A website from the Massachusetts Historical Society; founded 1791.

Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 4

beta
293
Committee Report
Massachusetts General Court RTP
February 1784

The Committee of both Houses appointed,1 to take into consideration the Memorial, of the Honble. Robert Treat Paine Esqr: and the Papers accompanying the same; have attended that Service and beg leave to report the following Resolve

Stephen Choate2 Pr. Order
Commonwealth of } In Senate Feby. 20th: 1784 Massachusetts

Whereas it appears to this Court, that by reason of the late war the business necessary to be performed, by the Attorney General of this Commonwealth in that office hath been greatly increased, and attended with peculiar difficulty—greater expence and more constant application than at other times. Therefore

Resolved, that there be allowed and paid out of the Treasury of this Commonwealth unto the Honble. Robert Treat Paine Esqr. attorney General, the sum of one thousand sixty three pounds & twelve shillings, in addition to what has been granted to him, and he has received, previous to the first of January in the year 1783; in full for his Services as attorney General, for this Commonwealth, from the time of his first appointment to that office, down to the said first day of January, in the year, one thousand seven hundred & eighty three.

Read & Accepted

Sent down for Concurrence

S. Adams, Presidt.
In the House of Representatives March 23. 1784

Read and concurred

Tristram Dalton Spkr. Approv’d John Hancock

DS (Massachusetts Archives, Resolves, 1807, Chapter 141); docketed: “B. Report 23. March 1784 Resolve concurred for allowing and paying £1063:12”; tallies on docketing sheet.

294 1.

Stephen Choate and Israel Nichols from the Senate joined with a Mr. Williams, John Choate, and Capt. John Prentiss from the House on the committee.

2.

Stephen Choate (1727–1815) was appointed to the Committee of Correspondence for his native town of Ipswich (1774) and was a delegate at the state constitutional convention (1779). He served as a representative to the General Court (1776–1779), a state senator (1780–1797), and a state councilor (1797–1803) (E. O. Jameson, The Choates in America, 1643–1896 [Boston, 1896], 58–61).