addition to give bond in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars; and each county court, as in Virginia, is authorized to appoint one or more laymen with power to solemnize wedlock.[1243] For four years the lawmaker staid his hand; but in 1877 the illiberal principle of the act of 1868 was again enforced.[1244] So to the present hour only the religious celebration, either by a clergyman or by the usages of a society having no officiating minister, is legal in West Virginia. The lay ceremony is not recognized there by statute.[1245] It is less surprising that Kentucky, whose territory until the admission of the state to the Union in 1792 was embraced in the jurisdiction of Virginia, should have retained the matrimonial law of the parent commonwealth. As regards solemnization, the act of 1798 in its substance is almost identical with the statutes of Virginia before that of 1794 appeared. It contains like provisions with respect to bond, credentials, testimonial, and oath of allegiance on the part of the minister; and Quakers, Menonists, and all societies of Christians are allowed to use their own rites.[1246] In the next year the county courts of the state are authorized each to license one or more of their own magistrates to solemnize marriages, "where there shall not be a sufficient number of ministers of the gospel" for the purpose.[1247] By the present law, which in all essential respects is identical with the act of 1851, marriages may be celebrated either by ministers of the gospel or priests of any denomination, in regular communion with a religious society; by judges of the county courts, and such justices of the peace as the county courts may authorize; or according to the usage of any religious society to which either person may belong.[1248] In Maryland no progress has been made regarding the marriage celebration since the Revolution. Ministers and priests still have a monopoly of the matrimonial business, as under the illiberal act of 1777, whose provisions have already been summarized.[1249] Quakers are still allowed their own rites; but, as in West Virginia, the lay celebration is not authorized by the statute.[1250] Until 1896, with slight modification, the marriage law of Maryland was in force in the District of Columbia. By a statute of that year the ceremony may be performed in the District by any justice of the peace; any judge of a court of record; or by any ordained or appointed minister residing anywhere in the United States, if authorized by a justice of the Supreme Court.[1251] Elsewhere the history of the matrimonial legislation of North Carolina has been traced to the act of 1766, the last statute adopted before the Revolution. The Quakers had practiced their own rites throughout the colonial era. By the act just mentioned the Presbyterians had been granted the same privilege, but on humiliating terms. With these exceptions, the clergy of the English church enjoyed a monopoly of the marriage celebration; for no other dissenting body save the Presbyterians was recognized by the law. All this was changed in 1778, after the establishment had been swept away. The "regular ministers of every denomination, having the cure of souls," and all justices of the peace in the state, are authorized to solemnize marriages; while the Quakers are to enjoy their ancient privileges.[1252] So the law remains at the present time.[1253] Throughout the century the statutes of Tennessee governing the celebration of wedlock have been practically the same as those of North Carolina, the parent commonwealth, to whose jurisdiction the territory belonged until 1796.[1254] At present "all regular ministers of the gospel of every denomination, and Jewish rabbis, having the cure of souls, and all justices of the peace, judges, and chancellors in the state," as well as the governor and the speakers of the senate and house, are authorized to celebrate marriages.[1255] No special ceremony is prescribed. During the period under review South Carolina, like Pennsylvania, has made no legislative provision for the marriage celebration. The same usage prevails since the Revolution as before, except that in the colonial period usage prevailed in spite of the statutes. What Brevard said in 1814 is still true. "It is customary in this state," he declares, "to celebrate or publish the matrimonial contract, by or before a minister of the gospel—of any sect, and without regard to any particular form or ceremony—or by or before a justice of the peace, or other lawful civil magistrate."[1256] The optional civil or religious celebration before a minister or justice, existing by custom in Georgia from the foundation of the colony, was recognized by the act of 1785—the first legislation on the subject of matrimony after the organization of the state.[1257] A few changes in details have brought the law into harmony with the prevailing practice of the country.[1258] At present marriages may be solemnized by any judge, justice of the peace, minister of the gospel, Jewish minister, "or other person of any religious society or sect" authorized by its rules to perform the ceremony.[1259] By a unique provision "colored ministers of the gospel, or ministers of the gospel of African descent," are allowed to celebrate marriages "between freedmen and freedwomen, or persons of African descent, only."[1260] In all the other states and territories of the South and Southwest the optional religious or civil celebration before a minister or judicial officer has been sanctioned by statute from the beginning. Such is the case in Florida, Arkansas, Indian Territory, Arizona, New Mexico, and Oklahoma; as also in Alabama, Mississippi,[1261] and Missouri, where in each case the typical optional plan was adopted under the territorial legislation of 1805.[1262] The laws of Louisiana have always shown ample evidence of their Latin origin. This is especially true of those governing marriage, divorce, and the family; except that the celebration was determined by statute, and was therefore soon brought into harmony with the practice prevailing in the southwestern states, the contemporary Virginia plan being at first adopted as a model. The vast region bearing the name of Louisiana was acquired from France in 1803. For the purpose of government it was presently divided into two parts, lying respectively north and south of the thirty-third parallel. The northern portion, called the "District of Louisiana," for law and administration was attached to Indiana Territory, while the southern portion, called the "Territory of Orleans"—having about fifty thousand inhabitants, French, Spanish, and English—in 1804 was provided with a separate government in which the lawmaking power was vested in a legislative council appointed by the president of the United States. In the next year this council was superseded by a representative assembly similar to that existing in the Mississippi Territory;[1263] and at the same time the northern region, under the new name of the Territory of Louisiana, was given a centralized government in which the legislative authority was in the hands of the governor and three judges holding by presidential appointment.[1264] A Digest of the Civil Laws now in force in the Territory of Orleans was later prepared. This contains minute provisions relating to marriage and divorce; but declares that, "besides the preceding general rules, there are divers formalities to be fulfilled for the publication and celebration of marriages, which are established by a special act of the legislature."[1265] But "such marriages only are recognized by law as are contracted and solemnized according to the rules which it prescribes."[1266] On February 24, 1807, all contracts hitherto solemnized by the judge of any county, a justice of the peace, minister of the gospel, or by any person legally discharging the duties of commandant, are validated so far as relates to the ceremony and the authority of the person officiating, provided they are in other respects according to law.[1267] On April 6 of the same year appears a very elaborate statute—the "special act of the legislature" above mentioned—which in many of its provisions still constitutes the matrimonial law of Louisiana.[1268] By this act "any priest or minister of the gospel, regularly ordained or admitted into any religious society, may obtain a licence to celebrate marriages within this territory." For this purpose he must produce the usual credentials "to the judge of the parish within which his domicile is situated, take the oath of allegiance, and the oath of affirmation to support the constitution of the United States, and give bond with security in the sum of two thousand dollars, for the faithful performance of his trust." Quakers and Menonists are allowed the use of their own rites; and "when any parish judge shall think that there is not a sufficient number" of qualified priests or ministers, he may grant licenses to justices of the peace to "celebrate marriages in the parish in which they reside," on their giving a legal bond. All marriages must be celebrated in the parish where one of the persons has his domicile and in the presence of three witnesses.[1269] The provisions of the act of 1807 requiring clergymen to procure license and give bond were repealed two years later.[1270] In 1820 marriages irregularly celebrated by the parish justices were validated; and these magistrates were in future given power to act.[1271] The law regarding the religious ceremony was made more flexible in 1826. "If there be no priest or minister of a religious sect domiciled in any one of the parishes of this state," it was then enacted, "the judge of that parish, if required by either of the parties, is authorized to send to any priest or minister residing in a neighboring parish a commission to come and celebrate marriages in the parish" where the judge has his jurisdiction.[1272] "Regularly commissioned notaries of the state" for the parish of West Feliciana were authorized to act in 1850.[1273] As the law now stands, the ceremony may be performed by these notaries; by justices of the peace and parish judges, within their respective parishes; by judges of the district courts; and by any minister or priest, "whether a citizen of the United States or not."[1274] The first matrimonial legislation of Texas coincides with the earliest experiment in organized rule by settlers from the United States in that Mexican province. By an ordinance of January 16, 1836, adopted by the provisional government, all "judges, alcades, commissarios, and regularly accredited ministers of the gospel of whatever denomination," are given "power to celebrate the rites of matrimony in their respective municipalities, which shall be done in the presence of not less than three disinterested witnesses." Certificates are to be made by the person officiating, attested by one or more witnesses, one of which is to be "given to the bride, and the other filed with the archives of the municipality." Marriages hitherto "celebrated by bond or otherwise, under the heretofore existing laws," are declared valid; "provided that all officers who have attended to the same, shall on application of either party, or the friend of either party, file the bond or other evidence of such marriages with the archives and records of their respective municipalities." This must be done in ten days after the application, under penalty of one hundred dollars to the injured person, and the same fine from time to time every ten days till the papers are filed.[1275] The "Republic of Texas" was soon after set up by the settlers; and one of its first legislative measures was a general marriage law. "Whereas," runs this noteworthy act, which reveals the embarrassments of American pioneer life, "in many parts of Texas no person legally authorized to celebrate the rites of matrimony has existed; and whereas, from that cause many persons have resorted to the practice of marrying by bond, and others have been married by various officers of justice not authorized" to do so; "and whereas, public policy and the interests of families require some legislative action on the subject:" therefore it is enacted that "all persons who have so intermarried" are authorized to go before any of the persons provided for in this act, "and publicly solemnize the rites of matrimony; and all marriages so solemnized are ... declared of legal and binding effect, from the period the persons had previously intermarried agreeably to the custom of the times," and their issue is made legitimate. But the benefits of the act are conditioned on there being no legal bar to the marriage, and on celebration within six months from its passage.[1276] For the future, all ordained ministers, judges of the district courts, justices of the county courts, and all justices of the peace of the several counties of the republic may perform the marriage ceremony.[1277] The present law of the state is identical with the statute of the republic just cited, except that Jewish rabbis are also expressly empowered to join persons in wedlock.[1278] In only three instances, among the twenty-one commonwealths and territories under discussion, are witnesses required by statute at the celebration; although in Maryland, in the case of Quaker weddings, the contracting parties are to sign a "certificate to the effect that they have agreed to take each other for husband and wife," which certificate must be attested by twelve persons present, and within sixty days entered in the records of the society to which one of them belongs, or else in some court in the county or city where the marriage takes place.[1279] But in Louisiana, by the act of 1807, all contracts are to be solemnized "in the presence of at least three witnesses, each of whom shall have attained the age of majority;"[1280] and this provision is still retained in the law.[1281] At least two adult competent witnesses are required in Oklahoma; and the same number in Porto Rico.[1282] Nowhere is any form of words prescribed for a legal celebration,[1283] although in several cases the ceremony is negatively mentioned. Thus, in Tennessee, it is expressly stated that no formula is requisite, except that the parties "shall respectively declare, in the presence of the minister or officer, that they accept each other as man and wife."[1284] The Oklahoma law requires marriage to be "contracted by a formal ceremony" in the presence of two witnesses.[1285] The consent of persons "who may be lawfully married," declares the North Carolina statute, "presently to take each other as husband and wife, freely, seriously, and plainly expressed by each in the presence of the other and in the presence" of a minister or justice, and the consequent declaration by him that they "are man and wife, shall be a valid and sufficient marriage."[1286] By the law of Arkansas and Indian Territory a marriage may be solemnized by a clergyman according to the forms and customs of his society; or by a civil officer in such a way as he "shall deem most appropriate."[1287] Mississippi has adopted a similar provision.[1288] In Arizona, by an act of 1887, "all persons who at any time heretofore have lived together as husband and wife, and who shall continue to live together" for one year after this law takes effect, or until one of the parties shall die, if within the year, "shall be considered as having been lawfully married and their children legitimate."[1289] Two years later the Arizona legislature produced the following extraordinary "blanket" provision. It is most generously enacted that "every ceremony of marriage or in the nature of a marriage ceremony of any kind, in this Territory, whether either or both or more of the parties to such ceremony be lawfully competent to be the subjects of such marriage or ceremony or not, shall be certified by a certificate stating the fact and nature of such ceremony, the full name of each of the parties concerned, and the full name of every officer, priest, minister, and person by whatever style or designation called or known, in any way taking part in the performance of such ceremony, which certificate shall be drawn up and signed by the parties to such ceremony and by every officer, priest, minister, and person taking part" therein, and be filed for record within twenty days.