The Filson Historical Society Commonwealth Land Title Company Maps Listing Mss

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Filson Historical Society Commonwealth Land Title Company Maps Listing Mss The Filson Historical Society Commonwealth Land Title Company Maps Listing Mss. BB C734 497-546 Folder Filson Commonwealth Map Street/Landmark on Left Street/Landmark at Street/Landmark at Street/Landmark at Noted Notes NumberNumberLand Title Number Name Bottom Right Top Landholders 501 1 95 Bardstown Turnpike Road Rogers St. Newburg Turnpike Rd. DeBarr St. Copy of CLT 95, also OVSZ "15" in Top Rt. Parts of Nos.11 and 12 Underhill Rubel added to scale same as 95 Penciled on right: Oct 27 and Nov 5 Alley parallel to Ormsby 501 1 98 First Street Ave. Preston Street Oak Rothwell St. on diagonal Acreage of Caldwell and Robinson to right of Preston Survey & Division for Peter, 501 2 30 Wilson 11th or Poplar Street Ormsby Avenue 15th or Cherry Street Magnolia or Oakland Ave. & Bull 1870 Augs Henning, McGonigale & Hobbs Stamped: Peter, Wilson and Bull's Subdivision for Bullitt's Addition Lots of Hahn, Harris, 501 2 38 McGonigale & Hobbs 1868 A.Brown Lots of Henning & Ormsby, Oakland Plank Road B Street [? Numbered St.] In red ink: "Lots marked Mead, H. Miller Esterling to the C_box___ No's Shipp Ave. on diagonal Lou. Chancery__" 501 3 43 Courtney's Addition Shippingport Road Garland Avenue 22nd Street Maple Street "7" in Top Rt 501 3 63 Guthrie Subdivision of 20 Acre Beargrass Creek Lampton Street Arthur Street Caldwell Street In blue ink: "Copied in No 2 of Lot #16 C.A." Shelby Street Maps Pge 112" 'Revised Plan' of Longest 501 4 190 Subdivision Willow Avenue Park Avenue Park Ave. on curve Longest Avenue C.S. Longest, Edith B. Longest, This is a plastic plan glued over "28" in Top Rt. adjoining Cherokee Park James W.McCarty, Eastern Land top of a plan in another part of Co. by John Stites Louisville which is bounded by 11 Jan 1897 Shelby, Camp and Arthur Streets also CLT No. 190 See Plat Box K to M Jeff. Co. Court The plan is to supersede one recorded 16 June 1893 by The Filson Historical Society Commonwealth Land Title Company Maps Listing Mss. BB C734 497-546 Folder Filson Commonwealth Map Street/Landmark on Left Street/Landmark at Street/Landmark at Street/Landmark at Noted Notes NumberNumberLand Title Number Name Bottom Right Top Landholders Clayton Longest Krupp St. parallel to 501 4 185 Shelby Meriwether Preston/Arthur on diagonal Hill Street Meriwether, Milton, McHenry, "27" in Top Rt and parallel to Jackson Hayman, Kennedy 5 165 501 "25" in Top Rt. Beynroth and Hardy's Addition to Elizabeth Town Turnpike Maple Street 22nd St. & Courtney's Garland Avenue Louisville, 1866 East Line 501 5 165 Elizabeth Town Turnpike Maple Street 22nd Street Garland Avenue Crutchfield, Olmstead, Tyler, "10 x 25" Dupuy, Irving Shipping Port & Salt River 501 6 164 Stokes Subdivision of Sayres Road Jefferson Street 20th Street No.146 West Jefferson St. Citizens Passenger R.Way Deed Book 124 p. 469 Addition. Lots for Sale by "24" in Top Rt. Henning Main Street Martin, Jacob, Graves, Hobbs, October 18, 1865 & Speed Weber, Henderson, etc. Jno I. Jacobs Line parallel Beargrass Creek on Ohio River parallel to Fulton 501 6 150 to Hemings Adams Street St. Ferguson, Hall, Guthrie, Pirtle, Map o. 5 parallel to Water "23" in Top Rt. Campbell Street Line Sherer, Haggin, etc. of Creek as shown on Map "10 x 23" No.150 501 7 135 Shippingport Road Grayson Street Devlin and Donnelly's Chestnut Street Trabue, Terry, Bloemer, etc. "22" in Top Rt. Western Line 501 7 110 The