Prorogation of General Assembly




THE
NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE
EXTRAORDINARY.
Published by Authority.

WELLINGTON, TUESDAY, JULY 3, 1906.

Proroguing the General Assembly.

PLUNKET, Governor.
A PROCLAMATION.

WHEREAS by an Act passed in the Parliament holden in the fifteenth and sixteenth years of the reign of Her late Majesty Queen Victoria, intituled “An Act to grant a Representative Constitution to the Colony of New Zealand,” it is, among other things, enacted that the Governor may, at his pleasure, prorogue the General Assembly of New Zealand:

Now, therefore, I, William Lee, Baron Plunket, the Governor of the Colony of New Zealand, in pursuance and exercise of the hereinbefore-recited power and authority, and of every other power and authority in this behalf enabling me, do hereby proclaim and declare that I do this day prorogue the General Assembly of New Zealand until Tuesday, the thirty-first day of July, one thousand nine hundred and six, and the said General Assembly is hereby prorogued accordingly.

Given under the hand of His Excellency the Right Honourable William Lee, Baron Plunket, Knight Commander of the Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George, Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order, Governor and Commander-in-Chief in and over His Majesty’s Colony of New Zealand and its Dependencies; and issued under the Seal of the said Colony, at the Government House, at Wellington, this third day of July, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and six.

WM. HALL-JONES.

GOD SAVE THE KING!

By Authority: JOHN MACKEY, Government Printer, Wellington.



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1906, No 55





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🏛️ Prorogation of the General Assembly

🏛️ Governance & Central Administration
3 July 1906
Prorogation, General Assembly, Proclamation
  • William Lee, Baron Plunket, Governor
  • WM. HALL-JONES