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(Not 1St Board)—2Nd Class
Missouri State Archives Finding Aid 951.2 U.S. RECORDER OF LAND TITLES SECOND BOARD OF LAND COMMISSIONERS PAPERS OF ORIGINAL CLAIMANTS, 1785-1857 Abstract: Papers of original claimants (1785-1857) submitted before the Second Board of Land Commissioners to determine validity of French and Spanish land grants made before the Louisiana Purchase. Extent: 5.6 cubic ft. (10 legal-size Hollinger boxes 2 flat boxes) Physical Description: Paper Location: MSA Rare Documents ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION Access Restrictions: No special restrictions. However, some records may be too fragile to be produced or may be undergoing conservation treatment. Publication Restrictions: Copyright is in the public domain. Items reproduced for publication should carry the credit line: Courtesy of the Missouri State Archives. Preferred Citation: [Name], [Class of Decision: 1st or 2nd], [Decision #]; Papers of Original Claimants, 1785-1857; Second Board of Land Commissioners; U.S. Recorder of Land Titles, Record Group 951; Missouri State Archives, Jefferson City. Acquisition Information: Agency transfer. Various accessions. Processing Information: Processing completed by Mary Kay Coker on June 14, 2010. HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES On July 9, 1832, after continued appeal from claimants whose petitions for land had been denied, Congress passed “An Act for the final adjustment of private land claims in Missouri.” It was not, as it turned out, the final adjustment, but it did establish a Second Board of Land Commissioners. PAPERS OF ORIGINAL CLAIMANTS (2nd BOARD), -
Petition of H. Chouteau
University of Oklahoma College of Law University of Oklahoma College of Law Digital Commons American Indian and Alaskan Native Documents in the Congressional Serial Set: 1817-1899 6-3-1844 Report : Petition of H. Chouteau Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.ou.edu/indianserialset Part of the Indian and Aboriginal Law Commons Recommended Citation S. Doc. No. 350, 28th Cong., 1st Sess. (1844) This Senate Document is brought to you for free and open access by University of Oklahoma College of Law Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in American Indian and Alaskan Native Documents in the Congressional Serial Set: 1817-1899 by an authorized administrator of University of Oklahoma College of Law Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 28th CoNGREss, [SENATE.] [ 350 J 1st Session. IN SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES. JuNE 3, 1844. Submitted, and ordered to be printe~. -~ Mr. HENDERSON made the following .REPOR'f: [To accompany bill S. 183.] T.be petition of Henry Chouteau and others, claiming as heirs at law ·of A'uguste Chouteau, deceased ; Bryan .Mullanphy and others, claiming as • the heirs at law of John l\1ullanphy, deceased; and William Russell, Pierre Chouteau, jr., and others, claiming as purchasers at administrator's sale of the estate of Julien Dubuque, deceased, represer.ts: That, in 177 4, Julien Dubuque, a mineralogist, emi~rated to the then province of Louisiana, and settled among the Sac and Fox Indians, on the Mississippi river, near the site of the present town of Dubuque. On the 22d of October, 1796, Dubuque presented his petition to the Baron de Carondelet, Governor General of Louisiana, p raying for the grant of a tract of land 011 the \Yest bank of the Mississippi river, com mencing at the upper hills of the little river Jria.quauquitois, and extend ing to the Mesquabynanques hills, which he stated he had bought from the Indians, and of which he was in the peaceable possession. -
Missouri a Territory of the Second Grade