[1290] The usual penalties are generally prescribed for unauthorized solemnization.[1291] In most cases a marriage is not expressly declared void for neglect of legal formalities; but the Mississippi statute makes a license essential to a valid contract;[1292] while, on the other hand, in Tennessee the validity of a marriage is not affected by the omission of the baptismal name of either person in the license and the use of a nickname instead, if the parties can be identified and have cohabited as man and wife.[1293] Furthermore, it is provided in Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, and Georgia that celebration before an unauthorized person professing to have legal power shall not invalidate a contract entered into in good faith by the parties.[1294] Marriages valid at common law are still good in Florida.[1295] It is curious to find the statute of 32 Henry VIII., chap. 38, for marriages to stand notwithstanding pre-contracts—repealed for England under Edward VI.—kept in full force by the laws of South Carolina at least until 1873, and in those of Kentucky for some years after the beginning of the century.[1296] After the Civil War the South found itself confronted by a very serious problem—that of the social and legal status of several millions of freedmen. The unions of slave men and women had existed, of course, only at the will of the master. They had no legal force at all. It became necessary, therefore, to determine and to recognize the marriages of the newly enfranchised negro population. For this purpose in many of the southern states special statutes were enacted. In Virginia it was provided that when colored persons prior to February 27, 1866, agreed to occupy the relation of husband and wife, and were then cohabiting as such, "whether the rites of matrimony had been celebrated or not," they shall be deemed husband and wife; and all their children shall be legitimate, whether born before or after that date; as were also the children of such parents who had then ceased living together.[1297] Similar laws were passed in West Virginia, Tennessee, South Carolina, Texas, Florida, and Arkansas.[1298] There is a like provision for the District of Columbia.[1299] By the Maryland act all reputed marriages of colored persons before March 22, 1867, are validated, if the parties establish before a justice of the peace the fact of the marriage, of which then a certificate is directed to be placed on record.[1300] The Georgia law is unique. Persons of color living together as husband and wife, March 9, 1866, are to sustain that legal relation to each other, unless a man then had two or more reputed wives, or a woman two or more reputed husbands. In such event the man shall immediately select one of his reputed wives, with her consent, or the woman one of her reputed husbands, with his consent; and the ceremony of marriage between these two shall be performed, under severe penalty for refusal.[1301] b) Forbidden degrees: void and voidable marriages.—Everywhere in the region under discussion, except perhaps in Louisiana, according to the spirit, if not by the letter, of the laws, marriage appears as a relation of status as well as of contract. Only in a few instances, however, is it actually defined or are its requirements formally laid down. Thus, in Arkansas, Indian Territory, Oklahoma, Missouri, and New Mexico it is a civil contract to which the consent of parties capable in law of contracting is necessary.[1302] The same in substance is true of the statute of Louisiana, whose rhetorical Gallic phrases have not been essentially changed since 1807. "The law considers marriage in no other view than as a civil contract.... Such marriages only are recognized by law as are contracted and solemnized according to the rules which it prescribes." Since they are thus considered by the law merely as civil contracts, "it sanctions all those marriages where the parties, at the time of making them, were (1) willing to contract; (2) able to contract; (3) did contract pursuant to the forms and solemnities prescribed.... No marriage is valid to which the parties have not freely consented; consent is not free, (1) when given to a ravisher, unless it has been given by the party ravished, after she has been restored to the enjoyment of liberty; (2) when it has been extorted by violence; (3) when there is a mistake respecting the person whom one of the parties intended to marry."[1303] By the Porto Rico code "marriage is a civil institution, originating in a civil contract whereby a man and a woman mutually agree to become husband and wife and to discharge toward each other the duties imposed by law. It is valid only when contracted and solemnized in accordance with provisions of law."[1304] In Georgia, "to constitute a valid marriage ... there must be (1) parties able to contract; (2) an actual contract; (3) consummation according to law." To constitute an actual contract "the parties must be consenting thereto voluntarily, and without any fraud practiced upon either. Drunkenness at the time of marriage, brought about by art or contrivance to induce consent," is held to be a fraud.[1305] The age of consent to marriage is prescribed in fifteen of these states and territories; and, as in other parts of the country, it is often far too low, particularly in the case of girls. For males it is eighteen in Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Porto Rico, and West Virginia; seventeen in Alabama, Arkansas, Indian Territory, and Georgia; sixteen in North Carolina, Texas, and the District of Columbia; and fourteen in Kentucky, Louisiana, and Virginia. For females it is sixteen in Arizona, Porto Rico, and West Virginia; fifteen in New Mexico and Oklahoma; fourteen in Alabama, Arkansas, Indian Territory, Georgia, North Carolina, Texas, and the District of Columbia; and only twelve in Kentucky, Louisiana, and Virginia.[1306] Eighteen commonwealths of the group and the District of Columbia have fixed, for both sexes, the age below which the consent of parent or guardian is necessary to a legal contract. For males it is twenty-one in Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Indian Territory, Oklahoma, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, New Mexico, Porto Rico, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia; eighteen in North Carolina; and but sixteen in Tennessee.[1307] For females, it is twenty-one in Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana, Porto Rico, Virginia, and West Virginia; eighteen in Alabama, Arkansas, Indian Territory, Mississippi, Missouri, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, and Texas; and only sixteen in Arizona, Maryland, Tennessee, and the District of Columbia.[1308] The age for females is eighteen in Georgia; but by the statutes of that state parental consent does not seem to be required for male minors, nor for females when publication is by banns.[1309] In effect, the same appears to be the case in South Carolina, since a penalty is affixed for marrying a female under sixteen without parental consent; while for male minors such consent is not prescribed.[1310] But in Alabama, Florida, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia, it should be noted, parental consent is not required, if the minor has been previously married. In several cases the statutes contain important special provisions regarding the marriage of minors which modify the general rule laid down as to age and parental consent. By the law of Alabama, before the issuance of a license for the marriage of persons under the ages of twenty-one and eighteen respectively, the judge of probate, in addition to parental consent, "must also require a bond to be executed in the penal sum of two hundred dollars," payable to the state, "with condition to be void if there is no lawful cause why such marriage should not be celebrated."[1311] In Kentucky, if a female under sixteen marry without legal consent, a court in her county having general equity jurisdiction may commit her estate to a receiver, who, under direction of the court, may pay out the profits, after due compensation, to her separate use during infancy. At the age of twenty-one, the estate is to be delivered to her, unless the court thinks fit to continue it longer in the receiver's hands.[1312] Under similar conditions, in West Virginia the county court is empowered, "upon petition of her next friend," to commit the estate of a girl between twelve and fourteen years of age to a receiver, who is to give bond for the faithful performance of his trust.[1313] A Tennessee law of 1899 prohibits the issue of a license to persons under sixteen years, without written consent of parent or guardian.[1314] In Porto Rico marriage under the age of consent "shall, nevertheless, be valid ipso facto and without an express declaration, if one day after having arrived at the legal age of puberty the parties shall have lived together without the representative of either of them having brought suit against its validity, or if the woman shall have conceived before the legal age of puberty or before having established such suit."[1315] The Romano-French origin of the Louisiana laws is in no way more plainly revealed than in the elaborate provisions regarding the Family Council. This institution is given a prominent place in the regulation of domestic affairs; and, in the United States, it is peculiar to Louisiana. It has always exercised jurisdiction in approving the marriage of minors; and in appointing "tutors" or guardians; while at present its advice may be required in the disposal of children of divorced parents. By the act of 1807 consent of the parents is necessary to the marriage of minors of either sex under twenty-one years of age. In case of disagreement the father's approval is sufficient. If either parent be dead or incapable of consenting, the other is authorized to act, "although he or she may have contracted a second marriage." But if the parents are both dead or incapable, the grandfathers and grandmothers "shall supply their places as to this consent, and in case of difference of opinion, a majority shall prevail;[1316] when they are equally divided in their opinions, the council of the family is invoked to decide." The council is likewise called in when parents and grandparents are all dead; but its decision must be made within one month after it is convoked and consent requested, otherwise the marriage may be celebrated. In all cases, whether by parents, grandparents, or council, approval is to be given or refused in presence of the parish judge. The consent must be drawn up in writing by that officer in presence of two witnesses and the persons consenting; and by all of these, including the magistrate, it must be signed. A certificate of consent is made out in duplicate: one copy being retained by the judge and the other given to the persons whose marriage is thus approved. In case of consent by the council the certificate "shall state the names of those of the family who assembled, their professions and places of residence, and which of them consented," together with "the names of the parties intending to marry."[1317] The regulation of consent is simplified under the present law, and the patriarchal features have in part disappeared. "The minor of either sex ... must have received the consent of his father and mother or of the survivor of them; and if they are both dead, the consent of his tutor." But the family council, or "meeting" as now called, still has important functions; and its composition and proceedings are carefully prescribed. In all cases the meeting is composed of "at least five relations, or in default of relations, friends of him in whose interests they are called upon to deliberate. These relations or friends must be selected from among those domiciled in the parish in which the meeting is held, or in a neighboring parish," provided it be at a distance of not more than thirty miles. "The relations shall be selected according to their proximity, beginning with the nearest;" and the "relation" shall be preferred to the "connection" of the same degree; while among relations of the same degree the eldest shall be preferred. No person who has "interests conflicting with those of a minor" is competent to serve in the meeting, "although one of the nearest relations." Members of the meeting are appointed by the parish judge: and it must be held "before the recorder of the parish, a justice of the peace, or notary public appointed by the judge for the purpose." A meeting may be called for a fixed hour on three days' notice; and the members are to take oath to give advice according to their best knowledge.[1318] The laws of the southern and southwestern states regarding the forbidden degrees of lineal and collateral consanguinity are far from uniform in their details; but they are determined by the same general principles as those of New England already considered. Ascendants and descendants are, of course, always included.[1319] In the side lines prohibition does not usually extend to first cousins. But in Arizona, Oklahoma, Indian Territory, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Missouri these may not legally marry;[1320] and this restriction was also maintained in Georgia until 1865.[1321] By the law of Porto Rico collaterals by consanguinity may not marry within the fourth degree; but the court may, for good cause, on petition of an interested person, waive this impediment.[1322] Furthermore, in every place, except in Tennessee, either expressly or by implication, marriage between aunts and nephews or uncles and nieces is forbidden.[1323] With respect to affinity it is not surprising to find still greater conservatism in communities where the influence of the English church had originally been so strong. Marriage with a brother's widow or a deceased wife's sister is forbidden by the Virginia statute of 1788.[1324] The prohibition as to the latter does not seem to have been entirely removed until 1849;[1325] while with regard to the former it lingered until 1860.[1326] In Maryland the law containing these two restrictions and likewise prohibiting marriage with a deceased husband's brother or a deceased sister's husband was repealed as early as 1790.[1327] A statute of Louisiana, in 1827, declares that, since the new civil code (1825) had abolished impediments on account of affinity existing "under the Spanish laws," and because even before the promulgation of that code "some doubts were entertained whether the Spanish laws on this subject were still in force," therefore to prevent litigation "all marriages between brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law contracted before the code went into effect shall be held valid."[1328] The law of Georgia which for many years forbade wedlock with a sister-in-law or a brother-in-law seems also to have been abrogated.[1329] Finally it may be noted that by the rule still existing in Alabama and Mississippi marriage with a step-mother or a step-father is prohibited; and the same is true of Georgia, Kentucky, Maryland, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia, where, in addition, one is not permitted to contract matrimony with a father-in-law or a mother-in-law. According to the rule generally prevailing marriage within the forbidden degrees is void or voidable;[1330] the children are often declared illegitimate, either absolutely or when born after annulment; and severe penalties are imposed for violation of the law.[1331] Likewise, as elsewhere in the country, marriages are declared void or voidable for a variety of reasons other than the forbidden degrees. Here the greatest confusion and uncertainty exist; and there is most urgent need of a strong effort to bring the laws of the different states into harmony in this regard. The evil is aggravated through the fact that transgressions which render a contract invalid in one state may in a neighboring community merely subject the offender to fine or imprisonment. Thus in Virginia, West Virginia, and apparently also in Georgia a marriage is void or voidable when celebrated out of the state by residents who seek to avoid the requirements of their own law.