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and transact all matters that are necessary and allowable by law to defend A.D. 1785. their respective suits.

In the Senate House, the seventeenth day of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand
seven hundred and eighty-five, and in the ninth year of the Independence of the
United States of America.

JOHN LLOYD, President of the Senate.
JOHN FAUCHEREAUD GRIMKE,
Speaker of the House of Representatives.

AN ORDINANCE TO PROHIBIT THE RAISING AND KEPPING HOGS IN THE No. 1271. TOWNS OF BEAUFORT AND Georg TwN.

Not lawful to

I. Be it ordained, by the honorable the Senate and House of Representatives, and by the authority of the same, That from and after the passing raise hogs in of this Ordinance, it shall not be lawful for any person or persons to raise Beaufort and or keep at large in the towns of Beaufort and Georgetown, any hog or Georgetown. hogs, on any pretence whatever.

II. Be it ordained by the authority aforesaid, That it shall be lawful for Lawful to kill hogs running any person or persons to kill and destroy any hog or hogs that may be nt large. found going at large in any street, streets, or public places in the towns aforesaid.

fined for allow

III. And be it further ordained by the authority aforesaid, That it shall and may be lawful for any magistrate for the district to impose a fine, not Persons to be exceeding two pounds, on any person or persons convicted of permitting ing hogs to run hogs to go at large about the towns of Beaufort or Georgetown aforesaid, at large. and such fines so recovered shall be paid unto the church wardens of the parishes of St. Helena and Georgetown, for the use of the poor.

of the streets

ants.

IV. And be it further ordained by the authority aforesaid That it shall and may be lawful for the taxable inhabitants of the towns of Beaufort Commissioners and Georgetown, and Camden, on every Easter Monday in every year, to to be elected elect by ballot three persons, inhabitants of such town or village, to act for by the inhabitthe ensuing year as commissioners of the streets; which persons, or any two of them, shall have the same power and authority for repairing and cleansing the streets of such town or village, for preventing and removing of nuisances, as the commissioners of the streets for the city of Charleston used heretofore to exercise and enjoy.

In the Senate House, the seventeenth day of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand
seven hundred and eighty-five, and in the ninth year of the Independence of the
United States of America.

JOHN LLOYD, President of the Senate.
JOHN FAUCHEREAUD GRIMKE,

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AN ORDINANCE for raising the rates of Ferriage at Ashley Ferry.

(Passed March 17, 1785. See last volume.)

VOL. IV.-85.

A. D. 1785.

No. 1273. AN ORDINANCE to amend an Ordinance entitled "An Ordinance to empower commissioners therein named to cut and sink Drains and Water Passages in the swamp and savannahs formed by the northeast branch of Stono river," passed the sixteenth day of March, one thousand seven hundred and eighty-three; also to amend an Ordinance entitled "An Ordinance to empower commissioners therein named, to cut and sink Drains and Water Passages in Cacaw Swamp, St. Paul's parish," passed the twenty-sixth day of March, one thousand seven hundred and eighty-four.

(Passed March 17, 1785. See last volume.)

No. 1274. AN ACT FOR ERECTING AND ESTABLISHING A College at THE VILLAGE OF WINNSBOROUGH, IN THE DISTRICT OF CAMDEN, A COLLEGE IN OR NEAR THE CITY OF CHARLESTON, AND A COLLEGE AT NINETY-SIX, IN THE DISTRICT OF NINETY-SIX, IN THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA,

Preamble.

Mount Sion

college established.

Trustees appointed for Charleston college.

WHEREAS, the proper education of youth is essential to the happiness and prosperity of every community, and is therefore an object well worthy the attention of this Legislature; and whereas, the incorporated Mount Sion Society have petitioned this House that a college may be erected and established by law at the village of Winnsborough, in this State, for the instruction of youth in the learned languages and the liberal arts and sciences, and that the said college may be committed to the management, direction, and government of trustees, to be chosen and appointed by the said society out of their number:

I. Be it therefore enacted, by the honorable the Senate and House of Representatives, and by the authority of the same, That there be erected and established, and hereby is erected and established, at the village of Winnsborough, in the district of Camden, in this State, a college for the education of youth in the learned and foreign languages, and in the liberal arts and sciences, under the style, name, and title, of the “ Mount Sion College."

