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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Table of Contents

      THE CITY.

      Section 1. Direct and Indirect Government.

      Summary of the foregoing results; township government is direct, county government is indirect

      Representative government is necessitated in a county by the extent of territory, and in a city by the multitude of people

      Josiah Quincy's account of the Boston town-meeting in 1830

      Distinctions between towns and cities in America and in England

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT

      Section 2. Origin of English Boroughs and Cities.

      Origin of the chesters and casters in Roman camps

      Coalescence of towns into fortified boroughs

      The borough as a hundred; it acquires a court

      The borough as a county; it acquires a sheriff

      Government of London under Henry I

      The guilds; the town guild, and Guild Hall

      Government of London as perfected in the thirteenth century; mayor, aldermen, and common council

      The city of London, and the metropolitan district

      English cities were for a long time the bulwarks of liberty

      Simon de Montfort and the cities

      Oligarchical abuses in English cities, beginning with the Tudor period

      The Municipal Reform Act of 1835

      Government of the city of New York before the Revolution

      Changes after the Revolution

      City government in Philadelphia in the eighteenth century

      The very tradition of good government was lacking in these cities

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT

      Section 3. The Government of Cities in the United States.

      Several features of our municipal governments

      In many cases they do not seem to work well

      Rapid growth of American cities

      Some consequences of this rapid growth

      Wastefulness resulting from want of foresight

      Growth in complexity of government in cities

      Illustrated by list of municipal officers in Boston.

      How city government comes to be a mystery to the citizens, in some respects harder to understand than state and national government

      Dread of the "one-man power" has in many cases led to scattering and weakening of responsibility

      Committees inefficient for executive purposes; the "Circumlocution

       Office"

      Alarming increase of city debts, and various attempts to remedy the evil

      Experience of New York with state interference in municipal affairs; unsatisfactory results

      The Tweed Ring in New York

      The present is a period of experiments

      The new government of Brooklyn

      Necessity of separating municipal from national politics

      Notion that the suffrage ought to be restricted; evils wrought by ignorant voters

      Evils wrought by wealthy speculators; testimony of the Pennsylvania

       Municipal Commission

      Dangers of a restricted suffrage

      Baneful effects of mixing city politics with national politics

      The "spoils system" must be destroyed, root and branch; ballot reform also indispensable

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT

      SUGGESTIVE QUESTIONS AND DIRECTIONS

      BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

      CHAPTER VI.

       Table of Contents

      THE STATE.

      Section 1. The Colonial Governments.

      Claims of Spain to the possession of North America

      Claims of France and England

      The London and Plymouth Companies

      Their common charter

      Dissolution of the two companies

      States formed in the three zones

      Formation of representative governments; House of Burgesses in

       Virginia

      Company of Massachusetts Bay

      Transfer of the charter from England to Massachusetts

      The General Court; assistants and deputies

      Virtual independence of Massachusetts, and quarrels with the Crown

      New charter of Massachusetts in 1692; its liberties curtailed

      Republican governments in Connecticut and Rhode Island

      Counties palatine in England; proprietary charter of Maryland

      Proprietary charter of Pennsylvania

      Quarrels between Penns and Calverts; Mason and Dixon's line

      Other proprietary governments

      They generally became unpopular

      At the time of the Revolution there were three forms of colonial government: 1. Republican; 2. Proprietary; 3. Royal

      (After 1692 the government of Massachusetts might be described as

       Semi-royal)

      In all three forms there was a representative assembly, which alone could impose taxes

      The governor's council was a kind of upper house

      The colonial government was much like the English system in miniature

      The Americans never admitted the supremacy of parliament

      Except in the regulation of maritime commerce

      In England there grew up the theory of the imperial supremacy of parliament

      And the conflict between the British and American theories was precipitated by becoming involved in the political schemes of George III.

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT

      Section 2. The Transition from Colonial to State Governments.

      Dissolution of assemblies and parliaments

      Committees of correspondence; provincial congresses

      Provisional governments; "governors" and "presidents"

      Origin of the senates

      Likenesses and differences between British and American systems

      QUESTIONS ON THE TEXT

      Section 3. The State Governments.

      Later


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