[1332] In Maryland under like conditions a fine is imposed[1333] and in the District of Columbia such a marriage is illegal and may be declared void.[1334] On the other hand, in Kentucky, when persons there resident "shall marry in another state, such marriages shall be valid ... if valid ... where solemnized."[1335] The statutes of the other fifteen states and territories, except when the motive is union within the forbidden degrees,[1336] appear to be entirely silent on the subject of clandestine marriage. Bigamous marriages are invalid in Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, District of Columbia, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia; but in Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Indian Territory, and Texas they are only prohibited or made punishable; while the legislature of New Mexico attaches a penalty for the offense of two to seven years in the penitentiary.[1337] Marriages obtained by fraud or by force, menace, or duress are dealt with in a similar spirit. They are prohibited or punishable in Alabama, Arizona, Mississippi, Missouri, Tennessee, and Texas;[1338] void or voidable in District of Columbia, Arkansas, Indian Territory, Georgia, Kentucky, and Louisiana;[1339] fraudulent contract is a ground of divorce in Oklahoma; while the statutes of the remaining states are either entirely silent, as in the case of Florida, Maryland, New Mexico, Virginia, and West Virginia; or such marriages are void at common law where no statute exists; or under general statutory provisions, as seems to be the case in North Carolina and South Carolina.[1340] Various other grounds for invalidating a marriage are here and there assigned. Such is lack of understanding, in North Carolina and Oklahoma; idiocy, in District of Columbia, Kentucky, and South Carolina; lunacy, insanity, or an unsound mind, in the two states last named, and also in Georgia, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia; want of legal age of consent, in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Texas, and West Virginia; want of physical competence, in Arizona, Arkansas, Indian Territory, Georgia, North Carolina, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia;[1341] or lack of proper solemnization, in Kentucky.[1342] But in these states as elsewhere, it must be remembered, the statutes are supplemented by the common law. Very naturally, in the region where slavery existed before the Civil War a horror of intermarriage between whites and blacks is everywhere evinced by the statute-maker. Accordingly, every state and territory in the group under examination—except New Mexico, Porto Rico, and the District of Columbia—has enacted rigorous laws to prevent miscegenation. In Alabama and Tennessee such marriages are prohibited "to the third generation" under severe penalties;[1343] in all the other states they are declared void or voidable, and usually the issue is absolutely illegitimate. Unfortunately, the statutes on this subject show a deplorable lack of uniformity. They are divergent in their most important provisions. Their language is not always clear, and even when it is technically exact, the occasional use of vulgar fractions to designate the degree of African blood interdicted must often put its certain interpretation far beyond the people whom it most vitally concerns. Thus in Arkansas, Indian Territory, and Kentucky[1344] marriage is void between a white person and a negro or mulatto; in Georgia[1345] it is so between a white person and a person of African descent; in Louisiana and Virginia, between white persons and persons of "color;" in West Virginia, between a white person and a negro; in Oklahoma, between persons of the white race and those of the negro race; in South Carolina, between a white person and an Indian, negro, mulatto, mestizo, or half-breed; in Florida between a white person and a colored person; in Maryland between a white person and a negro or a person of negro descent to the third generation inclusive; in North Carolina the interdiction is the same, except that Indians are included;[1346] in Texas the prohibition is between persons of European blood and Africans or their descendants. Elsewhere the lawmaker resorts to arithmetic. Marriage is void in Mississippi[1347] between a white person and a person having one-eighth or more negro or Mongolian blood; and in Missouri, where the negro blood amounts to one-eighth or more. Arizona, like Mississippi, objects strongly to the union of whites and Chinese; so a marriage is declared void between persons of "Caucasian" blood and Africans or "Mongolians," or with their descendants.[1348] But numerous and varied as are the legal restrictions put upon marriage in the southern and southwestern states, one regrets to discover that not even a beginning has yet been made in the effort to thus check the increase of paupers and vagrants, or to prevent the hereditary transmission of tendencies to vice, crime, or incurable disease. In many cases indirect encouragement of matrimony is given in the usual way through legitimation of children or the suspension of penalty or prosecution.[1349] Since 1856 the Statutes of New Mexico, in this connection, contain a somewhat novel clause. It is "provided that when any persons are found living together publicly as if they were married, they shall be required immediately to contract marriage, if there is no impediment to prevent their so doing; and if they do not marry upon the first requirement of any justice, they shall, upon accusation, be fined not less than twenty-five nor more than eighty dollars for every time they shall be so found."[1350] West Virginia favors wedlock in a different way. Not only may either person bring suit, in the manner very commonly prescribed, to annul or validate a doubtful marriage; but in that event and "in every other case where the validity of a marriage is called in question, it shall be presumed that the marriage is valid, unless the contrary be clearly proven."[1351] Georgia, however, is the only state which offers direct encouragement. It is formally announced that "marriage is encouraged by the law, and every effort to restrain or discourage" it by "contract, condition, limitation, or otherwise is invalid and void." Still, "prohibiting marriage to a particular person or persons, or before a certain seasonable age, or other prudential provision looking only to the interest of the person to be benefitted, and not in general restraint" of matrimony, will be allowed.[1352] c) Certificate and record.—In the region whose laws are under examination license from a county officer is now in most cases essential before a marriage may be legally solemnized. But originally in the older commonwealths there existed a dual system of optional civil license or ecclesiastical banns, which may be contrasted with the somewhat different system by banns or posting so long preserved in the New England states. Indeed, in at least two instances it still survives. By the first legislation of Virginia after the Revolution the provisions of the act of 1748 on this subject are retained.[1353] In 1780 it is provided that "no persons, except the people called Quakers and Menonists, shall hereafter be joined together as man and wife without lawful license first had, or thrice publication of banns in the respective parishes, or congregations," where such persons "severally" reside. Within three months a "certificate of solemnization" is to be filed with the clerk of the county where the marriage takes place. The fee for performing the ceremony is fixed at "twenty-five pounds of tobacco, and no more, to be paid in current money at the rate which shall be settled by the grand jury."[1354] Under the elaborate statute of 1792 a license, or oral banns in case of members of the Protestant Episcopal church, is still requisite. On submitting an approved bond in the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, license may be obtained from the clerk of the court of the county where the woman "usually resides." When either person is under twenty-one years of age, consent of parent or guardian, written or oral, is necessary before license may be issued. If written, the consent must be attested by two witnesses, one of whom, appearing in person, is to swear that the signature was made in his presence. Within twelve months—the time already fixed by the act of 1784—a certificate of the marriage must be returned to the clerk of the county or corporation in which it was solemnized.[1355] Thus, with slight change, the law of Virginia remained for over half a century.[1356] But in 1848 oral banns were abolished and the modern system by civil license only was established.[1357] In North Carolina a dual system of banns and license, similar to that of Virginia, was authorized by the act of 1778; and it did not yield to the modern plan until 1872, when banns were abolished and bond for license was no longer required.[1358] Tennessee retained the system of the parent commonwealth, North Carolina, until, far down in the century, it gave way to the typical American plan.[1359] Kentucky does not seem to have followed the example of Virginia; but civil license in all cases was there required from the origin of the state.[1360] In Missouri, on the other hand, in 1805 a triple optional system of banns, posting, or license was established by the governor and judges of Indiana Territory. Notice of intention to marry is to be published for fifteen days at least, either orally on "three several Sundays, holy days, or other days of public worship, in the meeting in the towns where the parties respectively belong;" or by affixing a written notice signed by one of the judges or a justice of the peace in some public place where the persons respectively dwell. Otherwise a license under the governor's hand and seal, authorizing celebration without publication, must be obtained. By this law persons solemnizing marriages are to keep a record; and within three months, in each case, they are required to make a return to the registrar of the district.[1361] Banns, however, do not seem ever to have been recognized after Missouri was admitted to the Union. The act of 1825 is entirely silent as to both banns and license. In place thereof it is provided that the marriage of a minor may not be celebrated unless parent or guardian be present and give consent; or else a written certificate of assent must be produced under the hand of such parent, guardian, or other person having legal control, attested by the oath or affirmation of a witness of full age.[1362] Maryland still clings to the system of license or ecclesiastical banns substantially as it appears in the act of 1777.[1363] The same was formerly true of the District of Columbia, where the statute of Maryland was in force until 1896,[1364] Georgia has been equally conservative. By the law of 1785 a magistrate or a clergyman may solemnize matrimony after eight days' "public notice" or on receiving a license from "his honor the governor, or register of probates."[1365] This plan lasted only until 1799, when license or thrice publication of banns, in the usual way, was substituted.[1366] So the law remained[1367] until 1860, when a reactionary step was taken. In December of that year an act was passed by the legislature, to take effect January I, 1862, containing a paragraph which made either license or ecclesiastical banns essential to a valid marriage. However, on the repeal of this paragraph in 1863, the old optional system by banns or license, without declaring either essential to a valid contract, was restored; and it has persisted to the present time.[1368] The peculiar procedure observed in Louisiana with respect to parental consent or the consent of the family council, in the case of the marriage of minors, has already been described in the preceding section. The act of 1807 contains also a general provision for notice and license. Persons applying for license must satisfy the parish judge, by two witnesses if necessary, that they are twenty-one years of age; and the proof must be registered. The intentions of the persons are then to be published by the judge through "posting up a notice at the door of the nearest church, [or] at the door of the court-house of the parish, announcing a day on which a license would issue, unless opposition should be made." If no objection be raised within fifteen days, the license may be issued, provided the intended husband execute a bond, with sufficient security, "in a sum proportioned to his fortune, at the discretion of the judge," that there is no legal impediment to the marriage. But there is an important exception to the general rule. In "certain cases," if minors are not concerned, "the judge may dispense with the above mode of publishing marriages, by his special license to that effect, and under his own responsibility." Minors must apply to the judge of the parish in which one of the persons has his domicile. The application is then published, and "if no opposition be made, the license shall be granted as directed in the case of persons who have attained the age of twenty-one years."[1369] The wholesome provision requiring notice to be published for a certain period before issuance of the license is no longer in force. Otherwise, though somewhat simplified, the law of Louisiana remains today practically what it was in 1807. License is always requisite; it must be issued by the proper officer in the parish where either the bride or groom is domiciled; and the provision for the bond is expressed in exactly the same words as of old, except that the duration of the security is limited to two years. In the parish of Orleans licenses are granted by the board of health and judges of the city courts; in the other parishes of the state, by the clerks of the district courts, or by the district judge when the clerk is himself a "party to the marriage."[1370] The general features of matrimonial administration in the entire group of states may now be presented in rapid outline. Everywhere, except in Georgia and Maryland, as already explained, and in New Mexico and South Carolina, which have no legislation on the subject, license in every case is required. The present law of Virginia does not differ materially from that of earlier years. The marriage license is issued by the clerk of the court of the county or corporation in which the woman usually resides. If the office of clerk be vacant, then the judge of the county court or the mayor of the corporation may act, making return to the clerk "as soon as there may be one." Before license is granted for the marriage of a minor, there is requisite the consent of the father or guardian, or, if none, of the mother, given personally or in writing subscribed by a witness who must swear that the writing was signed in his presence. Similar functions are performed by the clerk of the county court in West Virginia,[1371] Tennessee,[1372] and Arkansas; the clerk of the circuit court, in Maryland, Texas, and Mississippi; the county register or recorder of deeds, in North Carolina and Missouri; the county ordinary or his deputy, in Georgia; the county judge, in Florida; the county judge of probate, in Alabama and Oklahoma; the clerk of the probate court, in Arizona; the county clerk, in Kentucky; the clerk of the district court, in Louisiana; the municipal judge, in Porto Rico; and by the clerk of the supreme court of the District of Columbia.