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Date: | Sun, 24 Aug 2003 21:07:30 -0500 |
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The King's Attorneys were appointed by the Governor (often based upon recommendation by the Council) and were "...men of high distinction in the community independently of the honor and influence achieved from that position." Those appointees then appointed assistants in the counties where legal business required such appointments.
(Bruce, "Institutional History of VA in the 17th Century" (Knickerbocker Press, NY, 1910) vol. 1, pp. 685-689, pps. 570 & 571,and see "Index" generally under "Attorney-General".
The Crown also was represented from time to time by a "Solicitor General", Richard Povey having been sent out by the Crown shortly before the capital was moved to Williamsburg.
It is interesting that Richard Lee seems to have been the first King's Attorney, he having occupied that office shortly prior to Bacon's Rebellion. Paul
London
----- Original Message -----
From: Wesley E. Pippenger
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Sunday, August 24, 2003 7:19 PM
Subject: King's Attorney?
Question as to how one was appointed king's attorney in Virginia. I have
someone who died in 1767 and is claimed to have been king's attorney. He
died in the Alexandria/Fairfax Co. area. I don't spot such appointments in
Hening's statutes. What other record might be search to document such a
claim? What people could or could not be so appointed?
W.
__________
Wesley E. Pippenger
2909-A S. Woodstock St.
Arlington VA 22206
(703) 998-8920
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http://www.erols.com/pipp/
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