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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations to Sources
- Introduction
- PART I The Emergence of the Concept of Unreasonable Search and Seizure, to 1642
- Chapter 1 English Thought on Search and Seizure to 1642
- Chapter 2 Search and Seizure in England Before 1485
- Chapter 3 The English Law of Search and Seizure, 1485–1642
- Chapter 4 The English Practice of Search and Seizure, 1485–1642
- PART II The Emergence of the General Warrant as an Unreasonable Search and Seizure
- Chapter 5 English Thought on Search and Seizure, 1642–1700
- Chapter 6 The General Warrant in Intellectual and Political Perspective, 1642–1700
- Chapter 7 Search and Seizure in England, 1642–1700: The Legal Background to the English Critique of General Warrants
- Chapter 8 Colonial Thought Respecting Search, Seizure, and the Illegitimacy of General Warrants, to 17601
- Chapter 9 Colonial Legislation Regarding Search and Seizure, to 17601
- Chapter 10 Colonial Search Warrants and Their Enforcement, to 1760, in Relation to the Search Warrant Clause of the Fourth Amendment1
- Chapter 11 Colonial Searches by the Customs Services of England and Great Britain, to 17601
- PART III The Evolution of the Specific Warrant as the Orthodox Method of Search and Seizure, to 1760
- Chapter 12 English and British Advocacy of the Specific Warrant, to 17601
- Chapter 13 English and British Advocacy of the Specific Warrant in Intellectual and Political Context, 1700–1760
- Chapter 14 Search and Seizure in Great Britain, 1700–1760: The Legal Background to the Specific Warrant Clause
- Chapter 15 The Colonial Roots of the Specific Warrant Clause: Search and Seizure in Massachusetts, to 1760
- Chapter 16 The Political Background to the Emergence of the Specific Warrant in Massachusetts, to 1760
- Chapter 17 Paxton’s Case and the Writs of Assistance Controversy in Massachusetts, 1755–1762
- Chapter 18 Developments in Search and Seizure Beyond the Transition to Specific Warrants, to 1760
- PART V Developments in Search and Seizure, 1760–1776
- Chapter 19 The Wilkes Cases: Search and Seizure in Great Britain, 1761–1776
- Chapter 20 The Writs of Assistance Controversy, 1761–1776: The Awakening of Hostility to General Search and Seizure Throughout the Colonies
- Chapter 21 Colonial Responses to the Controversies over Wilkes, General Warrants, and Writs of Assistance: The Widening Opposition to General Warrants
- Chapter 22 Issues Correlative to the Search Warrant, 1761–1776
- PART VI The Emergence of the Fourth Amendment, 1776–1791
- Chapter 23 American Search and Seizure, 1776–1787: The Years of Paradox
- Chapter 24 The Formation and Original Meaning of the Fourth Amendment, 1787–1791
- Afterword
- APPENDIX A Monographic Sources on the Authors of English Legal Treatises, 1168–1581
- APPENDIX B Searches and Seizures Respecting the British Guilds, 1298–1692
- APPENDIX B-1 Guild Searches Restricted to the Premises of Artisans of the Corresponding Professions
- APPENDIX B-2 Guild Searches Unrestricted to the Premises of Artisans of the Corresponding Professions
- APPENDIX C
- APPENDIX C-1 Forms of Search Warrants in English Legal Treatises, 1618–1640
- APPENDIX C-2 Forms of Search Warrants in English Legal Treatises, 1642–1700
- APPENDIX C-3 Forms of Search Warrants in British Legal Treatises, 1700–1760
- APPENDIX C-4 Forms of Search Warrants in Colonial Legal Treatises, to 1760
- APPENDIX C-5 Typical Search Warrants in the Colonies Before 1760
- APPENDIX D Votes of Massachusetts Towns on the Excise of 1754
- APPENDIX D-1 Negative Votes: Towns That Rejected the Excise Bill of 1754
- APPENDIX D-2 Positive Votes: Towns That Approved the Excise of 1754
- APPENDIX D-3 Poll Tax Assessments of Towns That Voted on the Excise of 1754 (In pounds–shillings–pence)
- APPENDIX D-4 Abstention Votes: Towns That Resolved to Abstain From Voting on the Excise Bill
- APPENDIX D-5 “Silent Towns I”: Towns in Which the Excise Bill Appeared on the Agenda for a Town Meeting but Not in the Records for That Meeting or for Any Later One