Daisy Realty Co's Southern Bell's East Line Bell's Lane Cane Run Turnpike Road Gibson Lane Dr. Grant, Gaines, Gaar, Thum, Addition Ablemale Book 417, p.640 McAffee, Ormsby, Mrs. Annie Miller, etc. On diagonal: Louisville 501 8 110 'A' Rowans Western Enlargement of 9th Street Canal Avenue Main Street Copied in No. 2 of Maps, p.25" The Filson Historical Society Commonwealth Land Title Company Maps Listing Mss. BB C734 497-546 Folder Filson Commonwealth Map Street/Landmark on Left Street/Landmark at Street/Landmark at Street/Landmark at Noted Notes NumberNumberLand Title Number Name Bottom Right Top Landholders "20" in Top Rt. Louisville List of Lot References 22nd Street parallel to Part Maple Street parallel to During's Heirs and 'Dunkirk 501 8 105 of Erdman's 18th St. & Bullitt's West Line Road Colgan & Lewis, Meddis & South- Graves Subdivision Subdivision or Broadway' wick, Crutchfield, Bates Heirs 501 9 98 Hill Street 3rd Street Ormsby 6th Street Henning to Belknap, Robinson, 'See Country Map No. 240' Athy, Lindenberger, Tyler, Hite, DuPont's Heirs Area includeds Belgravia, St. James Court, Central Paark Alley parallel to Park 501 9 98 First Street Place/Ormsby Preston Street Oak Street Caldwell, Robinson "17" in Top Rt. "10 x 17" 502 10 64 Blind Asylum F. C. Edwards Blind Asylum Road "23" in Top Rt. Richard Taylor 502 10 64 Frankfort Avenue Stake Near Side of Road F. C. Edwards Blind Asylum Road Large Beech Near Honey "24" in Top Rt. Locust Richard Taylor 502 11 64 Survey Map "11" in Top Rt. F. G. Edwards, Richard Taylor "18" in pencil "11 x 11" Blind Asylum Road and 10 acres Turnpike Road and Spring Branch run through survey 502 11 "12" in Top Rt. A. T. Bottorff Sam B. Steele On Map: "See Minute Book "19" in blue 1857 Feb 12-- Back Part in Book 1867 -- also No. 19 in Bundles Aug 15, 1867" The Filson Historical Society Commonwealth Land Title Company Maps Listing Mss. BB C734 497-546 Folder Filson Commonwealth Map Street/Landmark on Left Street/Landmark at Street/Landmark at Street/Landmark at Noted Notes NumberNumberLand Title Number Name Bottom Right Top Landholders J. C. Johnston. A. 502 12 98 Reference Note: Parcels 1-11 Ohio River and Wm Pope J. Geiger. James Guthrie John Pope. J. Burkemeyer. Throckmorton. John Edwards. Geiger Mill Muddy and Middle Forks of represent Wm Pope and A. Gray D. S. Chambers Beargrass. Spring Branch. John Edwards Division Lexington Turnpike Surveyed by J. W. Henning copied by H.von Hippel 502 12 89 Gaar property Garland Avenue 20 acres Gaar to H. J. Lewis Broadway "11 x 31" Road. Eliz.Shipley. Stephen 502 13 2 Brownsboro Road E. Jones, Reinhard Avenue. Lots 7-12. Highland Avenue June 21st 1873 assignee of Robert Atwood W. B. Belknap's Louisville & Frankfort Acreage of Serps. Also of 502 13 5 Railroad. Geo.H.Carey Acreage of Cook; Sturns; Beal's Spring Branch A.P. Cochran, Hyatt, Wilson, Henning & Hobbs Surveyors Shelbyville & Louisville Cannon's Lane. Yeager "6 x 2" Turnpike Rd. Railing parcel. H.J.Stites, Polk, Morris A. Sachs July 1869 Shelbyville & Louisville Branch Turnpike Subdivisions in Churchill's 502 14 5 Addition Cherry or 15th Street Oak Street 7th Street Kentucky Street Color coded subdivisions, noting original and present which include Churchill's, Clark's, Ballard's and Zane's Oak St.parallel to to Boric's 502 14 "9" blue pencil Division of Presbyterian Orphan First Street South Line Arthur Street St. Catherine Case citations: Northern Bk Ky Asylum Nov 1871. vs. W. H. Hunt Co. No. 17954 Boric's Subdivision in Campbell's and No. 18120. Addition and H. W. Wilkes' Burn vs. Hunt & Co. No. 