[1373] As in Virginia, license must be obtained from the proper officer of the county where the woman resides, in Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, and West Virginia. The same is true in Georgia, if the woman is "resident in the state;" and in Kentucky, unless she is of full age or a widow, and the license is issued on her personal or written application, when it may be granted by any county clerk. But in Maryland and North Carolina license must be obtained in the county where the marriage is expected to occur; in Tennessee, either in the county in which the bride resides or in that where the marriage is to be solemnized; while in Louisiana, as already seen, it may be issued in the county where either the bride or the groom is domiciled. The statutes of the remaining states appear to have no definite provisions on this subject. The law of Porto Rico is very careful in this regard. "Persons desiring to contract marriage shall first present themselves before the municipal judge of their domicile if they shall have the same domicile," or before that officer in their respective places of abode if they have different domiciles; "and first being duly sworn, shall be examined as to their legal capacities and incapacities to enter into matrimony." They must also sign a sworn declaration of their names, ages, and professions, with those of their parents, which the judge is required to record in his "marriage book." Not until ten days after the examination may the judge issue the license, or refuse it if on proper trial any objection to the marriage is sustained; nor may he issue it in case the persons have different domiciles until the other judge "has forwarded to him a copy of the record made by the other contracting party."[1374] In Arkansas, Indian Territory, Tennessee, and until recently in Mississippi,[1375] a bond in a definite sum, conditioned that the parties may lawfully marry, must be given by the person applying for the license. The same is true for Alabama in the case of minors; and also for Kentucky when the persons are unknown to the clerk. In the other states, if demanded by the official, oath or affidavit usually takes the place of bond. For solemnizing a marriage without proper license presented the offender is very generally subjected to severe penalties.[1376] In every commonwealth, except South Carolina, Arkansas, and Indian Territory,[1377] it is the duty of the person or society conducting the celebration to make a "return" thereof to the proper official, either in the county where the woman dwells or in that of the marriage.[1378] This report must be submitted within a fixed period, which is one month (or thirty days) in Alabama, Louisiana, and Maryland; two months (or sixty days) in Texas, Virginia, North Carolina, and Arkansas; three months (or ninety days) in Kentucky, Missouri, and Mississippi; six months in Tennessee; twenty days in Arizona; ten days in Florida and the District of Columbia; two days in Porto Rico; while in Oklahoma return must be made "without delay." The return to the clerk may be by a separate certificate, as in Alabama, Virginia,[1379] Mississippi, Porto Rico, and Maryland; or by "endorsement" or "certificate appended," as in North Carolina, Oklahoma, Georgia, Tennessee,[1380] West Virginia, Florida, Texas, and Arizona; or on a "coupon" issued with the license, as in the District of Columbia.[1381] New Mexico requires two reports a year, on the first days of July and January, or a report "at every regular term of the probate court for each county." In the District of Columbia every minister celebrating marriage by license must "annually, in the month of November, return on oath a list of the names of the persons, and the time when married," to the clerk of the supreme court.[1382] Mississippi has provided for bringing delinquents to account. The clerk is directed "to examine the records once a month, and if any ... person be found in default, he shall institute inquiry," at the cost of the culprit, summoning him to make return of the certificate according to law.[1383] Similarly, in Missouri it is enacted that the recorder of deeds "shall certify to the grand jury, at each regular term of the court having criminal jurisdiction within the county, a list of all marriage licenses issued by him," but not returned within the legal period of ninety days; the negligent minister or officer being guilty of a misdemeanor and liable to a fine of from five to twenty-five dollars.[1384] Only in two cases is there provision for report of the marriages of residents celebrated without the state. By the statutes both of Virginia and West Virginia a certificate or statement of such contracts verified by any person present at the ceremony "may be returned" to the clerk of the court of the county where the husband resides, or if he be not a resident, then where the wife dwells; and the usual abstract of it must be recorded by the clerk.[1385] In a few instances the law directly provides for giving a certificate to the newly wedded pair; although where the law is silent the same may sometimes be done by custom when request is made. Maryland, Porto Rico, Missouri, and the District of Columbia have authorized such a certificate;[1386] and Arkansas has enacted that after the license has been returned to the clerk, and by him duly recorded, he shall at once make out a certificate of such record, attach it to the license, and send it back to the person who presented the same.[1387] The southern and southwestern states have in general taken far less pains than those of New England to provide by law for a full record of marriages and for collecting, registering, and publishing the important social statistics connected with family life. In fact, there is much less completeness regarding essential details throughout the entire field of matrimonial legislation. New Mexico, Missouri, and Kentucky appear to be the only states or territories which require every person solemnizing marriages to keep a record; although the Quakers of Maryland, as already seen, must enter the contracts by them solemnized in their own records, or in the records of some court, city, or county where the wedding occurs; and both Alabama and Mississippi require marriages performed by the pastors of any religious society to be registered in a book kept for the purpose.[1388] Everywhere[1389] the clerk or other officer must keep a register of the facts entered in the license, sometimes with other data; and usually the original license is placed on file. The laws of Virginia and West Virginia, being practically the same, are perhaps more complete and more wisely drawn as regards registration than those of any other state of this group. In Virginia the clerk is required to keep three books, to be called respectively the register of marriages, the register of births, and the register of deaths. At the time of issuing a license he is to ascertain, as nearly as may be, the date and place of the proposed marriage, the full names of the parties, whether they are single, widowed, or divorced,[1390] the place of their birth and residence, the names of their parents, and the husband's occupation. Within twenty days after return of the license and certificate by the person solemnizing, the clerk is to record a full abstract thereof in his marriage register, setting forth the facts in convenient tabular form. These two states have also provided for the collection of statistics from coroners, heads of families, and physicians; and, like Kentucky and Arkansas, they have established state systems of registration. On or before the first of March annually the clerk or other official in every county is required to submit to the state auditor of public accounts a full report of the facts contained in his marriage register; and every year the auditor is to prepare an abstract of the county reports and submit it to the general assembly at each regular session.[1391] III. THE MIDDLE AND WESTERN STATES[1392] a) Solemnization.—For half a century after the Declaration of Independence New York abstained from any legislation regarding the marriage celebration. The optional civil or ecclesiastical ceremony was still allowed as in the provincial era. In the meantime acts were passed for the punishment of bigamous and other unlawful unions; and in 1813 the statute-maker felt himself called upon to deal with the same hard case of conscience which had long before troubled the people of Virginia and Massachusetts. It was decreed that "every negro, mulatto, or mestee within this state, who is now a slave for life, shall continue such ... unless manumitted according to law; and the ... baptizing of any slave shall not be deemed ... a manumission." All marriages contracted "wherein one or more of the parties was, were, or may be slaves, shall be considered equally valid" as if they were free; but here also it is carefully provided that nothing in the law shall be construed so as to cause the bondman to be manumitted.[1393] The revised statutes of 1827-28 contain a general "title" regulating matrimony which in many respects forms the basis of the existing law. "For the purpose of being registered and authenticated" marriage shall be solemnized only by the following persons: (1) ministers of the gospel and priests of every denomination; (2) mayors, recorders, and aldermen of cities; (3) judges of the county courts and justices of the peace. Quakers and Jews may "continue" to use their own rites. Record of marriage certificates is provided for; and in place of license or banns—neither of which is mentioned—the person performing the ceremony is authorized to identify the parties, if either is a stranger, by the oath of some person whom he knows.[1394] The existing law contains a similar provision. Under like circumstances the minister or magistrate must ascertain from the applicants their right to contract marriage, and for that purpose he may examine one or both of them, or any other person under oath, "which examination shall be reduced to writing and subscribed by the parties."[1395] Throughout the century the law regarding celebration has remained unchanged in general character, although authority to perform the ceremony has been extended to other officials and magistrates.[1396] The state steadily maintained the validity of marriages entered into by simple agreement without any formal celebration. It was enacted in 1887 that the provisions of the statute shall not be "construed to require the parties to any marriage, or any minister or magistrate to solemnize the same in the manner "therein prescribed;" but all lawful marriages contracted in the manner heretofore in use in this state, shall be as valid as if this article had not been passed."[1397] The usual evils followed: but an effective remedy seems at last to have been provided. By an act of April 11, 1901, a marriage must be solemnized either (1) by a clergyman or minister of any religion, or the leader of the Society for Ethical Culture in the city of New York; (2) a mayor, recorder, alderman, police justice, or police magistrate of a city; (3) a justice or judge of a court of record or municipal court, or a justice of the peace; or (4) by "a written contract of marriage signed by both parties, and at least two witnesses who shall subscribe the same, stating the place of residence of each of the parties and witnesses and the date and place of marriage, and acknowledged by the parties and witnesses in the manner required for the acknowledgment of a conveyance of real estate to entitle the same to be recorded. Such contract shall be filed within six months after its execution in the office of the clerk of the town or city in which the marriage was solemnized." After the first day of January, 1902, no marriage claimed to have been contracted otherwise than in this article provided "shall be valid for any purpose whatever." The act, however, declares the validity of every lawful union formed "in the manner and pursuant to the regulations" of a religious society to which either person belongs.[1398] Thus with the beginning of the new century the "common-law" marriage appears to have finished its long course in New York state. The statutes of that commonwealth relating to contract or solemnization are extended to Indians residing in the state; although it is especially provided that those "who have heretofore or shall hereafter contract marriage according to the Indian custom or usage, and shall cohabit as husband and wife, shall be deemed lawfully married. Indian marriages may be solemnized by peace-makers within their jurisdiction with the same force and effect as by a justice of the peace."[1399] For New Jersey the first matrimonial law of the period under review is that of March 4, 1795, repealing an act of March 24, 1719. By this law every justice of the peace and "every stated and ordained minister" in the commonwealth is given power to perform the wedding ceremony; and, in addition, every religious society is permitted to employ its own usage in the marriage of its members; but such contracts are to be recorded in the same way as those before a minister or magistrate.[1400] Amendments were made from time to time down to 1882, when an act appears which in nearly all of its leading provisions is still in force.[1401] Marriage may now be solemnized in the state by every judge of a court of common pleas; any justice of the peace,[1402] mayor, recorder, or police justice; and by every stated and ordained minister of the gospel. In addition, every religious society in the state may join together in wedlock persons one or both of whom are its members; and by a later enactment authority is conferred upon the chief justice and the associate justices of the supreme court, the chancellor and every vice-chancellor of the equity courts, in as full measure "as if the marriage were solemnized by a stated and ordained minister of the gospel."[1403] The marriage of a minor may not be solemnized without certificate of parental consent, whose genuineness must be proved by the oath of at least one witness of full age and discretion.[1404] Pennsylvania has shown remarkable conservatism in her regulation of the marriage celebration. After two centuries, the act of 1701, taking its form in that of 1693, is with slight alteration still in force. It contains no precise designation of the persons who may perform the ceremony. Its spirit is revealed in the dictum of George Fox, elsewhere quoted: "We marry none, but are witnesses of it." Self-betrothal and self-gifta, as in early mediÆval days, are still practiced by the Quaker descendants of the ancient Teutons. In 1885 a statute expressly authorizes a man and a woman to solemnize their own marriage.[1405] This provision and a later requirement of license in all cases are the only legislative changes affecting the celebration since 1730, when certificate of parental consent was demanded. Now, as in 1701, the bride and groom, taking each other by the hand, are permitted to plight their vows in the presence of at least twelve witnesses, one of whom being a justice of the peace; although the courts have decided, as indeed they could hardly fail to do, that this provision is merely "directory" and not mandatory;[1406] for the original enactment declares that it shall not extend "to any that marry in their own society in the absence of a justice of the peace."[1407] Such is the liberty permitted by the law; but the practice of the majority of the people probably does not differ much from the common usage elsewhere in the United States. From an act of 1849, still retained in the statute-book, one may perceive who are the officers usually called upon to perform or witness the wedding ceremony. "Every person in whose care or profession may be found the record kept by any minister of the gospel, judge, alderman, or justice of the peace, of any marriage contract solemnized" by or before the same shall on application, and the payment or tender of a fee of fifty cents, deliver to the applicant a full transcript of such record, with a proper certificate of its correctness.[1408] There is a sharp contrast between the broad liberalism of Pennsylvania and the narrow, even reactionary, policy of Delaware, whose territory also once formed a part of the proprietary domain of William Penn. The act of January 29, 1790, is decidedly retrogressive. Its keynote is pitched in the preamble, "Whereas," we are assured, "matrimony is an honorable institution of Almighty God, designed for the mutual convenience and happiness of mankind; and sober, discreet, and advised union of persons in matrimony is the duty of every good citizen, and the unadvised, clandestine, loose, and unseemly proceedings in marriage, tend to introduce a contempt and irreverent regard for that holy institution, and a dissoluteness of manners among the thoughtless part of the community;" furthermore, since evils may arise "to persons secretly and improperly uniting themselves ... without knowledge of their parents, guardians, or friends; and the causes are now removed, which rendered it convenient to have marriages celebrated by justices of the peace": therefore, under penalty of one hundred pounds lawful money for disobedience, it is declared that marriages between white persons may be celebrated only by "ministers or preachers of the gospel, appointed or ordained according to the rites and ceremonies of their respective churches, or by the religious society to which they belong" according to its established mode and usage.