- APPENDIX D-6 “Silent Towns II”: Towns with Surviving Meeting Records for July–October 1754 that Do Not Mention the Excise Bill (78 towns)
- APPENDIX D-7 “Record Gaps”: Towns with Records Commencing before 1754 but Missing When Massachusetts Towns Debated the Excise Bill of 1754 (3 towns)
- APPENDIX D-8 Undocumented Towns: Towns that Either Generated No Meeting Records or for Which Previously Extant Records are Now Lost (5 towns)
- APPENDIX D-9 “Fictitious Towns”: Towns Claimed by Massachusetts but outside Its Boundaries in 1754 (5 towns)
- APPENDIX E
- APPENDIX E-1 The Primary Sources on Paxton’s Case (1761)
- APPENDIX E-2 Secondary Sources on Paxton’s Case (1761)
- APPENDIX F
- APPENDIX F-1 British Documents Respecting Civil Rights and Liberties, 1628 to 1760
- APPENDIX F-2 Colonial Precursors to the American Constitution, to 1760
- APPENDIX G
- APPENDIX G-1 The Wilkes Cases
- APPENDIX G-2 Leading Secondary Sources of the Wilkes Affair
- APPENDIX H
- APPENDIX H-1 Colonial Publications and Press Reports Respecting John Wilkes and His Role in The North Briton Forty-Five
- APPENDIX H-2 Pronouncements by the Continental Congress on Unreasonable Search and Seizure, 21, 26 Oct. 1774: Pamphlet and Newspaper Reprints
- APPENDIX I State Constitutions of 1776–1784 that Ignored Search and Seizure
- APPENDIX J The Massachusetts Constitution of 1780 in Relation to Search and Seizure: Ratification Returns
- APPENDIX J-1 Votes on Section 14 of the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780: 42 towns
- APPENDIX J-2 Votes on Segments of the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780 that Included the Article on Search and Seizure: 61 towns
- APPENDIX J-3 Votes on the Massachusetts Constitution or Declaration of Rights of 1780 as a Whole: 73 towns
- APPENDIX J-4 Votes of Approximate Number on the Constitution of 1780: 11 Towns
- APPENDIX J-5 Voted on the Massachusetts Constitution: Result but Not Margin of Vote Recorded: 26 towns
- APPENDIX J-6 Towns that Voted Only on Parts of the Constitution that Did Not Concern Search and Seizure: 3 towns
- APPENDIX J-7 Towns that Voted on Proposals to Amend the Constitution but Not on the Constitution Itself: 10 towns
- APPENDIX J-8 Towns that Voted on the Constitution, but the Substance of the Vote Does Not Survive: 1 town
- APPENDIX J-9 Towns that Placed the Constitution on the Agenda for at Least One Town Meeting but Did Not Record the Substance of the Resulting Vote: 3 towns
- APPENDIX J-10 Ambiguous Reports: 3 towns
- APPENDIX J-11 Towns that Voted Not to Vote on the Constitution of 1780 or to Send No Return: 7 towns
- APPENDIX J-12 Towns with Records Predating the Constitution that Are Missing or Blank for the Period When It Was before the Towns: 3 towns
- APPENDIX J-13 Towns with Records for 1780 that Mention No Vote on the Constitution of that Year: 22 towns
- APPENDIX J-14 Towns Whose Earliest Records Start after 1780: 26 towns
- APPENDIX J-15 Fictitious Towns: Towns in the Massachusetts Tax Act of 1780 that Were Located in Other Jurisdictions: 4 towns
- APPENDIX K The Authorship of the State Constitutions of 1776–84 and of Their Statements on Search and Seizure
- APPENDIX L Search and Seizure by Quasi–Official and Unofficial Institutions Before the Revolution
- APPENDIX M The Effects of Plunder on Opinion Respecting Search and Seizure during the American Revolution
- APPENDIX N
- APPENDIX N-1 Secondary Sources on the State Ratifying Conventions 1787–1788
- APPENDIX N-2 Ratifications by the State Legislatures in Chronological Sequence (cited by statute):
- APPENDIX O An Inventory of Manuscripts that Congressmen Wrote While Drafting the Fourth Amendment
- APPENDIX P Forms of Search Warrants in American Legal Treatises, 1792–1820
- APPENDIX Q Origins of the Affirmation Phrase
- APPENDIX Q Origins of the Affirmation Phrase
- Table of Cases
- Index
(p.833) APPENDIX E-2 Secondary Sources on Paxton’s Case (1761)
