Difference between revisions of "Buggery law: North and South Carolina, March, 1663"

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{{GLA}} p.104
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From the first major settlement, in the 1660s, of the area which became North and South Carolina, the English "buggery" law was apparently regarded as in force, although neither colony's law made explicit reference to this crime.<ref> 1663, March: North and South Carolina "buggery" law; Francois Xavier Martin, ed., A Collection of the Statutes of the Parliament of England in Force in North Carolina (New Been, N. C.: The Editor's Press, 1792), p. 208, where the English statute of 1533 is cited as in effect as of 1792, suggesting it was in force during the early colonial period.</ref> South Carolina first passed its own "buggery" law by enacting the text of the English
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statute in [[Buggery law: South Carolina, 1712|1712]]. North Carolina's first explicit statutory reference to "buggery"
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was its law of 1792. The death penalty for the crime was abolished in North Carolina in 1869.
  
From the first major settlement, in the 1660s, of the area which became North
 
and South Carolina, the English "buggery" law was apparently regarded as in
 
force, although neither colony's law made explicit reference to this crime.<ref> 1663, March: North and South Carolina
 
"buggery" law; Francois Xavier Martin, ed., A Collection of the Statutes of the Parliament of England in Force in North Carolina (New Been, N. C.: The Editor's Press, 1792), p. 208, where the English statute of 1533 is cited as in effect as of 1792, suggesting it was in force during the early colonial period.</ref> South Carolina first passed its own "buggery" law by enacting the text of the English
 
statute in [["Buggery" law: South Carolina, 1712|1712]]. North Carolina's first explicit statutory reference to "buggery"
 
was its law of 1792. The death penalty for the crime was abolished in North
 
Carolina in 1869.
 
  
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== References ==
  
== References ==
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{{GLA}} p. 104.
  
 
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{{Curated Exhibit|exhibit name and link=[[Colonial America: The Age of Sodomitical Sin|Colonial America: The Age of Sodomitical Sin]]|firstname=Jonathan Ned|lastname=Katz}}
 
{{Curated Exhibit|exhibit name and link=[[Colonial America: The Age of Sodomitical Sin|Colonial America: The Age of Sodomitical Sin]]|firstname=Jonathan Ned|lastname=Katz}}
  
 
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[[Category:The Age of Sodomitical Sin]]
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[[Category:South Carolina]]

Revision as of 11:49, 23 April 2008

From the first major settlement, in the 1660s, of the area which became North and South Carolina, the English "buggery" law was apparently regarded as in force, although neither colony's law made explicit reference to this crime.[1] South Carolina first passed its own "buggery" law by enacting the text of the English statute in 1712. North Carolina's first explicit statutory reference to "buggery" was its law of 1792. The death penalty for the crime was abolished in North Carolina in 1869.


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References

Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay/Lesbian Almanac (NY: Harper & Row, 1983) p. 104.

  1. 1663, March: North and South Carolina "buggery" law; Francois Xavier Martin, ed., A Collection of the Statutes of the Parliament of England in Force in North Carolina (New Been, N. C.: The Editor's Press, 1792), p. 208, where the English statute of 1533 is cited as in effect as of 1792, suggesting it was in force during the early colonial period.
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