FRED'c L. BILLON, at the age of 45. TAREN A'l' PHILADELPHIA, 1846. ANNALS OF ST. LOUIS IN ITS TERRITORIAL DAYS FROM 1804 TO 1821 BEING A CONTINUATION OF THE AUTHOR'S PREVIOUS WORK THE ANNALS OF THE FRENCH AND SPANISH PERIOD Bv FREDERIC L. BILLON A RESIDENT OF ST. LOUIS, EXCEEDING SEVENTY YEARS ST. LOUIS PRINTED FOR THE AUTHOR 1888. 'PRESS OF NIXON-JONES PRINTING Co. 212 PINE ST,1 ST, LOU!S MO, INTRODUCTORY . ., By an act of Congress of May 7,. 1800, the -'' Northwest Territory '' ,vas divided into two sep .arate governments .. That portion irnmediately west and adjoining ·Pennsylvania, beca1ne the territory of Ohio, and the qalance of the country, extending west to the Missis ;sippi river, was f or1ned into the new territory of In -diana. On May 13, ~en. Win. Henry Harrison, of Vir ginia, was appointed the Governor, and John Gibson, ,of Pennsylvania, Secretary of the new territory - .and shortly after,vards Wm. Clark, Henry Vander-: berg and John Giiffin, Territorial Judges, who held the first term of their court. at Vincennes, on March -3, 1801. The population of the new T_erritory, embracing all the country now Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wis consin was 4,875, about one-half in the settlements in the American botto1n on the Mississippi, and the balance on the Ohio, Illinois, Wabash and other points .. The second census of the United States (that of 1800), had been taken only the year previously, ex (iii) • lV INTRODUCTORY. hibiting a population of 5,305,366 souls in the then· sixteen States and three territories of the Union, of· which over 40,000 were included within the bound-· aries of that portion of theNorthwest Territory, which became the State of Ohio, leaving, as aforesaid, 4,875 in the new territory of Indiana. -
Legal Profession in Early Missouri, The
Missouri Law Review Volume 29 Issue 2 Spring 1964 Article 1 Spring 1964 Legal Profession in Early Missouri, The Anton-Hermann Chroust false Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.missouri.edu/mlr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Anton-Hermann Chroust, Legal Profession in Early Missouri, The , 29 MO. L. REV. (1964) Available at: https://scholarship.law.missouri.edu/mlr/vol29/iss2/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Law Journals at University of Missouri School of Law Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Missouri Law Review by an authorized editor of University of Missouri School of Law Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Chroust: Chroust: Legal Profession in Early Missouri THE LEGAL PROFESSION IN EARLY MISSOURI ANToN-HERMANN CHROUST* Prior to 1804, the year Missouri became attached to the Indiana Ter- ritory, few lawyers, mostly French who had come up the Mississippi, prac- ticed in St. Louis. From the beginning, there always was an abundance of legal work for capable members of the profession: Spanish land grants -fraudulent and authentic-and conflicting claims of every sort, growing out of improper surveys, spurious titles, disputed conveyances, and con- fusing judicial decisions under French, Spanish, and American law, provided lawyers with ample opportunities to display their professional skill and to earn a reasonable livelihood, provided they were "hustlers" and, as often as not, not too particular about the sort of work they were expected to do., The General Court, held on October 29, 1805, after the District of Louisiana had been detached from the Territory of Indiana and had been organized as the Territory of Louisiana, ruled that all attorneys who had been admitted to practice in the Indiana Territory were also to be admitted to the Louisiana Territory upon taking the oath of attorney.2 John Taylor, Benjamin Parke, Isaac Darnielle, William C. -
Historical Review
HISTORICAL REVIEW Stump Speaking See Page 339 „L Y 1956 rly By e State Historical Society of Missouri COLUMBIA, MISSOURI THE STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF MISSOURI The State Historical Society of Missouri, heretofore organized under the laws of this State, shall be the trustee of this State.—Laws of Missouri, 1899, R. S. of Mo., 1949, Chapter 183. OFFICERS 1953-1956 L. M. WHITE, Mexico, President GEORGE ROBB ELLISON, Jefferson City, First Vice-President RUSH H. LIMBAUGH, Cape Girardeau, Second Vice-President HENRY A. BUNDSCHU, Independence, Third Vice-President BARTLETT BODER, St. Joseph, Fourth Vice-President RAY V. DENSLOW, Trenton, Fifth Vice-President W. C HEWITT, Shelbyville, Sixth Vice-President R. B. PRICE, Columbia, Treasurer FLOYD C SHOEMAKER, Columbia, Secretary and Librarian TRUSTEES Permanent Trustees, Former Presidents of the Society ALLEN MCREYNOLDS, Carthage E. E. SWAIN, Kirksville GEORGE A. ROZIER, Jefferson City G. L. ZWICK, St. Joseph Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1956 F. C BARNHILL, Marshall RALPH P. JOHNSON, Osceola FRANK P. BRIGGS, Macon ALBERT L. REEVES, Kansas City W. C HEWITT, Shelbyville ROY D. WILLIAMS, Boonville STEPHEN B. HUNTER, Cape Girardeau GEORGE C WILLSON, St. Louis Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1957 RALPH P. BIEBER, St. Louis L. E. MEADOR, Springfield ARTHUR V. BURROWES, St. Joseph JOSEPH H. MOORE, Charleston *WM. P. ELMER, Salem ISRAEL A. SMITH, Independence LAURENCE J. KENNY, S. J., St. Louis HENRY C THOMPSON, Bonne Terre Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1958 CHESTER A. BRADLEY, Kansas City FRANK L. MOTT, Columbia RAY V. DENSLOW, Trenton GEORGE H. SCRUTON, Sedalia GEORGE ROBB ELLISON. Jefferson City JAMES TODD, Moberly ALFRED O. -
