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      • During the colonial period the king usually appointed the attorney general, but the governor and Council or the governor (or lieutenant governor) alone usually made interim appointments when the office became vacant.
      encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/attorneys-general-of-virginia/
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  2. In royal colonies, the British government appointed the governor and the council. In proprietary colonies, the proprietors appointed the governor and his council. In corporate colonies, voters elected these officials.

  3. 2 administration of justice in colonial dependencies ships are the rewards for which the ablest Judges compete with Attorneys-General. Sometimes members of the local bar are appointed direct to Judgeships.

  4. Colonial Attorney-Generals. (See Pages 31 and 140.) William Randolph, born in 1651, was son of Richard Ran-dolph, of Warwickshire, and was half-nephew of Thomas Ran-dolph, the poet, of Newnham, Northamptonshire, England. He came to Virginia about 1673, and settled at Turkey Island in Henrico county. He succeeded his uncle Henry Randolph as

  5. The chief legal officer of the General Court was the Attorney-General. 9. During the seventeenth century he was appointed by the king, until near the end of the colonial period he was appointed and commissioned by the Governor under the seal of the colony.

  6. May 24, 2018 · By the middle of the eighteenth century the courts of every one of Britain’s thirteen colonies on the East Coast of North America conducted litigation pursuant, more or less, to the procedures of the common law.

  7. (a) Drafts are prepared by the Attorney-General of government legislative measures, and of any other measures which he considers it desirable to adopt. There is no other official draftsman. The Attorney-General is appointed by the Crown, and he has no official staff. His duties do not extend to measures introduced by private or non-official

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