(p.833) APPENDIX E-2 Secondary Sources on Paxton’s Case (1761)
- Source:
- The Fourth Amendment
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations to Sources
- Introduction
- PART I The Emergence of the Concept of Unreasonable Search and Seizure, to 1642
- Chapter 1 English Thought on Search and Seizure to 1642
- Chapter 2 Search and Seizure in England Before 1485
- Chapter 3 The English Law of Search and Seizure, 1485–1642
- Chapter 4 The English Practice of Search and Seizure, 1485–1642
- PART II The Emergence of the General Warrant as an Unreasonable Search and Seizure
- Chapter 5 English Thought on Search and Seizure, 1642–1700
- Chapter 6 The General Warrant in Intellectual and Political Perspective, 1642–1700
- Chapter 7 Search and Seizure in England, 1642–1700: The Legal Background to the English Critique of General Warrants
- Chapter 8 Colonial Thought Respecting Search, Seizure, and the Illegitimacy of General Warrants, to 17601
- Chapter 9 Colonial Legislation Regarding Search and Seizure, to 17601
- Chapter 10 Colonial Search Warrants and Their Enforcement, to 1760, in Relation to the Search Warrant Clause of the Fourth Amendment1
- Chapter 11 Colonial Searches by the Customs Services of England and Great Britain, to 17601
- PART III The Evolution of the Specific Warrant as the Orthodox Method of Search and Seizure, to 1760
- Chapter 12 English and British Advocacy of the Specific Warrant, to 17601
- Chapter 13 English and British Advocacy of the Specific Warrant in Intellectual and Political Context, 1700–1760
- Chapter 14 Search and Seizure in Great Britain, 1700–1760: The Legal Background to the Specific Warrant Clause
- Chapter 15 The Colonial Roots of the Specific Warrant Clause: Search and Seizure in Massachusetts, to 1760
- Chapter 16 The Political Background to the Emergence of the Specific Warrant in Massachusetts, to 1760
- Chapter 17 Paxton’s Case and the Writs of Assistance Controversy in Massachusetts, 1755–1762
- Chapter 18 Developments in Search and Seizure Beyond the Transition to Specific Warrants, to 1760
- PART V Developments in Search and Seizure, 1760–1776
- Chapter 19 The Wilkes Cases: Search and Seizure in Great Britain, 1761–1776
- Chapter 20 The Writs of Assistance Controversy, 1761–1776: The Awakening of Hostility to General Search and Seizure Throughout the Colonies
- Chapter 21 Colonial Responses to the Controversies over Wilkes, General Warrants, and Writs of Assistance: The Widening Opposition to General Warrants
- Chapter 22 Issues Correlative to the Search Warrant, 1761–1776
- PART VI The Emergence of the Fourth Amendment, 1776–1791
- Chapter 23 American Search and Seizure, 1776–1787: The Years of Paradox
- Chapter 24 The Formation and Original Meaning of the Fourth Amendment, 1787–1791
- Afterword
- APPENDIX A Monographic Sources on the Authors of English Legal Treatises, 1168–1581
- APPENDIX B Searches and Seizures Respecting the British Guilds, 1298–1692
- APPENDIX B-1 Guild Searches Restricted to the Premises of Artisans of the Corresponding Professions
- APPENDIX B-2 Guild Searches Unrestricted to the Premises of Artisans of the Corresponding Professions
- APPENDIX C
- APPENDIX C-1 Forms of Search Warrants in English Legal Treatises, 1618–1640
- APPENDIX C-2 Forms of Search Warrants in English Legal Treatises, 1642–1700
- APPENDIX C-3 Forms of Search Warrants in British Legal Treatises, 1700–1760
- APPENDIX C-4 Forms of Search Warrants in Colonial Legal Treatises, to 1760
- APPENDIX C-5 Typical Search Warrants in the Colonies Before 1760
- APPENDIX D Votes of Massachusetts Towns on the Excise of 1754
- APPENDIX D-1 Negative Votes: Towns That Rejected the Excise Bill of 1754
- APPENDIX D-2 Positive Votes: Towns That Approved the Excise of 1754
- APPENDIX D-3 Poll Tax Assessments of Towns That Voted on the Excise of 1754 (In pounds–shillings–pence)
- APPENDIX D-4 Abstention Votes: Towns That Resolved to Abstain From Voting on the Excise Bill