Papers of Original Claimants (Other Than 2Nd Board)
Missouri State Archives Finding Aid 951.1 U.S. RECORDER OF LAND TITLES FIRST BOARD OF LAND COMMISSIONERS PAPERS OF ORIGINAL CLAIMANTS, 1777-1851 Abstract: Papers of original claimants (1777-1851) submitted before the First Board of Land Commissioners to determine the validity of French and Spanish land grants made before the Louisiana Purchase. Extent: 11 cubic ft. (15 legal-size hollinger boxes and 9 flat boxes) Physical Description: Paper Location: MSA Rare Documents ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION Access Restrictions: No special restrictions. However, some records may be too fragile to be produced or may be undergoing conservation treatment. Publication Restrictions: Copyright is in the public domain. Items reproduced for publication should carry the credit line: Courtesy of the Missouri State Archives. Preferred Citation: [Name]; Papers of Original Claimants, 1777-1851; First Board of Land Commissioners; U.S. Recorder of Land Titles, Record Group 951; Missouri State Archives, Jefferson City. Acquisition Information: Agency transfer. Various accessions. Processing Information: Processing completed by Mary Kay Coker on June 14, 2010. Added plat of survey for widow of Charles Guilbaud found in the stacks on June 7, 2017. HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES On March 2, 1805, Thomas Jefferson signed into law an “Act for ascertaining and adjusting the titles and claims to land within the Territory of Orleans and the district of Louisiana.” At this PAPERS OF ORIGINAL CLAIMANTS (1st BOARD), 1777-1851 time, Missouri belonged to the Louisiana Territory, -
Missouri Historical Revi Ew
MISSOURI HISTORICAL REVI EW, CONTENTS The Multitude Incorporated Earl A. Collins The Boonslick Road in St. Charles County Kate L. Gregg Abiel Leonard, Part III Frederic A. Culmer Joseph B. McCullagh, Part XII Walter B. Stevens Missouriana Historical Notes and Comments Missouri History Not Found in Textbooks STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY or MISSOURI VOL. XXVII July, 1933 Me. 4 OFFICERS OF THE STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF MISSOURI, 1932-1935 GEORGE A. MAHAN, Hannibal, President. EDWARD J. WHITE, St. Louis, First Vice-President. WALTER B. STEVENS, $t. Louis, Second Vice-President. C. H. McCLURE, Kirksville, Third Vice-President. CORNELIUS ROACH, Kansas City, Fourth Vice-President. B. M. LITTLE, Lexington, Fifth Vice-President. ALLEN McREYNOLDS, Carthage, Sixth Vice-President. R. B. PRICE, Columbia, Treasurer. FLOYD C. SHOEMAKER, Secretary and Librarian. BOARD OF TRUSTEES Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1934. C. P. DORSEY, Cameron. H. S. STURGIS, Neosho. EUGENE FAIR, Kirksville. JONAS VILES, Columbia. THEODORE GARY, Kansas City. R. M. WHITE, Mexico. GEORGE A. MAHAN, Hannibal. W. J. SEWALL, Carthage. WM. R. PAINTER, Carrollton. Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1935 T. H. B. DUNNEGAN, Bolivar. E. E. SWAIN, Kirksville. BEN L. EMMONS, St. Charles. JOHN ROTHENSTEINER. STEPHEN B. HUNTER, St. Louis. Cape Girardeau. CHAS. H. WHITAKER, Clinton. ISIDOR LOEB, St. Louis. ROY D. WILLIAMS, Boonville. Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1936 PHIL A. BENNETT, Springfield. ELMER O. JONES, LaPlata. W. E. CROWE, DeSoto. IY KRUG, JR., St. Joseph. FORREST C. DONNELL, St. Louis. Independence. BOYD DUDLEY, Gallatin. CHARLES L. WOODS, Rolla. J. F. HULL, Maryville. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE The twenty-six trustees, the president and secretary of the Society, the Governor, Secretary of State, State Treasurer, and President of the University of Missouri, constitute the Executive Committee. -
Calender of the Preston Family Papers, Joyes Collection
