Research

Scope and Content Note

The records in this series consist of 17 severely burned leaves that appear to be a legal document concerning resolution of territorial disputes regarding colonial charters and the Massachusetts line east of the Hudson River. Massachusetts claimed unlimited inland provisions according to the Massachusetts Bay Colony Charters of 1620 (Plymouth Charter) and 1628/29; and New York claimed grants based on provisions in the March 12, 1664 charter from King Charles II to his brother, James, Duke of York. The State Capitol fire of 1911 destroyed most of the information in this document.

The document discusses facts regarding boundary lines between New York and New Jersey, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and Quebec, including the Plymouth Charter, the charter of Charles II to James, and other treaties and historical documents; boundary lines between New York and Connecticut established in 1731 and confirmed by King William on 17 March 1790; the Massachusetts Bay boundary with New Hampshire, determined 18 March 1773; and historical documentation defending or annulling northern and western claims of Massachusetts and New Hampshire including rights of landowners based upon ancient grants of the colony, particularly the Roswell estate in the Merrimac River area.

Much of the document also discusses country reserved for Indians, particularly tracts purchased by or surrendered to the government from the Five Nations.

Commissioners discussed settlement between New Jersey and the East bank of the Hudson River and determined lines of New York jurisdiction between Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Quebec, including detailed west and northern latitude boundary descriptions. It is unclear from the records whether or not this was the final settlement regarding the territorial dispute.