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Home > Collections > City Council, 1647-1977
CITY COUNCIL, 1647-1977
Proceedings, resolutions,
minutes, accounts, petitions, correspondence of Dutch
(New Amsterdam) and English colonial governments;
New York City Common Council, Board of Aldermen, and
City Council.
The Council is the city's legislative body. Its origins
date back to the Burgomasters and Schepens of the Dutch
period, and the Common Council during English colonial
era. Re-named the City Council in 1938, its functions
have remained essentially unchanged over three centuries.
Petition
of John Peeck and John Peter Zenger to the Mayor, Recorder
and Alderman of the City New York, May 1, 1735. Collection:
Common Council Papers, 1735.
The historical records of the legislative body reflect
its ombudsman-like role. The council received citizen
complaints and petitions; they were the source of contracts,
the arbiter of disputes, as well as the regulators and
law-makers.
COLLECTION STATUS:
The Minutes of the Common Council,
1676-1776 and 1784-1831 (published version, with
index)
are available in both hard copy and microfilm. The
supporting papers of the Common Council, including
petitions, correspondence,
rough minutes, invoices, etc. from 1670-1831, have
been processed and recently microfilmed with assistance
from
the National Endowment of the Humanities. The supporting
papers are arranged chronologically; a folder-level
finding aid is available. Post-1832 legislative body
records are not completely processed; they are
generally
arranged chronologically, by committee; they have not
been microfilmed. The printed proceedings of the
legislative
bodies, post-1832, have been microfilmed and are available
in the City
Hall Library.
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