W&M ScholarWorks Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects 1972 Calender of the Preston Family Papers, Joyes Collection James Robert Bentley College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd Part of the Library and Information Science Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Bentley, James Robert, "Calender of the Preston Family Papers, Joyes Collection" (1972). Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. Paper 1539624782. https://dx.doi.org/doi:10.21220/s2-tb8d-1a02 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CALENDAR OF THE PRESTON FAMILY PAPERS- JOYES COLLECTION A Thesis Presented to The Faculty of the Department of History The College of William and Mary in Virginia In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts by James R. Bentley 1972 APPROVAL SHEET This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Author Approved, August 1972 hi Edward M. Riley Joh . Selb Lu'd^ell H. J ohns 11 For Francis Getty Bentley and Elizabeth Wescott Bentley TABLE OF CONTENTS Page ACKNOWLEDGMENTS............... v ABSTRACT .................... vi INTRODUCTION .................... 2 CALENDAR . 10 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES .................................... 285 BIBLIOGRAPHY ........................................... .3^3 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The writer expresses his appreciation particularly to Edward M. Riley, who directed, encouraged, and supported this study. -
Missouri Storical Revi Ew
MISSOURI STORICAL REVI EW, The History of Fort Osage Kate L. Gregg Missouri Avenue and the Missouri State Lottery Samuel W. Rave net Missouriana Historical Notes and Comments Missouri History Not Found in Textbooks 5TATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY ^MISSOURI VOL. JULY 1940 OFFICERS OF THE STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF MISSOURI, 1938-1941 ALLEN McREYNOLDS, Carthage, President. GEORGE A. ROZIER, Penyvilie, First Vice-President. L. M. WHITE, Mexico, Second Vice-President. MARION C. EARLY, St. Louis, Third Vice-President, B. M. LITTLE, Lexington, Fourth Vice-President. JOHN T. BARKER, Kansas City, Fifth Vice-President. ROY H. MONIER, Carrollton, Sixth Vice-President. R. B. PRICE, Columbia, Treasurer. FLOYD C. SHOEMAKER, Secretary and Librarian. BOARD OF TRUSTEES Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1941 BEN L. EMMONS, St. Charles. ISIDOR LOEB, St. Louis. STEPHEN B. HUNTER, Cape E. E. SWAIN, Kirksville. Girardeau. CHAS. H. WHITAKER, WALDO P. JOHNSON, Osceola. Clinton. LANGDON R. JONES, Kennett. ROY D. WILLIAMS, Boonville. Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1942 MORRIS ANDERSON, Hannibal WM. SOUTHERN, JR., LUDWIG FUERBRINGER, Independence. St. Louis. HENRY C. THOMPSON, HENRY KRUG, JR., St. Joseph. Bonne Terre. JUSTUS R. MOLL, Springfield. GEORGE H. WILLIAMS, JOHN F. RHODES, St. Louis. Kansas City. CHARLES L. WOODS, Rolla. Term Expires at Annual Meetingf 194S JESSE W. BARRETT, St. Louis. H. S. STURGIS, Neosho. ALBERT M. CLARK, Richmond. JAMES TODD, Moberly. HENRY J. HASKELL, Kansas City.* JONAS V1LES, Columbia. WM. R. PAINTER, Carrollton. L. M. WHITE, Mexico. JOSEPH PULITZER, St. Louis. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE The twenty-six trustees, the President and the Secretary of th« Society, the Governor, Secretary of State, State Treasurer, and Presidenl of the University of Missouri constitute the Executive Committee. -
Fur Trapping and the Corps of Discovery
Colter's Run -- Private John Newman -- LCTHF 40th Annual Meeting Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation I www.lewisandclark.org November 2008 Volume 34, No. 4 Fur Trapping and the Corps of Discovery I d \\I It H I I KARL BOOMER, BEAVER ~UTDNTHE MISSOURI, ENGRAVING WITH AQUA.TINT. HANO-COLORED lVIGNETTE XVIII COURTESY OF JOSLYN ART MUSEUM, OMAHA, NEBRASKA Contents President's Message: Trail is at the heart of our focus on the future 2 Letters: A motive for Lewis's murder; the Experiment 4 The Life of John Colter 6 Colter"s Race, p. 7 Better known for his exploits after the expedition, Colter's heart remained in the West he explored with the Corps of Discovery Bylany E. Morris Moonlighting on the Lewis and Clark Expedition 16 In the early days of the expedition, Corps of Discovery members realized trapping was a lucrative