II. And whereas, it is much desired by many well disposed persons that a public seminary of learning for the education of youth should be established in or near Charleston, and it is not doubted but that many persons will contribute largely towards the same, if a proper piece of ground was appropriated for that purpose, and a law passed for empowering commissioners to receive such donations, and for erecting a college as soon as a sufficient sum shall be raised for that purpose; Be it therefore enacted by the authority aforesaid, That his Excellency the Governor for the time being, his honor the Lieutenant Governor for the time being, the honorable John Lloyd, Daniel Desaussure, Daniel Bourdeaux, David Olyphant, Arnoldus Vanderhorst, Joseph Atkinson, John Rutledge, John Mathews, Richard Hutson, and Thomas Heyward, junior, Esquires, Thomas Bee, David Ramsay, Arthur Middleton, Gabriel Manigault, Ralph Izard, William Smith, Charles Pinckney, Richard Beresford, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, and Hugh Rutledge, Esquires, and the reverend Robert Smith, or a majority of them, and their successors to be elected in manner hereinafter directed, shall forever be one body politic and corporate, in deed and

in name, by the style of the "Trustees of the College of Charleston;" and that by the same name they and their successors shall and may have perpetual succession, and be able and capable in law to have, receive, take, and enjoy, to them and their successors, lands, messuages, tenements, rents, liberties, franchises, and hereditaments, of any kind, nature, quality, or value, in fee and perpetuity, and also estates for lives and for years, and all sums of money, goods, chattels, and things whatsoever, of any nature, quality, or value, for building, erecting, and supporting the said college in or near Charleston as aforesaid: provided, the same do not exceed in the whole the yearly value of twenty thousand pounds sterling; and that by the same name they and their successors shall and may be able to implead and be impleaded, answer and be answered unto, defend and be defended, in all courts and places, and before all judges and justices whatsoever, in all actions, pleas, plaints, and demands; and to grant, bargain, sell, set, or assign, any lands, tenements, hereditaments, goods, or chattels; and to act and do all things whatsoever for the use aforesaid, in as ample manner and form as any natural person or body politic or corporate, can or may by law; that they shall and may have a common seal for the business of them and their successors, with liberty to change, break, alter, or make new the same, from time to time, as they shall think proper; and that the land heretofore given and appropriated for a free school in Charleston, shall be, and the same is hereby, declared to be reserved for the use of the said college or seminary of learning in Charleston, and that the same shall not be applied to any other use or purpose.

A.D. 1785.

III. And whereas, by the liberal subscriptions which have been made towards erecting and maintaining a seminary of learning at Ninety-Six, College of Cambridge. and the exertions of the trustees appointed by an Act of the General Assembly, passed the thirteenth day of August, in the eighth year of the Independence of the United States of America, to whom the government of the public school was committed, a very considerable fund hath already accumulated, and a prospect of still greater additions; and whereas, it is just and proper to give all possible encouragement to, and enlarge the foundations of, the said public school, in common with the others by this Act to be established; Be it therefore enacted by the authority aforesaid, That the honorable Benjamin Guerard, John Lewis Gervais, and Henry Pendleton, Esquires, and Leroy Hammond, Nicholas Eveleigh, Major Thomas Pinckney, Benjamin Tutt, Arthur Simkins, Joseph Adair, of Duncan's creek, John Thomas, senior, Robert Rutherford, Alexander Gillon, and John Purvis, Esquires, together with the trustees of the public school established at Ninety-Six, mentioned in the said recited Act, or a majority of them, shall be, and they are hereby appointed, trustees of a college to be erected at or near the town of Ninety-Six, which shall be called and known by the name of the "College of Cambridge;" which said trustees, or a majority of them, and their successors, to be elected in manner hereinafter directed, shall forever be one body politic and corporate, in deed and in name, by the style of the "Trustees of the College of Cambridge," and shall be vested with the same powers and authorities, and enjoy the same rights and privileges, to all intents and purposes, as are vested in, belonging to, or enjoyed by, the said colleges of Winnsborough and Charleston, or either of them.

IV. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That the said trustees, or a majority of them, shall have full power and authority to meet at all times when they shall think proper, at the said town of Ninety-Six, or at any other place such trustees or a majority shall appoint, to deliberate, resolve upon, and carry into effect, the laws and regulations to be by them

Powers of trustees.

A. D. 1785. made for the government of the said college, and shall have full power to fill up any vacancies which may happen in the said incorporated body of trustees, by the death, resignation, or removal out of this State of any of its members; and shall in all other respects have the same powers and authorities, and enjoy the same immunities, rights, and privileges, to which either of the said corporations of Winnsborough and Charleston colleges are entitled by this Act; anything herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding.

V. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That the Charters of the charters or constitutions of the said colleges respectively, shall be, and respective they are hereby declared to be, as is hereinafter mentioned and defined; that is to say:

colleges.

