51st Delaware General Assembly

The 51st Delaware General Assembly was a meeting of the legislative branch of the state government, consisting of the Delaware Senate and the Delaware House of Representatives. Elections were held the first Tuesday of October and terms began on the first Tuesday in January. It met in Dover, Delaware, convening January 2, 1827, two weeks before the beginning of the first year of the administration of Governor Charles Polk, Jr.

Governor
Charles Polk, Jr.
51st General Assembly
In office
January 2, 1827  January 1, 1828
Preceded by50th Assembly
Succeeded by52nd Assembly

The apportionment of seats was permanently assigned to three senators and seven representatives for each of the three counties. Population of the county did not effect the number of delegates. Both chambers had a Federalist majority.

Leadership

Senate

  • Henry Whiteley, New Castle County

House of Representatives

  • Archibald Hamilton, New Castle County

Members

Senate

Senators were elected by the public for a three-year term, one third posted each year.

New Castle County
  • Joseph England
  • Christopher Vandegrift
  • Henry Whiteley
Kent County
  • John Brinckle
  • Charles Polk, Jr.
  • Presley Spruance, Jr.
Sussex County
  • Jesse Green
  • William N. Polk
  • Peter Robinson

House of Representative

Representatives were elected by the public for a one-year term.

New Castle County
  • Samuel H. Black
  • Josiah F. Clement
  • Daniel Corbit
  • Alexander Crawford
  • John Erwin
  • Archibald Hamilton
  • John Higgins
Kent County
Sussex County
  • Francis Brown
  • Joshua Burton
  • George Phillips
  • Lawrence Riley
  • John Tennent
  • Miles Tindall
  • John Wiltbank
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gollark: Given:- smaller process node (easier to add more stuff, increase clock)- faster RAM- faster IO- simultaneous multithreading- other generic IPC improvements- probably bigger or at least faster cache- higher clocksit's inevitable.
gollark: I'd say, in fact, that a modern dual core would beat it.
gollark: Perhaps a 4-core CPU with outdated everything is slow.
gollark: I don't think it's too likely, but perhaps...

References

  • Martin, Roger A. (1995). Memoirs of the Senate. Newark, Delaware: Roger A. Martin.

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