[1409] Civil marriage was thus completely abrogated, to be grudgingly restored only after more than fourscore years. Since 1874 the mayor of Wilmington has had a share in the matrimonial business, otherwise the law of 1790 still governs the nuptial celebration.[1410] The foundation of Marietta in 1788, and the subsequent organization of the first territory of the United States, under the ordinance of 1787, constitutes an event scarcely second in significance to any in the whole course of American history. It marks the beginning of distinctively western institutions, although these, especially as regards the local political organisms, are in many respects predetermined and molded by those of the two old middle states, New York and Pennsylvania.[1411] The laws adopted or enacted for the region of Ohio, both before and after that state was admitted to the Union in 1802, form in principle and often in detail the models or prototypes on which rest the legal systems of the numerous commonwealths filling the vast expanse of territory stretching from the Alleghanies to the Golden Gate. This is surely true in general of the laws of marriage; although Ohio, in still clinging to the optional plan of civil license or oral ecclesiastical banns, has retained an archaic feature which finds little imitation in the other western states. By a law of the Northwestern Territory in 1788, after banns, license, or notice by posting, persons may be joined in wedlock before any judge of the general court, or of the courts of common pleas in their respective districts, or before a minister of any religious society or congregation where he is settled; and the Quakers are especially guaranteed the enjoyment of their peculiar rites.[1412] Four years later the same authority is granted to all justices of the peace.[1413] In 1803 a new act appears. Now justices of the peace may perform the ceremony in their proper counties; Quakers and Menonists may use their own rites; and every "ordained" minister of any society or congregation is given the same authority, on presenting his credentials to the county court of common pleas,[1414] and receiving a license to that effect. But the function of such minister is no longer restricted to his own congregation; he may act anywhere in the state.[1415] The law was thus practically complete. Under the present statute of Ohio[1416] any ordained minister after obtaining a license from the county judge of probate; any justice of the peace in his county; any religious society "agreeably to the rules and regulations of their respective churches;" or the mayor of any city or incorporated village, in the county where it wholly or partly lies, is authorized to join persons in wedlock. A clergyman still has authority throughout the state; but since 1822, in each case, before he may legally act, it is necessary to exhibit his license to the court of the county where he intends to solemnize a marriage.[1417] When the marriage is of a minor, without the authority of a license, the person solemnizing is required to satisfy himself that banns have been duly published, and that the consent of parent or guardian has been obtained.[1418] Indiana, admitted to the Union in 1816, Illinois in 1818, Michigan in 1837, and Wisconsin in 1848, were all included in the "Territory northwest of the Ohio," and, so far as they had inhabitants, were therefore originally affected by the laws and government established under the ordinance of 1787. Gradually, as each portion became a separate territory or an independent state, the early statutes, already considered in connection with Ohio, were retained, modified, or superseded. So far as the marriage celebration is concerned, the course of history in Indiana and Illinois need not here be dwelt upon. In the former commonwealth the ceremony may now be conducted by all ministers of the gospel and priests of every denomination, throughout the state; by judges of all courts of record, justices of the peace, and mayors of cities, within their respective counties; and by the Friends and German Baptists according to the rules of those societies. But no marriage, legal in other respects, is deemed void "on account of the incapacity of the person solemnizing the same."[1419] The present law of Illinois shows several variations. The ceremony may be performed either by a minister of the gospel in regular standing with the church or society to which he belongs; by a judge of any court of record; a justice of the peace; any superintendent of a public institution for the education of the deaf and dumb in the state; or, if either of the persons is a member of the "religious society known as Friends or Quakers, they may be lawfully married by making known their intention ... to a standing committee of an official meeting, at least one week before said marriage ... and by appearing in a public meeting or private gathering, before official witnesses of said body, with a certificate duly setting forth" their names and residences, with those of the parents, if living. This certificate, duly signed by the contracting persons and by the official witnesses, must be publicly read by one of the witnesses, and afterward entered in the records of an organized meeting of the society. In addition, the law guarantees every religious society the use of its own rites.[1420] By the first marriage law of Michigan Territory, adopted in 1805 from the statutes of Massachusetts, so "far as is necessary and suitable to the circumstances," the wedding ceremony may be performed by justices of the peace and regular ministers of the gospel, when at least one of the persons marrying is an "inhabitant" or "resident" of the district where such clergyman or magistrate dwells; and there is the usual clause securing to all religious societies their peculiar usage or customs.[1421] In 1820 the contemporary law of Ohio was adopted, authorizing celebration, after license, banns, or posting, by justices of the peace in their own counties, or by ministers of the gospel in regular communion with any society of Christians according to the forms of the church to which they respectively belong.[1422] The same privilege is expressly reserved to Quakers and Menonists in 1827;[1423] while in 1832 "ordained ministers" in regular communion with their societies, "but not otherwise," may perform the ceremony, provided their credentials are first entered "of record" with the county clerk.[1424] The present statute is in substance nearly the same, except that the "ordained" minister, who "continues to preach the gospel" in the state, is not required to file his credentials as by the earlier acts. Non-resident clergymen are also authorized to perform the ceremony in the state, provided a proper record be kept and a return duly made according to law; but in all cases the person conducting the celebration is commanded first to examine at least one of the persons on oath as to the legality of the intended contract.[1425] Wisconsin, whose law on the subject has been but slightly altered since 1839, authorizes solemnization by justices of the peace or court commissioners in the counties where they are elected; and throughout the state by any judge of a court of record, or by a minister or priest in regular communion with any religious society, so long as he continues to preach the gospel. Since 1851 Minnesota has had a similar statute; except that court commissioners are not mentioned, and instead the superintendent of the department for the deaf and dumb in the Deaf, Dumb, and Blind Institute of the state is given authority. In both Minnesota and Wisconsin Quakers, on complying with the law as to return of certificate, are permitted to use their own forms;[1426] a minister, before being empowered to act, is required to file a copy of his credentials of ordination with the clerk of the court in some county, and receive from him a proper certificate thereof; and the magistrate or other person performing the ceremony may in all cases examine at least one of the parties on oath as to the legality of the intended marriage.[1427] In the remaining fifteen western states, not yet considered, there is relative uniformity regarding the law of celebration. Originating even as organized territories in recent years, these commonwealths have profited by the experience of the older communities whence their people have mainly come, and so there has been less reason for experimentation. The history of their marriage laws in general is therefore less eventful. Everywhere the optional civil or religious celebration is recognized. (1) In all cases justices of the peace are authorized to conduct the solemnization. Occasionally, as in Alaska, North Dakota, Oregon,[1428] Nevada, and Washington, their power is expressly confined to their respective counties or districts; elsewhere no such restriction appears. (2) Everywhere without exception the judges or justices of the higher courts of record are granted authority, although the particular courts named vary considerably from state to state. Thus, in Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, and Wyoming the statute simply allows any "judge" to perform the ceremony; while in North Dakota the same power is bestowed upon every judge of a "court of record," and in Alaska and Oregon, on any "judicial officer" within his proper jurisdiction. It is granted to judges of the district courts, in their respective districts, in Nevada; to judges of the supreme and district courts, in Montana and Utah; to these same magistrates and to judges of probate, in Idaho; to the justices of the supreme court and the judges of superior courts, in California and Washington; to the justices of the supreme court and the judges of the circuit or county courts, in South Dakota; and to these same judges and to those of the district courts, in Iowa. (3) Throughout these states, in every instance, all ordained ministers, priests, or preachers of the gospel, duly authorized by the usages of their respective churches or societies, are allowed to celebrate matrimony; but there is wide diversity in the phraseology of the statutes. Their power is not limited to a particular place, but may be exercised anywhere in the state. Only in one case among these fifteen states, Nevada, is the clergyman required to exhibit his credentials and take out a formal license. Sometimes, as in Kansas, Nevada, and North Dakota, the Friends are expressly permitted to observe their own rites; or, as in California, Iowa, Nebraska, Montana, Washington, and the two Dakotas, there is a general clause in the law favoring all religious societies having peculiar methods of celebration. City mayors are allowed the same authority as magistrates and ministers in Iowa, Montana, Idaho, Utah, and South Dakota. By the law of the last-named state, as in New York, Indians are permitted to marry according to their own forms; and in the West, during the earlier stage of development, the governor has sometimes been granted authority to join persons in wedlock, such being the case formerly in Nevada and still in Idaho. California, like New York, South Dakota, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and some other states, requires special precautions on the part of the person performing the ceremony, tending to prevent illegal or clandestine unions. He must first demand the "presentation of the marriage license; and if he has any reason to doubt the correctness of its statement of facts" as to identity of the persons, their names, ages, and places of residence, or the consent of their parents or guardians in case of minors, he must satisfy himself of the same; and "for that purpose he may administer oaths and examine the parties and witnesses in the like manner as the county clerk does before issuing the license." Idaho has a similar law; and that of Colorado allows the minister or magistrate, in case of minors having no parents or guardian, to perform the ceremony or not, according to his own judgment.[1429] The statutes of many of the middle and western states require the presence of witnesses at the celebration. One witness is sufficient in South Dakota,[1430] as formerly in Dakota Territory; but two witnesses must attend in Alaska, Michigan, Montana, Minnesota since 1851, Idaho since 1864, Nebraska since 1867, Nevada since 1861, North Dakota since 1890, Oregon since 1854, Washington since 1866, Wisconsin since 1849, and Wyoming since 1869. New York requires one witness when the celebration takes place before a minister or a magistrate, and two witnesses when the marriage is by a written contract. The statutes sometimes contemplate the presence of witnesses when in terms it is not prescribed. Such is the case, for example, in New Jersey and California.[1431] In Pennsylvania the provision of 1701 requiring the attendance of twelve witnesses has not been expressly repealed; but, as already remarked, it is construed by the courts as being merely "directory," and "it has been ascertained that the requirement is no longer enforced. Two witnesses must be present" in that state "when any marriage is solemnized by the parties themselves."[1432] No definite formula for the celebration is anywhere prescribed. Sometimes the statute contains a statement to that effect. Thus in Alaska, California, Idaho, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming it is expressly provided that no particular form for the ceremony is required, but the parties must solemnly declare in the presence of the person officiating, and usually of the attending witnesses, that they take each other as husband and wife. The same is true of New York, if the ceremony is performed by a magistrate; but when a clergyman officiates, it may be "according to the forms and customs of the church or society to which he belongs."[1433] In the case of Quakers or religious societies having as such any peculiar mode of celebrating marriage, the law usually provides, as already seen, that the ceremony or other mode of joining in wedlock shall be in accordance with their customs; and "where not so stated it is, of course, implied."[1434] The laws of Montana, South Dakota, and formerly those of Idaho and California, contain a peculiar definition of matrimony and a provision for contract by "declaration," which, taken together, in effect allow persons to solemnize their own marriage, and to do so clandestinely, if they see fit. So by the California statute, as it stood from 1873 to 1895, marriage is defined as a "personal relation arising out of a civil contract, to which the consent of parties capable of making it is necessary. Consent alone will not constitute marriage; it must be followed by a solemnization, or by a mutual assumption of marital rights, duties, or obligations." Furthermore, "consent to and subsequent consummation of marriage may be manifested in any form, and may be proved under the same general rules of evidence as facts in other cases." "Persons married without the solemnization provided for" in the law "must jointly make a declaration of marriage substantially showing: 1. The names, ages and residences of the parties; 2. The fact of marriage; 3. That the marriage has not been solemnized. If no record of the solemnization of a marriage heretofore contracted be known to exist, the parties may join in a written declaration ... , substantially showing: 1. The names, ages, and residences of the parties; 2. The fact of marriage; 3. That no record of such marriage is known to exist." This declaration must be "subscribed by the parties and attested by at least three witnesses." These provisions are essentially vicious; and they gave rise to the so-called "contract" marriages, famous in California judicial history, the most notorious case being that of Sharon v. Sharon, which in its various phases was for years before the state and federal courts.