CD 5618 .N4 S7 Copy 1 PROCEEDINGS OF THE B05T0NIAN S0GIETY Monthly Meeting, June 12, 1888. e/fe^ ^am^AmMVo j6q£ - 4vp4' THE PROVINCE SEAL OF NEW HAMPSHIRE WILLIAM AND MARY l692— l694 A PAPER READ BY REQUEST BEFORE THE BOSTONIAN SOCIETY, AT THE STATED MONTHLY MEETING, HELD JUNE 12, l888 BY JAMES RINDGE STANWOOD OF BOSTON BOSTON: OLD STATE HOUSE 1889 CorYRIGHT, 18S9 James Rindge Stanwood 3 Old State House, Boston, June 12, 1888. At the Regular Monthly Meeting of the Bostonian Society, held this day in the Council Chamber, at 3 o'clock, P. M., Mr. Hamilton Andrews Hill, of the Board of Directors, by request, in the absence of the President, occupied the Chair. Mr. Hill, addressing the Society, referred to the fact that an accession of great historical value had been added to the Loan Collection, in the recently discovered Seal of the Province of New Hampshire, under their Majesties William and Mary, and introduced Mr. James Rindge Stanwood, a member of the Society, who read an essay descriptive of the same, which had been prepared by request, and which is printed on the following pages. The thanks of the Society were voted Mr. Stanwood. Attest : WM. CLARENCE BURRAGE. Clerk. BLAZON OF ARMS WILLIAM III AND MARY II "Quarterly, ist and 4th, France and England, quarterly: 2d, or, a lion ramp, within a double tressure flory counterflory gu., for Scotland; 3d, az. a harp or, stringed ar., for Ireland ; with an escutcheon of pretence, thereon the Arms of Nassau, viz: az. billetty or, a lion ramp, gold." — Burke. INTRODUCTION In the publication of the material embraced within the follow- ing pages relative to a Great Seal of the former Province of New Hampshire, used during the joint reign of William and Mary, Sovereigns of England from 1689 to 1694, the author desires to state that this monograph is but introductory to a more elaborate and thorough treatment of the subject of the Province Seals under the Crown, which he hopes to prepare for the press at a later period. In the brief description of the particular Seal in question here given, he has endeavored to outline the characteristics of the Province Seals, by illustration of the features common to most, if not all, as may readily be proved by patient examination. Before proceeding, however, to consider the period represented by this special form of the Seal — which we are led to single out through reason of the preservation of the original die, by rare good fortune, to the present day — it is fitting that we review briefly the early history of the State which it represents. The population embraced in the various scattered plantations along the eastern coast of New Hampshire, which by voluntary action in 1641, had been, in 1643, placed under the jurisdiction of the charter Province of the Massachusetts-Bay, and incorporated into the early County of Norfolk, so called, extending from the Merrimack to the Pascataqua Rivers, was, thirty-eight years later, granted a royal government by King Charles the Second. New Hampshire was erected to Provincial dignity, and placed under the government of a President and Council. His Majesty's Com- mission to John Cutt, of Portsmouth, as President of the first Council, bears date the eighteenth of September, 1679, and was received at Portsmouth, January i, 1679/80. The first entries in the Council Book read as follows : — " Portsm in the Prouince of N. Hampshire, Janua : primo. 1679. This day, by the hands of Edw. Randolph, Esq r ., Wee his Maj 'tie's President and Council for the Prou. of N. Hampshire, received his Maj'ties Comiss"on of grace & fauor for the Gou'mt of said prouince, together w* a Seale & Letter from y e King's Maj'tie & his hon b .l e Priui Council." Upon "January y e 14^ 1679, The President & Council meiKToned in his Maj'ties Commisson assembled at y e president's house in portsm? & then & y re dis- tinctly read his Maj'ties s4 Commission as directed." Upon Jan. 22, following, the King's commission was formally published to the inhabitants of the new Province, summoned for that purpose to attend at Portsmouth, and March 16, 1679/80, the first General Assembly in New Hampshire was convened at the same place. To this period dates the official existence of the first Province Seal, which was used by President Cutt, and his successor, the Hon. Richard Waldron, from 1680 to 1682. Of the absolute termination of the use of this earliest Seal in the latter part of 1682, we have proof in the following extract from a Council record which may be found printed in the late John Scribner Jenness's Transcripts from Original Documents in the English Archives : " At a Councel held at Portsmouth, October y e 4* 1682. A new Commission from His Maj'ty produced by Edward Cranfield, Esq r ., Constituting him his Maj'ty's Lieutenant- Governour & Commander-in-chief of this His Province of New Hampshire, was read, & according to the direction in the said Commissn, the said EdwEsqrs. Capt Jno. Gerrish > Esqrs. Robert Elliott) Rich