In November 1620, the men aboard the Mayflower signed a document known as the Mayflower Compact, agreeing that they would come together as a political body to create “just and equal laws” for their new colony. One of their first laws in Plymouth Colony paved the way for jury trials. On December 17, 1623, the town court ordered that all matters of crime, trespass, and debt disputes “should be tried by the verdict of twelve honest men... in form of a jury."
Before this, crimes and legal disputes were handled within regular town meetings under the oversight of the governor, but as the colony grew, the town meeting became unwieldy for many tasks. The Pilgrim’s desire for freedom in religious practice did not mean they rejected the semblance of law and order, so as citizens of England they conducted their affairs in ways familiar to them, and that would meet the approval of governing authorities. Their differences with the Church of England may have motivated the young colony to work all the more to show themselves as conscientious and law-abiding citizens and loyal subjects of His Majesty, King James.
Although the jury system was rarely needed in the earliest days, it was certainly tested a few years later when the first murder occurred in their midst. In 1630, one of the original Mayflower passengers was put on trial before a jury and found guilty of "willful murder by plain and notorious evidence." He was soon after hanged for his crime.
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“And I charged your Judges that same time, saying, Hear the controversies between your brethren, and judge righteously between every man and his brother, and the stranger that is with him. Ye shall have no respect of person in judgment, but shall hear the small as well as the great: ye shall not fear the face of man: for the judgment is God's....”
(Deuteronomy 1:16-17;1599 Geneva Bible)
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