Winnsborough college to have 13 trustees,

1. The said college at Winnsborough shall be under the management, direction, and government of thirteen trustees, or a quorum or Board thereof, as hereinafter established, to be chosen, appointed, and perpetuated, as hereinafter directed; and the said college at Charleston shall be under the management, direction, and government of twenty-three trusCharleston 23. tees, or a quorum or Board thereof, to be chosen, appointed, and perpetuated as followeth; that the said trustees and their successors forever, shall meet on the first Monday of February in every year, at the State House in Charleston, until the said college shall be erected, and afterwards at the college hall, between the hours of nine and two, and that the major part of those so met shall choose a president, and such other officers, ministers, and servants, as they shall think necessary, for the year ensuing; that the said president and officers so chosen shall then and there take an oath for the due and faithful execution of their office, to be administered to them by any justice of the peace; that on the death, resignation, or removal of the said trustees or their successors, or any person chosen to any of the said offices, the president shall, within one month thereafter, cause the members thereof to be summoned to meet at the usual place, at such time as he shall think proper, not less than five nor more than ten days after such notice, and the trustees meeting in pursuance of such summons, or a majority of them, shall choose another trustee or officer in the room of the person so dying, resigning, or removing, who shall be vested with the same powers and privileges which his predecessor or predecessors held, enjoyed, or was entitled to; and the said trustees shall also meet quarterly at the State House in Charleston, until the said college shall be erected, and afterwards in the college hall, between the hours of nine and two, to transact the business thereof, under the penalty of one pound for every neglect, unless he shall make a satisfactory excuse for such nonattendance at the next quarterly meeting.

Mount Sion

Society to have 13 trustees.

No meeting

valid without 7 are present.

2. The president and wardens of the Mount Sion Society shall, as soon as conveniently may be, after the passing of this Act, cause the members thereof to be summoned to meet at the usual place in Charleston, at such time as they shall think proper, not less than thirty days nor more than sixty days after such notice, for the purpose of choosing thirteen fit and proper persons out of their own body, to act as trustees of the said college, who shall thereafter be called and known by the name of the "Trustees of the Mount Sion College," and shall be invested with all the powers and authorities hereinafter mentioned and declared; which said trustees shall continue in office three years, and no longer; and shall in like manner be elected every three years forever.

3. No meeting of the trustees shall be valid or legal for the despatch of any business whatsoever, unless there shall be seven of the number pre

sent.

4. No meeting of the said trustees shall be valid or legal for deciding A.D. 1785. any new question which may arise, or for determining upon any matter or thing which shall appear to be out of the usual track or established course Trustees to be of business, unless the clerk or other officer of the trustees for that notified by the clerk when to pose to be appointed, shall have duly and legally notified each and every meet. trustee of such meeting, and shall, before the entering upon any business, under his hand certify such notification.

pur

5. The head or principal of the said college shall be called and styled The principal "The President," and the masters thereof shall be called and styled "Pro- and masters to be styled fessors;" but neither president nor professors, while they remain such, shall president and ever be capable of holding the office of trustee. professors. 6. The trustees appointed as aforesaid shall have regular and stated Trustees to have stated meetings for the despatch of business, at such times and at such places as meetings. they, or a quorum of them, shall appoint.

7. Six or more of the said trustees shall have full power and authority Six trustees to to call occasional meetings of the Board whenever it shall to them appear necessary.

have power to call occasional meetings.

the business of

8. The said trustees, or a quorum of them, (according to the provision hereinbefore,) being regularly convened, shall be capable of doing and Trustees to do transacting all the business and concerns of the said colleges respectively, the colleges. and particularly of electing and appointing the president and professors, of appointing a treasurer, secretary. stewards, managers, and all other necessary and customary officers, for the taking care of the estate and managing the concerns of the institution, of fixing and ascertaining their several salaries and stipends, and removing or displacing any or all of them for misconduct or malversation in office, of prescribing the course of studies to be pursued, and in general of framing, establishing, and enacting all such orders, rules, statutes, and ordinances, as shall appear to them necessary for the good government of the said colleges, not repugnant to the laws of this State.

to enforce the

9. The presidents and professors, or a majority of them, shall be styled and called the "Faculty of the Colleges," which faculty shall have the power The Faculty of enforcing the rules and regulations adopted by the trustees for the to have power government of the pupils, by rewarding or censuring them, and finally by rules. suspending such of them as after repeated admonitions shall continue disobedient and refractory, until the determination of a quorum of trustees can be had.

10. No person shall be eligible as a trustee of the said colleges unless he shall profess the Christian protestant religion; but none shall be ex- Qualification cluded from any other liberty, privilege, or immunity, of the said colleges, teacher, or to be a trustee, whether as principal, professor, or pupil, on account of his religious per-pupil. suasion; provided he shall demean himself in a sober, peaceable, and orderly manner, and shall conform to the rules and regulations of the said colleges respectively.

confer degrees.

VI. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, That the said trustees, or the major part of them, shall have full power, by the presidents Trustees can of the said colleges respectively, or any other of the faculty deputed by them to grant and confer such degree or degrees in the liberal arts and sciences, to any of the students of the said colleges, or to any others by them, thought worthy thereof, as are usually granted and conferred in other colleges in Europe or America, and to give diplomas or certificates thereof, signed by them, and sealed with the common seal of the society, to authenticate and perpetuate the memory of such graduation.

VII. And whereas, for the adequate maintenance and support of said college at Winnsborough, it is necessary that the power of the Mount

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