19th March 1869
The rector of St Helier is humiliated in the States Assembly
You could almost believe the States members had themselves been under the influence of drink when they met to decide whether the island’s pubs should be allowed to open on Sundays. As things stood, the pubs always been able to do so, but the rectors of the 12 parishes, each of whom had a seat in the States, were arguing for their closure on the day of rest.
The States had already voted on the matter once, but that vote was declared null, so the matter returned to the chamber to be considered a second time, during which the rector of St Helier tried to read the previous week’s sermon to the members.
The members argue
Seemingly none of them wanted to hear it, and a boisterous argument broke out, over which the rector had no chance of making himself heard. When the matter was put to a vote, the case for allowing the pubs to open for an hour and a half, between 5.30 and 7pm, won by the slimmest of margins, but the rector of St Helier wasn’t happy. He moved to have it immediately overturned, and was roundly defeated, with only two other members supporting him and 29 voting against.
He may have taken some comfort in the fact that a proposition that all pubs should be closed at 10pm on weekdays was, at least, successful.
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Other events that occured in March
Occupying forces mount desperate raid on Granvillle
- Occupying forces mounted a raid on the French port of Granville when their own stocks started to run down at the end of the war.
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States of Jersey authorises construction of the Eastern Railway
- Jersey's Eastern Railway was build in stages after its construction was authorised by the States in March 1871.
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Publisher and ad-man Sir Hedley Le Bas dies
- Sir Hedley Le Bas came up with the slogan Your Country Needs You, which Britain used in its First World War recruitment campaign.
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Jersey’s occupation bailiff is knighted
- Coincidentally, on the day Lingshaw was sentenced for his treachery, it was announced in the London Gazette that Alexander Coutanche, bailiff throughout the occupation, had been knighted in recognition of his service to the island. Coutanche was again recognised in the 1961 Birthday Honours, when he was made a life peer and given the title […]
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