Civil Government in the United States Considered with Some Reference to Its Origins. Fiske John

Civil Government in the United States Considered with Some Reference to Its Origins - Fiske John


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property

      When and where taxes are assessed

      Tax-lists

      Cheating the government

      The rate of taxation

      Undervaluation; the burden of taxation

      The "magic-fund" delusion

      Educational value of the town-meeting

      By-laws

      Power and responsibility

      There is nothing especially American, democratic, or meritorious about "rotation in office"

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT

      Section 2. Origin of the Township.

      Town-meetings in ancient Greece and Rome

      Clans; the mark and the tun

      The Old-English township, the manor, and the parish

      The vestry-meeting

      Parish and vestry clerks; beadles, waywardens, haywards, common-drivers, churchwardens, etc.

      Transition from the English parish to the New England township

      Building of states out of smaller political units

      Representation; shire-motes; Earl Simon's Parliament

      The township as the "unit of representation" in the shire-mote and in the General Court

      Contrast with the Russian village-community which is not represented in the general government

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT SUGGESTIVE QUESTIONS AND DIRECTIONS BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

      CHAPTER III.

       Table of Contents

      THE COUNTY.

      Section 1. The County in its Beginnings.

      Why do we have counties?

      Clans and tribes

      The English nation, like the American, grew out of the union of small states

      Ealdorman and sheriff; shire-mote and county court

      The coroner, or "crown officer"

      Justices of the peace; the Quarter Sessions; the lord lieutenant

      Decline of the English county; beginnings of counties in Massachusetts

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT

      Section 2. The Modern County in Massachusetts.

      County commissioners, etc.; shire-towns and court-houses

      Justices of the peace, and trial justices

      The sheriff

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT

      Section 3. The Old Virginia County.

      Virginia sparsely settled; extensive land grants to individuals

      Navigable rivers; absence of towns; slavery

      Social position of the settlers

      Virginia parishes; the vestry was a close corporation

      Powers of the vestry

      The county was the unit of representation

      The county court was virtually a close corporation

      The county-seat, or Court House

      Powers of the court; the sheriff

      The county-lieutenant

      Contrast between old Virginia and old New England, in respect of local government

      Jefferson's opinion of township government

      "Court-day" in old Virginia

      Virginia has been prolific in great leaders

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT

      SUGGESTIVE QUESTIONS AND DIRECTIONS

      BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

      CHAPTER IV.

       Table of Contents

      TOWNSHIP AND COUNTY.

      Section 1. Various Local Systems.

      Parishes in South Carolina

      The back country; the "regulators"

      The district system

      The modern South Carolina county

      The counties are too large

      Tendency of the school district to develop into something like a township

      Local institutions in colonial Maryland; the hundred

      Clans; brotherhoods, or phratries; and tribes

      Origin of the hundred; the hundred court; the high constable

      Decay of the hundred; hundred-meeting in Maryland

      The hundred in Delaware; the levy court, or representative county assembly

      The old Pennsylvania county

      Town-meetings in New Tort

      The county board of supervisors

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT

      Section 2. Settlement of the Public Domain.

      Westward movement of population along parallels of latitude

      Method of surveying the public lands

      Origin of townships in the West

      Formation of counties in the West

      Some effects of this system

      The reservation of a section for public schools

      In this reservation there were the germs of township government

      But at first the county system prevailed

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT

      Section 3. The Representative Township-County System in the West.

      The town-meeting in Michigan

      Conflict between township and county systems in Illinois

      Effects of the Ordinance of 1787

      Intense vitality of the township system

      County option and township option in Missouri, Nebraska, Minnesota, and Dakota

      Grades of township government in the West

      An excellent result of the absence of centralization in the United

       States

      Effect of the self-governing school district in the South, in preparing the way for the self-governing township

      Woman-suffrage in the school district

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT

      SUGGESTIVE QUESTIONS AND DIRECTIONS

      BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

      CHAPTER V.

      


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