404:, President of Council. William Pinhorne, being next in precedence, became president. Unbeknownst to Ingoldesby, his own commission as lieutenant governor was revoked in October 1709, but the news only reached him in April 1710. Pinhorne, as President of Council, became acting governor until June 10, 1710, when Governor
303:, which resulted in his suspension on September 1 from his positions for non-residence. Returning to New York the following year, he was appointed Second Justice of the New York Supreme Court of Judicature on March 22, 1693, and on June 10 he was restored to the Council.
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Pinhorne and Hunter soon found themselves in opposition to each other, with Hunter demanding
Pinhorne's removal from all offices in New Jersey in 1711. Hunter continued lobbying London for the replacement of Pinhorne and other Councillors, and on April 23, 1713 the
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On May 15, 1691, William
Pinhorne was appointed Fourth Justice on the New York Supreme Court of Judicature. In 1692 he moved to a plantation of over 1,000 acres (400 ha) at
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took office as governor, and
Pinhorne was stripped of all New York offices for a remark made nearly a decade earlier which Bellomont interpreted as being in support of
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New Jersey
Colonial Documents, Archives of the State of New Jersey, First Series, Vol. III
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New Jersey
Colonial Documents, Archives of the State of New Jersey, First Series, Vol. IV
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became increasingly dysfunctional. This ultimately resulted in the surrender by the
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In 1704 Cornbury named him Second
Justice of the Supreme Court. The Chief Justice
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Documents relative to the
Colonial History of the State of New York, Volume III
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wrote to Hunter that the crown had approved the appointment of new councilors.
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434:. A daughter, Martha, was the wife of Chief Justice Roger Mompesson of the
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The Empire
Reformed: English America in the Age of the Glorious Revolution
536:"William Pinhorne Biography at Historical Society of the New York Courts"
456:"William Pinhorne Biography at Historical Society of the New York Courts"
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522:; Daily Advertiser Publishing House, Newark, New Jersey, 1881. p. 299
510:; Daily Advertiser Publishing House, Newark, New Jersey, 1882. p. 299
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284:. He then served as a judge in a special session of the Court of
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292:. Leisler was convicted, sentenced to death, and executed.
273:. In 1685 he was Speaker of the New York General Assembly.
393:, Cornbury's successor as governor, died on May 6, 1709.
438:. Pinhorne had another daughter, Mary, and a son, John.
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265:in the 1670s. In May 1683 he purchased a house on
131:July 29, 1703 – June 15, 1713 (suspended)
829:Members of the East New Jersey Provincial Council
400:became acting governor, and on June 16 suspended
232:1720) was an American colonial politician and
199:Mary Pinhorne, Martha Mompesson, John Pinhorne
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427:William Pinhorne married Mary, a daughter of
34:Acting Governor of the Province of New Jersey
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276:In 1691, with the accession of Governor
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89:June 16, 1709 – June 10, 1710
419:William Pinhorne died in early 1720.
257:William Pinhorne probably arrived in
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328:East New Jersey Provincial Council
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107:Succeeded by
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64:Succeeded by
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849:1720 deaths
355:West Jersey
351:East Jersey
347:Proprietors
343:West Jersey
301:East Jersey
137:Preceded by
95:Preceded by
52:Preceded by
808:Categories
668:R. Harison
628:Horsmanden
623:F. Harison
598:Gouverneur
470:2023-09-13
442:References
359:Queen Anne
322:New Jersey
312:Jacobitism
297:Snake Hill
242:New Jersey
212:Occupation
753:Tallmadge
743:Tallmadge
603:Broughton
127:In office
85:In office
42:In office
703:Van Wyck
693:Van Wyck
683:Van Wyck
638:T. Jones
618:Jamieson
588:Pinhorne
464:Archived
267:Broadway
253:New York
238:New York
196:Children
778:Hackett
768:Barnard
673:Prevost
633:Johnson
613:Bickley
290:treason
263:England
172:England
793:McAvoy
758:Tillou
738:Morris
653:Varick
593:Graham
583:Graham
423:Family
316:Jesuit
248:Career
234:jurist
228:(died
215:Lawyer
188:Spouse
783:Smyth
763:Smith
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608:Tudor
261:from
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663:Kent
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