industry By Jim Hardee John Newman: "A Man of Uncommon 24 Activity and Bodily Strength" "Mutinous" activity put an early end to his service with the Lewis and Clark Expedition, but he later enjoyed a successful fur trade / '"" career in the shadow of their 1804-1805 winter encampment American beaver, p. 17 By Richard K. Stenberg ' Dispatches 30 Brooke to serve as president in 2008-2009; three elected to board of directors; awards at 40th annual meeting recognize and honor members' achievements Annual Meeting 34 Foundation headquarters, Portage Route Chapter host 40th annual meeting Soundings 36 Native Voices Endowment announces first five awards Fort Clark, p. 27 On the cover Artist Karl Bodmer depicted beaver and their lodge on July 17, 1833, on his way up the Missouri River from Fort Union to Fore McKenzie. -
Missouri Historical Revi Ew
MISSOURI HISTORICAL REVI EW, CONTENTS A Day and Night With "Old Davy"j David R. Atchison Walter B. Stevens The Battle of Carthage Ward L. Schrantz Missouri, 1804-1828 j Peopling a Frontier State Hattie M. Anderson Missouriana Historical Notes and Comments Missouri History Not Found in Textbooks STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY of MISSOURI VOL. XXXI JANUARY, 1937 No, 2 OFFICERS OF THE STATE HISTORICAL SOCHSTY OF MISSOURI, 1935-1938 *GE0RGE A. MAHAN, Hannibal, President. ALLEN McREYNOLDS, Carthage, First Vice-President. WALTER B. STEVENS, St. Louis, Second Vice-President. C. H. McCLURE, Kirksville, Third Vice-President, MARION C. EARLY, St. Louis, Fourth Vice-President. B. M. LITTLE, Lexington, Fifth Vice-President. JOHN T. BARKER, Kansas City, Sixth Vice-President. R. B. PRICE* Columbia, Treasurer. FLOYD C. SHOEMAKER. Secretary and Librarian. BOARD OF TRUSTEES Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1937 C. P. DORSEY, Cameron. WM. R. PAINTER, Carrollton. EUGENE FAIR, Kirksville. W. J. SEWALL, Carthage. THEODORE GARY, Kansas City. H. S. STURGIS, Neosho. HENRY J. HASKELL, Kansas City. JONAS VILES, Columbia. L. M. WHITE, Mexico. Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1938 T. H. B. DUNNEGAN, Bolivar. *JOHN ROTHENSTEINER, BEN L. EMMONS, St. Charles. St. Louis. STEPHEN B. HUNTER, E. E. SWAIN, Kirksville. Cape Girardeau. CHAS. H. WHITAKER, Clinton. ISIDOR LOEB, St. Louis. ROY D. WILLIAMS, Boonville. Term Expires at Annual Meeting, 1939 WILSON BELL, Potosi. JUSTUS R. MOLL, Springfield. CHARLES B. DAVIS, St. Louis. ELMER N. POWELL, FORREST C DON NELL, St. Louis. Kansas City. ELMER O. JONES, LaPlata. WM. SOUTHERN, Jr., HENRY KRUG, Jr., St. Joseph. Independence. CHARLES L. WOODS, Rolla. -
Outcasts of All Nations: the Rise and Decline of French and Indian Relations in the American Midwest 1665-1851 Noah Sandweiss Hi
Outcasts of all Nations: The Rise and Decline of French and Indian Relations in the American Midwest 1665-1851 Noah Sandweiss History K392 Honors Seminar Fall 2016 In 1773, British Major Henry Basset wrote a letter to his superiors, requesting permission to launch a preemptive attack on the trading post of Ft. Saint Joseph on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan. Basset felt that he had good reason to believe that the fort’s commander, the half- French half-Indian Louis Chevalier, maintained ties with disloyal Indian tribes. The memory of Pontiac’s Rebellion ten years earlier still cast a shadow over the British occupants of forts Detroit and Mackinac; Basset felt unready to trust Chevalier, who had along with his French compatriots avoided the wrath of the native uprising. In his letter, Basset accused Chevalier of the “plunder of young men with good character,” and described him and his biracial kinsmen as “outcasts of all nations and the refuse of mankind.” 1 Though Basset failed to obtain permission to make war on the L’Archeveque-Chevalier kin network, in less than a century the L’Archeveque-Chevaliers, Chouteau-Osage, and other powerful French-and-Indian kin networks of the Northwest Territory existed only in the dusty pages of history books. In the decades following the American Revolution, racialization, Western settlement, and business interests created rifts within the mixed families of the Midwest. Clans divided along racial and cultural lines as members faced the decision of whether to adhere to a traditional way of life, or to secure a place for their family in American society.