2

Facsimile

Transcription

Status: Indexed

and if Mr. Peck has varied from the ground marked out,
whether you suppose he has much augmented the distance
of the road, or not, and further whether you suppose, that
the variation Mr. Peck has made in cutting the road, from
the ground marked out as aforesaid, will have a tendency
to permit ^admit of loaded waggons [sic] running with as much more
ease and opened the ground marked out for that
purpose.

Secondly- Whether the road is cut and opened fifteen
feet wide, or not, and if any part of it is under that
width, what ^distance proportion of it you suppose is in
that situation.

Thirdly - Whether the road is cut, and opened, and
causewayed ^and bridged, and the
banks of rivers, creeks branches &c dug down in such a
manner, that ^in your opinions it ought to be called a good and sufficient waggon [sic]
road - one

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