[1435] So great were the evils of clandestine marriages, and the resulting conflicting and often false claims to property or inheritance under this law, that in 1895 a tardy remedy was sought in legislation. Section 75 of the code, as above quoted, allowing a declaration of marriage, was repealed outright. The definition in sec. 55 was amended to read, "Consent alone will not constitute marriage; it must be followed by a solemnization authorized by this Code;" and for the future sec. 57, instead of its former dangerous terms, declares that "consent to a marriage and solemnization thereof may be proved under the same general rules of evidence as facts are proved in other cases."[1436] Fourteen states of the middle and western group have provided that when a marriage has been solemnized by a person professing to be authorized, but not authorized by law for that purpose, its validity is "not affected by such lack of authority, if it is in other respects valid and consummated with the belief of the parties, or either of them, that they have been lawfully married."[1437] These states are Idaho, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, New York, Nebraska, North Dakota, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. In all cases the person falsely representing himself to have authority is made liable to severe penalties.[1438] California requires that "marriage must be licensed, solemnized, authenticated, and recorded;" but it is not invalidated by non-compliance with the law "by other than the parties" themselves.[1439] Idaho, Montana, and South Dakota have similar statutes, although the act of the parties is not thus excepted.[1440] In Iowa "marriages solemnized, with the consent of parties, in any other manner" than presented by the statute, "are valid; but the parties thereto, and all persons aiding or abetting them, shall forfeit to the school fund the sum of fifty dollars each; but this shall not apply to the person conducting the ceremony, if within ninety days thereafter he makes the required return to the clerk of the district court."[1441] In Indiana "no marriage shall be void or voidable for want of license or other formality required by law, if either of the parties thereto believed it to be legal marriage at the time."[1442] The person solemnizing, in Colorado, is protected by the duly issued license, if he has no personal knowledge of the incompetency of the parties.[1443] In Ohio, "when the person who solemnized the marriage had no license, it was held that it was to be inferred that the parties openly and mutually consented to a contract of present marriage;" and when they thereafter cohabited as husband and wife, "this consent constituted a legal marriage, and the man having then a wife living might properly be convicted of bigamy."[1444] b) Forbidden degrees: void and voidable marriages.—Nineteen out of the twenty-five middle and western states have each provided a statutory definition of marriage.[1445] In Oregon, Indiana, and in Washington since 1854, it is defined briefly as a civil contract; in Alaska it is a civil contract which may be entered into by males of twenty-one and females of eighteen years, if otherwise capable; in Colorado and Kansas it is "considered in law" as a civil contract to which the consent of the parties is essential; in Iowa[1446] since 1851, Nebraska since 1855, and Wyoming since 1869, it is a civil contract to which the consent of parties capable in law of contracting is necessary; in Michigan, Minnesota since 1866, Nevada since 1861, New York[1447] since 1828, and Wisconsin since 1849, "so far as its validity in law is concerned," it is a civil contract under the same conditions as in the last-named group of states. On the other hand, several commonwealths have sanctioned a definition which seems to imply the element of status in the marital relation. Thus by the laws of Idaho, Montana, South Dakota, California, and North Dakota, marriage is a personal relation, arising out of a civil contract to which the consent of parties capable of making it is necessary. In North Dakota, although marriage is a personal relation so arising, it must be "entered into, maintained, annulled, or dissolved" only as provided by law; and in California, since the reform of 1895, consent must be followed by a solemnization authorized by the code. Moreover, in South Dakota the consent to a marriage "must be to one commencing instantly, and not to an agreement to marry afterwards." The law of Ohio is similar;[1448] and in Idaho and California neither party to a nuptial contract is "bound by a promise made in ignorance of the other's want of personal chastity, and either is released therefrom by unchaste conduct" of the other, unless both participated therein.[1449] In all the states of the group under review, except in Colorado, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, the age of consent to marriage is fixed by the law, or it may be inferred from its provisions. For males it is twenty-one in Alaska and Washington;[1450] eighteen in California, Delaware,[1451] Idaho,[1452] Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oregon, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming; seventeen in Illinois; sixteen in Iowa,[1453] North Dakota,[1454] and Utah;[1455] and only fifteen in Kansas. For females it is eighteen in Alaska, Washington, Idaho, and New York; sixteen in Delaware, Indiana, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, Ohio, and Wyoming; fifteen in California, Minnesota, Oregon, South Dakota, and Wisconsin; fourteen in Illinois, Iowa, and Utah; thirteen in North Dakota; and only twelve in Kansas. The age below which the consent of parent or guardian is required for the marriage of a minor is prescribed in all cases, except in Alaska, Kansas, New York, and Michigan.[1456] Such consent must precede the granting of license; or, where the license system has not been adopted, it must be made known by certificate or otherwise to the person or society conducting the celebration before the ceremony may be performed.[1457] In all cases, save the three named, the age for males is twenty-one, except in Idaho, where it is eighteen. For females it is eighteen in all these states, except in Idaho, where it is sixteen; and in Pennsylvania and Wyoming, where it is twenty-one. Formerly in Delaware indented servants could not lawfully marry without the master's consent; and for so doing such persons offending must "serve their respective masters or mistresses six months after the time of their servitude by indentures or engagements has expired; and if any person being free, shall marry with a servant without such consent ... he or she ... shall pay to the master or mistress of the servant, if a man, ten pounds, and if a woman, five pounds; and the servant so married shall abide with the master or mistress according to indenture or engagement six months as aforesaid."[1458] Later the penalty for a free person marrying a servant, if a man, was fixed at thirty dollars, of if a woman, at fifteen.[1459] All the states under consideration have legislated concerning forbidden degrees of consanguinity. Relations in the direct line, with brothers and sisters, are, as elsewhere, always included; although many of the newer states and some of the older, have not thought it necessary to continue the solemn farce derived from ancient ecclesiastical usage of specifically interdicting wedlock with a grandparent or with a grandchild; and sometimes the connections by affinity are not mentioned, or, as in Wyoming, they are expressly exempted from the inhibitions. Frequently, however, a man is denied the privilege of taking his step-mother or his mother-in-law to wife,[1460] and in every state of the group, expressly or by implication,[1461] marriage between aunts and nephews, or uncles and nieces, is forbidden. Minnesota since 1851, and Wisconsin since 1839, prohibit marriage between persons nearer of kin than first cousins, computing by the rules of the civil law; and in effect the same is true of Utah.[1462] On the other hand, the statutes of Indiana, Ohio, Nevada, and Washington are more severe, allowing marriage only between persons "not nearer of kin than second cousins;" first cousins are likewise prohibited from intermarrying in Illinois, Kansas, Wyoming, the two Dakotas, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Oregon, and, apparently in Colorado;[1463] while in Alaska marriages are prohibited within the fourth degree of the whole or the half-blood. But in no instance is a union between a sister-in-law or a brother-in-law interdicted. In all cases marriages within the prohibited degrees are both incestuous and void, except in Delaware, Minnesota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Indiana, and South Dakota, where they are only void; in New Jersey, where they are only voidable;[1464] in Washington, where they are only incestuous; and in Ohio, where they are not expressly declared to be either incestuous or void. However, in the three states last named such unions are forbidden and punished; and in general for violation of the law by the persons contracting or the person solemnizing marriages declared void or voidable severe penalties are often imposed.[1465] By exception, in Colorado, it is provided that nothing in the law regarding degrees "shall be so construed as to prevent the people living in that portion of the state acquired from Mexico from marrying according to the customs of that country."[1466] In these states the grounds for prohibiting wedlock other than kinship or affinity are as varied, confusing, and contradictory as in New England or the southern group. For the same cause a contract declared void in one state may be voidable or merely forbidden and punished in another. The statutes disclose a great diversity of conditional or qualifying clauses which render it almost hopeless to make any trustworthy generalizations. Thus bigamous marriages are void or voidable by judicial decree in California, Delaware, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania,[1467] South Dakota, Utah, Wisconsin, and Wyoming; while in Colorado,[1468] Illinois, Ohio, and Washington they are prohibited and made punishable. In Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, and Wisconsin the law applies only when the marriage was solemnized in the state; while in California, Idaho, Minnesota, North Dakota, New York, and South Dakota such unions are void or voidable unless, as expressed in the California statute, "the former husband or wife was absent, and not known to such person to be living for the space of five successive years immediately preceding such subsequent marriage, or was generally reputed or believed by such person to be dead" when the second marriage was contracted; "in either of which cases the subsequent marriage is valid until its nullity is adjudged by a competent tribunal."[1469] Illinois and Ohio have each a similar provision.[1470] On the abrogation of polygamy, Utah had a problem to solve analogous to that of the southern states after the enfranchisement of the negroes. By an act of March 9, 1896, rights of inheritance were secured to the issue of bigamous and polygamous marriages; and a few days later, by general enactment, the children of such unions "heretofore contracted between members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, born on or prior to the fourth day of January," 1896, were legitimated.[1471] The laws of California, Idaho, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming render a marriage void or voidable when entered into by either person through force or fraud;[1472] those of New York,[1473] when force, fraud, or duress has been practiced; and those of Nevada, when fraud has been proved.[1474] In Colorado the marriage of a female obtained by force or fraud is prohibited and punished; in Iowa, Kansas, Montana, and Nevada, when obtained by force, menace, or duress; in Illinois, Montana, and New York, when the marriage of either person has been gained through false persuasion; while New Jersey, in more general phrase, treats as void the marriage of a female "against her will." Marriages are also void or, usually, voidable when either person was of unsound mind, as in California, Idaho, or South Dakota; or insane or an idiot, as in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Nebraska, Utah, Wisconsin, and Wyoming;[1475] or wanting in age or understanding, as in Indiana, Kansas, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Washington, and Wisconsin;[1476] or physically incompetent, as in California, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Wyoming, and the two Dakotas;[1477] or below age of legal consent, as in all the last-named states, and also in Michigan, Nevada, Ohio, Utah, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.[1478] Several states of this group, like those of the South, have attempted to check miscegenation by statute. Marriages between white persons and negroes or mulattoes are thus declared illegal and void in California,[1479] Colorado, Delaware, and Idaho; and with negroes or Mongolians in Utah. The prohibition of such unions in Nebraska extends to persons having one-fourth, and in Indiana to those having one-eighth, negro blood; while in Oregon since 1866 it has been applied to those with one-half Indian or one-fourth negro or Chinese blood in their veins.[1480] In Nevada similar unions, without specification of the degree of dark blood, are forbidden and punished. On the contrary, Michigan, by an act of 1883, provides that "all marriages heretofore contracted between white persons and those wholly or in part of African descent are ... valid and effectual in law for all purposes, and the issue" shall be deemed legitimate.[1481] Among the commonwealths of this group Delaware alone has the honor of trying through legislation to put some limit upon the increase of the indigent and incapable classes, the marriage of paupers being forbidden under penalty. Michigan has taken a still more important step in advance, setting a worthy example of social legislation which ought to be followed throughout the country. By a stringent law of 1899, it is declared that no person afflicted with certain syphilitic diseases "shall be capable of contracting marriage." For so doing the transgressor shall be "deemed guilty of felony and upon conviction thereof ... , shall be punished by a fine of not less than five hundred dollars or more than one thousand dollars, or by imprisonment in the state's prison ... not more than five years, or by both such fine and imprisonment in the discretion of the court." Furthermore, it is especially provided that either husband or wife may be examined as a witness; and in all cases arising under the act a physician who has attended or prescribed for any person so affected "shall be compelled to testify to any facts found by him from such attendance."[1482] An enlightened policy in a parallel direction is revealed by a recent law of Minnesota, similar to that of Connecticut, prohibiting the marriage of persons either of whom is epileptic, imbecile, feeble-minded, or afflicted with insanity, when the woman is under forty-five years of age;[1483] and Kansas has just enacted the same restraint.[1484] On the other hand, in no instance, apparently, has any effort yet been made to prevent the clandestine marriage outside the state of residents who thus seek to evade the requirements of their own laws.[1485] Very generally, as elsewhere, indirect encouragement to matrimony is given by the suspension of prosecution or penalty, and through the legitimation of children. By the laws of Dakota and California, "every contract in restraint of the marriage of any person, other than a minor, is void;"[1486] and the same is true in the latter state regarding conditions of ownership imposing like restraints; but this rule "does not affect limitations when the intent was not to forbid marriage, but only to give the use until marriage."[1487] In many cases it is provided that marriages contracted out of the state are valid, if valid where they are formed; but Pennsylvania is the only commonwealth in the Union, except Georgia, directly promoting wedlock, her statute declaring that "all marriages not forbidden by the law of God shall be encouraged."