- APPENDIX D-5 “Silent Towns I”: Towns in Which the Excise Bill Appeared on the Agenda for a Town Meeting but Not in the Records for That Meeting or for Any Later One
- APPENDIX D-6 “Silent Towns II”: Towns with Surviving Meeting Records for July–October 1754 that Do Not Mention the Excise Bill (78 towns)
- APPENDIX D-7 “Record Gaps”: Towns with Records Commencing before 1754 but Missing When Massachusetts Towns Debated the Excise Bill of 1754 (3 towns)
- APPENDIX D-8 Undocumented Towns: Towns that Either Generated No Meeting Records or for Which Previously Extant Records are Now Lost (5 towns)
- APPENDIX D-9 “Fictitious Towns”: Towns Claimed by Massachusetts but outside Its Boundaries in 1754 (5 towns)
- APPENDIX E
- APPENDIX E-1 The Primary Sources on Paxton’s Case (1761)
- APPENDIX E-2 Secondary Sources on Paxton’s Case (1761)
- APPENDIX F
- APPENDIX F-1 British Documents Respecting Civil Rights and Liberties, 1628 to 1760
- APPENDIX F-2 Colonial Precursors to the American Constitution, to 1760
- APPENDIX G
- APPENDIX G-1 The Wilkes Cases
- APPENDIX G-2 Leading Secondary Sources of the Wilkes Affair
- APPENDIX H
- APPENDIX H-1 Colonial Publications and Press Reports Respecting John Wilkes and His Role in The North Briton Forty-Five
- APPENDIX H-2 Pronouncements by the Continental Congress on Unreasonable Search and Seizure, 21, 26 Oct. 1774: Pamphlet and Newspaper Reprints
- APPENDIX I State Constitutions of 1776–1784 that Ignored Search and Seizure
- APPENDIX J The Massachusetts Constitution of 1780 in Relation to Search and Seizure: Ratification Returns
- APPENDIX J-1 Votes on Section 14 of the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780: 42 towns
- APPENDIX J-2 Votes on Segments of the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780 that Included the Article on Search and Seizure: 61 towns
- APPENDIX J-3 Votes on the Massachusetts Constitution or Declaration of Rights of 1780 as a Whole: 73 towns
- APPENDIX J-4 Votes of Approximate Number on the Constitution of 1780: 11 Towns
- APPENDIX J-5 Voted on the Massachusetts Constitution: Result but Not Margin of Vote Recorded: 26 towns
- APPENDIX J-6 Towns that Voted Only on Parts of the Constitution that Did Not Concern Search and Seizure: 3 towns
- APPENDIX J-7 Towns that Voted on Proposals to Amend the Constitution but Not on the Constitution Itself: 10 towns
- APPENDIX J-8 Towns that Voted on the Constitution, but the Substance of the Vote Does Not Survive: 1 town
- APPENDIX J-9 Towns that Placed the Constitution on the Agenda for at Least One Town Meeting but Did Not Record the Substance of the Resulting Vote: 3 towns
- APPENDIX J-10 Ambiguous Reports: 3 towns
- APPENDIX J-11 Towns that Voted Not to Vote on the Constitution of 1780 or to Send No Return: 7 towns
- APPENDIX J-12 Towns with Records Predating the Constitution that Are Missing or Blank for the Period When It Was before the Towns: 3 towns
- APPENDIX J-13 Towns with Records for 1780 that Mention No Vote on the Constitution of that Year: 22 towns
- APPENDIX J-14 Towns Whose Earliest Records Start after 1780: 26 towns
- APPENDIX J-15 Fictitious Towns: Towns in the Massachusetts Tax Act of 1780 that Were Located in Other Jurisdictions: 4 towns
- APPENDIX K The Authorship of the State Constitutions of 1776–84 and of Their Statements on Search and Seizure
- APPENDIX L Search and Seizure by Quasi–Official and Unofficial Institutions Before the Revolution
- APPENDIX M The Effects of Plunder on Opinion Respecting Search and Seizure during the American Revolution
- APPENDIX N
- APPENDIX N-1 Secondary Sources on the State Ratifying Conventions 1787–1788
- APPENDIX N-2 Ratifications by the State Legislatures in Chronological Sequence (cited by statute):
- APPENDIX O An Inventory of Manuscripts that Congressmen Wrote While Drafting the Fourth Amendment
- APPENDIX P Forms of Search Warrants in American Legal Treatises, 1792–1820
- APPENDIX Q Origins of the Affirmation Phrase
- APPENDIX Q Origins of the Affirmation Phrase
- Table of Cases
- Index