The city charter is the governing document of the city, much like the Constitution is America’s governing document. The first City Charter was granted by the territorial legislature on December 9, 1825 and established the form of government as a strong mayor system with a 5-person city council. The initial charter laid the basic framework of government, set the municipal boundaries, provided for municipal officers (clerk, treasurer), elections, etc. Soon after, the original City Charter was superseded by new charters on January 18, 1827, February 13, 1831, and March 2, 1840. These early charters were prior to Florida’s admittance into the Union on March 3, 1845, when Florida became the 27th state. After statehood, the City of Tallahassee was re-chartered twice more on November 28, 1868 (a ministerial act to adhere to emancipation) and on February 20, 1920. From 1826 to 1919, the composition of the city council changed first to an 8-member council (1827) and later to a 9-member council (1874), to account for the 1869 act outlawing mayors holding a seat on a city council. Through this period, there were numerous directly-elected and appointed municipal officials including the clerk-treasurer, city marshal (chief of police), tax assessor, tax collector, market clerk, street contractor, cemetery sexton, and keeper of the clock. For much of this period, terms of office for all officials were for one year, but in the later years the terms of councilmen were for two years.