[1488] c) Certificate and record.—The laws of the middle and western states have reached substantial harmony regarding the preliminaries of marriage. The provisions for license and the other leading features of matrimonial administration in their main features are much the same, except in a few of the older commonwealths, where the system of ecclesiastical banns and some other peculiar usages are still maintained. Thus in Delaware, by the act of 1790, no minister is allowed to conduct the ceremony without first receiving a license authorizing the persons to wed, or, instead, unless the banns shall "be published between such persons intending to marry, at some church, chapel, meetinghouse, or stationary place of public religious worship belonging to the district, or of the congregation wherein the woman so intending to be married shall be resident, or in the next adjacent congregation of the same society, on the two several Sundays before the celebration thereof, immediately after divine service." The license is granted by the president or commander-in-chief duly attested under his sign manual; and it is issued from the office of the secretary of state. "In order to avoid fraud and collusion in obtaining such license," the person applying is required to enter into bond with good security in such sum as the president shall judge proper.[1489] All marriage licenses are to be lodged with the prothonotaries and justices of the peace of the respective counties, or with such of them as the secretary may think fit for convenience of the people, and these officers are required to submit a report every six months.[1490] After a century the system thus outlined is still maintained in its essential features. License or banns, "published at some place of stated religious worship, within the hundred of the woman's residence, on two Sabbaths immediately after divine service," is yet sanctioned. The requirement of bond is still retained.[1491] It is the duty of the clerk of the peace to designate at least six justices of the peace in his county to dispense licenses; and the state derives a revenue of two dollars for each license issued. By a provision still appearing in the statute-book, though obsolete in practice, negroes or mulattoes may be married without license or publication of banns; provided "that each party (being free) shall produce the certificate of the justice of the peace of the county that such party has made before him satisfactory proof of freedom; or (being ... servant), shall produce the written consent of his master or mistress."[1492] The legislation of Ohio shows almost equal conservatism. For many years after the organization of the Northwest Territory a triple optional system of banns, license, or posting was there maintained. The law of 1788 requires that either on Sundays, holidays, or other days of public worship, in the towns where the bride and groom respectively dwell, the banns shall be thrice published; or that a written notice, under the hand and seal of a judge or a justice of the peace of the county, shall be affixed in some public place in such towns; or else a license shall be obtained from the governor authorizing the marriage without publication.[1493] The details of the plan were changed in 1803. License is then to be obtained from the clerk of the court of common pleas for the county where the woman resides. Twice publication of banns, the first time ten days before the wedding; or notice by posting during fifteen days, is declared sufficient. In the case of minors a license may be issued only when consent of parent or guardian is personally given or certified to, attested by two witnesses, one of whom must personally appear and make oath or affirmation that he saw the parent or guardian subscribe or acknowledge the same.[1494] After 1824 provision for public posting is no longer made,[1495] thus reducing the Ohio plan to the more familiar system of optional civil license or ecclesiastical banns which still survives. License is now issued by the judge of probate in the county of the female; and the law governing the consent of parent or guardian in case of minors is identical with that of 1803, except that since 1810 persons under age who have before been married are not required to give evidence of such approval.[1496] By the first matrimonial statute of Michigan in 1805 a license system is not established; but evidence of parental consent to the marriage of minors is to be presented to the minister or magistrate performing the ceremony. Within one hundred days the latter is to return a certificate of the celebration to a clerk of the court in the district where it takes place, who is required to keep a record and report annually to the clerk of the superior court of the territory.[1497] So the law remained until 1820, when the triple optional system, as it then existed in Ohio, was introduced;[1498] but this is not found in the existing law, which requires license in all cases according to the more common American usage. Neither banns nor license has at any time been required in New York during the century. Instead, as already pointed out, the person conducting the celebration is authorized to identify the parties by examining them or any other persons under oath.[1499] New Jersey has maintained a similar plan, except that non-residents are required to obtain a license from the county clerk five days before the wedding.[1500] At present in case of minors the powers and procedure of the person solemnizing are substantially the same as those of the county clerk or other officer where the license system prevails.[1501] Pennsylvania has also followed methods peculiar to herself. From 1730 to 1885 certificate of parental consent seems to have been required for the marriage of minors; and such certificate was presented directly to the person or society conducting the celebration. By an act of the last-named year there was introduced a license system which in 1893 was modified so as to permit a license to be obtained from the clerk of the orphans' court, not only in the county where the marriage is to take place but also in the county of the residence of either the man or the woman.[1502] The clerk is to keep a marriage-license docket, "in which he shall make a complete record of the issuing of said licenses, and all matters which he shall be required to ascertain, relative to the rights" of the persons to obtain a license, "together with their ages and residences." In getting a license the persons may proceed in one of two ways. "Either separately or together" they may apply directly to the clerk, who by oath or affirmation is authorized to inquire concerning the legality of the contemplated marriage, and if there be no legal objection, to issue the license; or in like manner, if they prefer, they may "appear before any magistrate, alderman, or justice of the peace of the township, ward or county, wherein either ... resides, and in the county where the license is desired, who may ... inquire of them touching the legality of the contemplated marriage." These answers and the replies, duly subscribed and sworn to before the officer, may be forwarded to the clerk of the court, who if satisfied therewith, and that no legal objection to the marriage exists, may issue the license. But if either of the persons intending to marry is under the age of twenty-one, the consent of parent or guardian, given personally or attested by witnesses in the usual way, is necessary. The license shall have appended to it two certificates, one marked "original" and the other "duplicate." The certificate marked "original" shall be given by the solemnizer to the persons married; and the other must within thirty days be returned to the clerk in the county of the celebration, to be filed of record. It is, however, especially provided that in all cases where the persons intend solemnizing their own marriage, the clerk in "the proper county shall certify their right so to do in a declaration in the following form": "Legal evidence having been furnished to me, in accordance with the act of assembly ... this certifies that I am satisfied that there is no legal impediment to your joining yourselves together in marriage." When self-gifta thus takes place, the persons contracting are required to make duplicate certificates of their own wedding celebration, returning one of them to the clerk, as in other cases provided by law.[1503] In the remaining nineteen states of this group not yet considered, except Alaska, the simple license system has been introduced. Save here and there in certain cases specially provided for, a license is always required. Thus, by the Minnesota law, "previous to persons being joined in marriage, a license shall be obtained from the clerk of the district court of the county in which the female resides," or, if she be not a resident of the state, then from the same officer "in the county where the marriage is to take place in the state;" but if there shall be no such clerk in either of the counties specified, no license is required. The clerk may inquire of the persons under oath as to the legality of the proposed marriage. If he "shall be satisfied that there is no legal impediment thereto," he shall grant a license and make a record thereof. Persons under age and not having had a former husband or wife must have the consent of the parents or guardians personally given or certified under their hands and seals, "attested by two witnesses, one of whom shall appear before said clerk, and make oath or affirmation that he saw said parent or guardian subscribe, or heard him or her acknowledge the same." If a "clerk shall in any other manner issue or sign any marriage license, he shall forfeit and pay a sum not exceeding one thousand dollars" to the persons aggrieved. The statute allows the clerk a fee of two dollars for each license issued.[1504] Similar powers and functions are exercised by the clerk of the district court in Iowa and Montana;[1505] the county clerk, in California, Colorado, Illinois, Michigan,[1506] Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Wisconsin, and Wyoming; the clerk of the circuit court, in Indiana and South Dakota; the probate judge, in Kansas and Ohio; the county judge, in Nebraska; the county auditor, in Washington; the county recorder, in Idaho; and by the judge of the county court, in North Dakota. The license is issued by such officer from the county of the woman's residence, in Indiana, Ohio, and Oregon; from the county where either the man or the woman resides, in Michigan; from the county where the marriage is to take place, in California, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming; from the "proper" county, in Kansas; and from "any county," in Colorado; from "a county auditor" in Washington; the county where one or both of the persons dwell, or from any county when both are non-residents, in Nevada; from the county of the bride's residence, or, if she be a non-resident, from that of the proposed marriage, in Wisconsin and Minnesota; and in Utah, from the county where the female lives, provided that when she is a widow or of full age, and it is granted on her application, it may be issued from any county. In Kansas and Indiana a license is not required in the case of Friends marrying according to their own usage; and the same is true in Iowa, California, and South Dakota, for the members of "any particular denomination having, as such, any peculiar mode of entering the marriage relation." Wisconsin requires the license to be obtained not less than five days previous to the persons being joined in marriage; and has also provided for celebration without license in urgent cases. Upon the application of either party to a proposed marriage, any county judge, court of record, or presiding judge thereof, in his discretion, by order may authorize solemnization without license or the five days' notice. Such order must be delivered to the person performing the ceremony, who is to return it in place of or in connection with the license to the register of deeds or of vital statistics.[1507] Michigan has likewise made provision for cases of emergency where social expediency seems to require exceptional rules. By a law of 1897, amended in 1899, entitled "an act to provide for the protection of the reputation and good name of certain persons," the judge of probate in each county is authorized to issue without publicity a license to any female who has lived with a man as his wife, or who for any other reason expressed in her application, deemed sufficient by the magistrate, "desires to keep the exact date of the marriage a secret, to protect the good name of herself and the reputation of her family."[1508] Generally throughout the region under discussion penalties by fine or imprisonment are prescribed for celebration without a license or for illegally issuing the same. In every instance, except in Alaska, the person or society conducting the celebration is required to make a return to the officer authorized to receive it, either in the town or, usually, the county, where the license was issued, or in that of the marriage.[1509] Such return is made either by separate certificate, by indorsement on the license, or by certificate appended to it. Several states, however, have enacted special provisions. In South Dakota, for example, the marriage certificate must be "filed with the clerk of the city or town where the marriage was solemnized, or where either of the parties resides," or with the "register of deeds of such county." By the Colorado statute return is made to the clerk issuing the license; and the solemnizer must also send a report to the clerk of the county where the marriage takes place. In Iowa the person performing the ceremony is to make return to the clerk of the district court; and, "when the services of a clergyman or magistrate are dispensed with, the husband must make the return." California has enacted that "when unmarried persons, not minors, have been living together as man and wife, they may, without a license, be married by any clergyman. A certificate of such marriage must be made and delivered by the clergyman to the parties, and recorded upon the records of the church of which the clergyman is a representative;" and "no other record need be made." Furthermore, when members of a religious society, having as such peculiar rites, are married without a license, as the law permits, they must join in a written declaration of the marriage, which shall be signed by themselves and attested by at least three witnesses. Within thirty days after the wedding this declaration must be filed by the husband with the county recorder, who, after it is duly acknowledged, shall record the same as in grants of real property.[1510] New York requires that the certificate, given to each of the married persons on request, signed by the officiating magistrate, shall be filed and recorded, if within six months it is presented to the clerk of the city or town where the marriage took place, or where either the bride or groom resided. When it is a clergyman who conducts the celebration, his certificate thereof may in the same manner be filed and recorded, "if there be endorsed thereon or annexed thereto, a certificate of any magistrate residing within the same county with such clerk, setting forth that the minister is personally known to such magistrate, and has acknowledged the execution of the certificate in his presence;" or that the execution was proved to the magistrate by the oath of a witness known to him.[1511] By the rules prevailing in every state, save New Jersey, the official receiving the return must register or file the same of record. The prescribed term within which the report of the celebration must be submitted is thirty days (or "one month") in California,[1512] Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey,[1513] North Dakota, Ohio,[1514] Oregon, Pennsylvania,[1515] South Dakota, and Utah; ninety days (or "three months"), in Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Nebraska, Washington, and Wyoming; and six months in New York. South Dakota, in addition to the return by the solemnizer, provides that within six months after the wedding the certificate given to the persons married may be "filed" in the manner above described; and, when thus filed, it must be entered in a book to be provided by the clerk or register for the purpose.[1516] By the Wisconsin law the license, with a certificate of the marriage, must be returned by the person conducting the celebration to the register of deeds of the county where the license was issued, provided that in cities of the first class the report shall be sent to the registrar of vital statistics, who is to place it on file.[1517] In Delaware the person solemnizing must keep a record and "annually, in March, deliver to the recorder of deeds for the county, a true extract therefrom" of all entries for the year preceding.[1518] Only in Wisconsin is there any provision for return when the marriage of a resident takes place outside the state. Provision for giving a certificate to the persons married, on request or otherwise, is made by Alaska, California, Idaho, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Creditable progress is also shown in a number of the states of this group in providing for a proper record of marriages, and for the collection, registration, and publication of social statistics. Thus in California, Delaware, Idaho, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin the person conducting the celebration is required to keep a record;[1519] and everywhere, save in one instance, as already seen, the clerk or other officer of the county or town must register the facts contained in the license issued or the certificate returned; and usually the original documents are filed for preservation.[1520] Moreover, a goodly number of commonwealths have wisely created systems of state registration which promise to be of great service in the future of American society. Beginning in 1881, Delaware has established such a system. The state board of health, composed of "seven physicians of skill," has general oversight, appointing one of its own number as secretary, who performs the duties of "superintendent of registration of vital statistics." To him the recorders of the several counties are required to send information.[1521] An elaborate registration act was adopted in New Jersey in 1888; and this, as amended in 1892, is still in force. Thirty days after the solemnization of any marriage a certificate thereof is to be sent to the proper officer, setting forth the "name, age, parentage, birthplace, occupation, and residence of each of the persons married, the time and place of the marriage, the condition of each of the persons married, whether single or widowed, the name of the minister, magistrate, or person by whom, or of the religious society before which the marriage was solemnized, and the names and residences of the witnesses." The certificate is to be returned to the "registrar of vital statistics," or, if there be none, the clerk of any city, borough, town, or other municipal government, or to the assessor or clerk of a township. These local officers are required each month to forward the certificates and the "special return" provided for by law to the state board of health, whose secretary is styled the "medical superintendent of vital statistics."[1522]
Ohio has a similar plan of local and state administration. The mayor of each of the smaller cities and villages, and six persons nominated by the council, including two medical practitioners, constitute a board of health which is authorized to appoint a health officer and "create a complete and accurate system of registration of births, marriages, deaths, and interments, for the purpose of legal and genealogical investigations, and to furnish facts for statistical, scientific, and sanitary inquiries." The secretary of state is required each year to prepare and submit to the general assembly a full and accurate report of the statistics of Ohio.[1523] A system of state registration of births, marriages, deaths, and divorces has existed in Michigan since 1867. The secretary of state is required to furnish the clerks of the respective counties with suitable blank books for record and forms for reports. The reports of these local officials are to be properly bound and indexed under the direction of the secretary; "and with such assistance as may be voluntarily rendered by any authorized committee appointed by the medical faculty of the University of Michigan, or by any regularly authorized medical society ... , he shall prepare such tabular statements, results, and deductions therefrom as will render them of practical utility, and make report therof annually to the governor." But in reality this report, under the general direction of the secretary, is prepared and published by the secretary of the state board of health.[1524] As early as 1852 Wisconsin made provision for registration of births, marriages, and deaths; and the plan then adopted, with some modification, still exists. By a statute of 1897 the register of vital statistics in every city having such an officer is required to keep a record of all marriages celebrated therein, in the same way as he does of births and deaths. To him the persons or societies conducting marriage celebrations are required to send certificates thereof; and every week these certificates must by him be forwarded to the register of deeds of the county or city. For the commonwealth the secretary of the state board of health, under the direction of the secretary of state, performs the same functions as discharged by that official in Michigan.[1525] Provision for similar registration, under authority of the state boards of health, is made by the laws of Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, and Pennsylvania. California has a similar statute. Careful provision is made for keeping registers of births by physicians and midwives; of deaths, by clergymen who officiate at funerals, coroners who hold inquests, sextons and undertakers who bury deceased persons; and by those who conduct marriage celebrations. Certified copies of all these registers are to be filed quarterly with the respective county recorders; and every three months these officials are required to transmit a "certified abstract" of their own registers to the secretary of the state board of health at Sacramento. This body consists of seven physicians appointed for four years by the governor; and at each biennial session of the legislature it is authorized to make a report, "with such suggestions as to legislative action" as it deems proper.[1526] The New York law is very careful and elaborate. There are local boards of health in towns, incorporated villages, and cities. In the town the board consists of the clerk and the justices of the peace, together with a "citizen" appointed by them; in the incorporated villages, of from three to seven members nominated by the village trustees. The village and town boards each hold office for one year, and each is authorized to appoint a "competent physician" to serve as "health officer," who, in the case of the village, may not be a member of the board. The city board is composed of six members, at least one of whom shall be a physician, all appointed by the common council. The board thus constituted is authorized to choose a president and to select a competent physician as health officer. The six members hold office for one, two, and three years, respectively, by pairs. It is made the duty of each of these local boards "to supervise and make complete the registration of all births, marriages, and deaths occurring within the limits of its jurisdiction in accordance with the methods and forms prescribed by the state board of health, and to secure the prompt forwarding of the certificates of birth, marriage, and death to the state bureau of vital statistics after local registration." To attain completeness in such registration, "it shall be the duty of the parents or custodians of every child, and the groom at every marriage, or the clergyman or magistrate performing the ceremony, to secure the return of the record of such birth or marriage to the board of health or person designated by them within thirty days from the date" of the same, "and each record shall be duly attested by the physician or midwife (if any) in attendance at such birth, or the clergyman officiating at such marriage." If in any place the state board of health ascertains that the registration is "not completely and well made," it may notify the delinquent local board that within one month such "defects and neglects in the records must be amended and prevented." If the abuses are not remedied within the period named, the state board is required to take control of the records, and to "enforce the rules and regulations" so as to make them complete. The bureau of vital statistics has general charge of the state system of registration, under direction of the state board of health. The latter body consists of three "state commissioners of health," appointed by the governor with the advice and consent of the senate, and six other members, three nominated by the governor, and three serving ex officio. It appoints a secretary who is "superintendent of registration of vital statistics;" and it makes an annual report to the governor regarding "vital statistics and the sanitary condition and prospects of the state."[1527] [1] Homer, Odyssey, x, 58; xxii, 38. Cf. Meier-SchÖmann, Der attische Process, II, 510; Geffcken, Ehescheidung vor Gratian, 12; Glasson, Le mariage civil et le divorce, 151; Hruza, Polygamie und Pellikat, 64 n. 7. [60] Woolsey, op. cit., 92, 93: Paulus, in Dig., XLV, 1, 134; Cod., viii, 39, 1, 2, de inutil. stip. [135] See the remarkable capitulary of Lothar I., 825. For the correction of all sins and crimes (quibuslibet culpis atque criminibus) the count is associated with the bishop. When excommunication fails to correct the offender, "a comite vinculis constringatur": quoted by Geffcken, op. cit., 72; cf. Esmein, op. cit., I, 13, 14. [198] Richter, Die evangelischen Kirchenordnungen des sechszehnten Jahrhunderts. In many Protestant lands these ecclesiastical statutes or provisions, with the sanction of the civil authority, took the place of the old canon law. For a discussion of their contents see especially the monographs of Goeschen, Doctrina de mat., 59 ff.; idem, in Herzog's EncyclopÄdie, III, 702 ff.; Dietrich, Evang. Ehescheidungsrecht; and compare Hauber, Ehescheid. im Reformat., II, 219 ff.; Richter, BeitrÄge, 51 ff.; idem, Kirchenrecht, 1177, 1178; Strippelmann, Das Ehescheidungsrecht, 78 ff.; Greve, Ehescheidung, 298 ff.; Thwing, The Family, 84, 85; Woolsey, Divorce, 136-38. [264] Milton, "Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce," Prose Works, III, 181. "And what his chief end was of creating woman to be joined with man, his own instituting words declare, and are infallible to inform us what is marriage, and what is no marriage; unless we can think them set there to no purpose: 'It is not good,' saith he, 'that man should be alone. I will make him a help meet for him.'"—Ibid., 187. Beza holds, says Milton, that divorce (by the Jewish law) is created "only for the help of wives." This leads him to exclaim: "Palpably uxorious! Who can be ignorant, that woman was created for man, and not man for woman, and that a husband may be injured as insufferably in marriage as a wife! What an injury is it after wedlock not to be loved! What to be slighted! What to be contended with in point of house rule who shall be the head; not for any parity of wisdom, for that were something reasonable, but out of a female pride! 'I suffer not,' saith St. Paul, 'the woman to usurp authority over the man.' If the apostle could not suffer it, into what mould is he mortified that can?"—Ibid., 247; cf. also ibid., 209. [327] Hansard, Parl. Debates, 3d series, CXLII, 394 ff. See the suggestive paper of Hirschfeld, "The Law of Divorce in England and in Germany," Law Quart. Review, XIII, 400-403, giving illustrative passages from the debates relating to the unfair treatment of the wife. [403] Charters and General Laws (Boston, 1814), 285; Acts and Resolves, I, 209, 210. In Nov., 1704, James Gardner, "preacher of the Gospel" at Dartmouth, that town being destitute of an "ordained minister," was allowed to solemnize marriages: ibid., VIII (Appendix, Vol. III), 92. [499] Whitmore, Col. Laws of Mass. (1660-72), 172; ibid. (1672-86), 101; Mass. Col. Rec., II, 207. Cf. Friedberg, Eheschliessung, 477, note; Newhall, Ye Great and General Court, 349-65, giving interesting examples. [576] "There was Peregrine White, the first-born child of the Colony and stepson of Governor Winslow; Thomas Cushman, Jr., son of the elder; James Cudworth, Jr., son of the future general and deputy-governor, and Jonathan, his brother; Samuel Arnold, Jr., son of the Marshfield pastor; Isaac Robinson, Jr., grandson of the great Leyden pastor; Thomas Delano; Nathaniel Church; and other scions of leading families."—Goodwin, Pilgrim Republic, 600, who, thinks it a mistake to suppose that generation "below the present in general purity of life;" since the pre-contract was "a sort of semi-marriage" and "such cases were ferretted out and recorded" with "impartial diligence." [665] Whitmore, Col. Laws of Mass. (1672-86), 102; Mass. Col. Rec., IV, Part II, 454. [762] After thus expressing the motive for toleration, the Constitutions curiously provide that any seven or more persons agreeing in any religion may form themselves into a "church or profession;" and no person over seventeen years of age "shall have any benefit or protection of the law, or be capable of any place of profit or honor, who is not a member" of such a church or profession, "having his name recorded in some one, and but one religious record at once."—Ibid., 1407. [850] See O'Callaghan, Hist. of New Netherland, II, 345-55, 450-57. Under the lead of the clerical bigots, Drisius and Megapolensis, the Reformed church in New Netherland banished Lutherans and tormented the Quakers. A number of Friends, expelled from Massachusetts, arrived in New Amsterdam in 1657, and were at once persecuted with fiendish cruelty. Nevertheless, the Quakers grew apace in numbers, settling by preference in Jamaica and Flushing on Long Island. Among them was John Bowne, a recent convert and signer of the petition quoted in the text. In 1662 he was fined for allowing his house to be used as a Quaker conventicle; and in the next year he was banished to Holland. This resulted in calling down upon the head of Stuyvesant a severe and just rebuke from the directors. See also Brodhead, Hist. of N. Y., I, 636, 705; O'Callaghan, op. cit., 338-42, 428; Earle, op. cit., 260; and Waller, Hist. of Flushing, 37-47, 77, note. It is a pity that a writer of such merit as Mr. Waller should have reiterated (46, 47) the baseless and long since exposed slanders against the Quakers in New England. [940] Earle, "Among Friends," New Eng. Mag., Sept., 1898, 20. [1044] R. I. Col. Rec., I, 312 (1655). "And if any persons in this Colonie," continues the order, "shall part themselves and marrie again without ye authoritie of ye Court of Commissioners, or be convicted of carnal copulation with any other [bigamy], they shall be punished as in case of adulterie."—Ibid., 312. [1154] Pub. Stat. of Mass. (1882), 811; Revised Stat. of Maine (1884), 517; Pub. Stat. of N. H. (1891), 494; Vermont Stat. (1894), 502; Gen. Laws of R. I. (1896), 625. [1263] Compare the acts of March 26, 1804, and March 2, 1805: U. S. Stat. at Large, II, 283-89, 322, 323; also in Poore, Charters, I, 691-97. [1357] Ibid. [1455] Formerly the ages in Utah were fourteen and twelve: Laws (1888), 88-91; they were fixed at sixteen and fourteen respectively for males and females by the act of March 11, 1897: Laws, 40. Minor typographical and punctuation errors have been corrected without note. Irregularities and inconsistencies in the text have been retained as printed. Mismatched quotes are not fixed if it's not sufficiently clear where the missing quote should be placed. In the Table of Contents: III. The Evils of the Spiritual Jurisdiction 351-359"—350 was changed to 351. The cover for the eBook version of this book was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain. |