17296. Subdivision in Campbell's Addition The Filson Historical Society Commonwealth Land Title Company Maps Listing Mss. BB C734 497-546 Folder Filson Commonwealth Map Street/Landmark on Left Street/Landmark at Street/Landmark at Street/Landmark at Noted Notes NumberNumberLand Title Number Name Bottom Right Top Landholders 26th St. on slant to Gibson Lane to Southern 502 15 None Louisville and Garland Sreet W line from Garland Ave. on Avenue Color coded acreage of: Morris "Copied in part in No. 3 of Cane-Run Turnpike Road slant to Gaar's Corner parallel Southwick Co.; Morrill; Jno.Long; Maps, pge 277[?], 279[?], 24_, to 38th Street DuPont; A. Remmers 299[?] 502 15 191 Nothing Nothing Nothing Nothing Nothing Nothing Nothing Shelbyville & Louisville Spring Station and 502 16 "3" in red Subdivision of the Spring Station Spring Station. Yeager Turnpike Thatcher to McRoberts. Wm.A.Ronald Mann Tract late residence of D.B. "5" in blue Allen. Wm. A. Ronald The lots in the Turnpike include to the south edge of the _____zing on said road. Water Way -[probably Property of Jarris & Son and 502 16 8 on map Adams Beargrass Creek] of Main Street St. Joseph Catholic Church Several structures drawn and 503 on fabric Manton many property owners. Obviously present-day (1998) Butchertown 502 17 311 Tracts relating to St. Matthews. Fenley Heirs; John Rudy; Louis T. Chenoweth Rd. and L & S "10 x 33" Turnpike Rd. Herr; Henry C. Anderson; Heirs "33" in Top Rt. of Geo. Herr, jr.,dec'd;Crawford Elmwood Subdivision of Geo. Also: See M.B. Herr's and Norburn Arterburn; Helen M. Heirs bounded by Chenoweth 7 x 76 Ave. Key's Estate Ward and Jones 'N' Street 4th St. to National Turnpike "T" St. parallel to Collins 502 17 349 Subdivision "M" Street on slant Court Louisville & Nashville Railroad 3rd Street and Grand Boulevard "34" in Top Rt. Part of Block 19 Wilder Park bisect the plat 503 18 35 Twenty Sixth Street Bank Street Twenty First Street Portland Avenue Henderson, Mitchell, Whipple, The Filson Historical Society Commonwealth Land Title Company Maps Listing Mss. BB C734 497-546 Folder Filson Commonwealth Map Street/Landmark on Left Street/Landmark at Street/Landmark at Street/Landmark at Noted Notes NumberNumberLand Title Number Name Bottom Right Top Landholders OVSZ Averill's Subdivision, Caldwell, Dunlap, Flournoy 503 18 381 Southern Heights Land Company Brooklyn Avenue Haldeman Avenue Park Ave./Elm Street Forrest Avenue Bluegrass, Woodlawn and Ash- B.
Recommended publications
  • LINCOLN's OFFICIAL FAMILY-Bffiuography
    LINCOLN LORE Bulletin of the Lincoln National Life Foundation -- --- Dr. Louis A. WarreniEditor Published each week by The Lincoln National Life Insurance Company, Fort Wayne, ndlana Number 753 FORT WAYNE, INDIANA September 13, 1943 LINCOLN'S OFFICIAL FAMILY-BffiUOGRAPHY Sometimes the appearance of a new Salmon P. Chase, 1861-1864 Seward, F. W., Stward at Wa8hington book will call to the attention of the 1.18 Senat<w and Secretary of State, public a considerable number of titles Schuckers, J. W., Life and Public Serv· ices of Salm<m Portland Clwse, 1846·1881, 650pp., 1891. with which it may be classified. Gideon Seward, F. W., Seward at Washington \Velles, Lincoln's Navy Department, 669pp., 1874. is such a book. Chase, S. P., AgaimJt tl~ Re,Jealof the as Sent~.t<w and Secretary of State, Missottri Prohibition of Suwery, 1861-187!, 561pp., 1891. Just outside the pale which separates 16pJ>., 1854. Bancroft, F., Life of William H. Sew· Lincolniana from a general library is ard, 2 vols., 1900. an indefinite number of books called Luthin, R. H., Salmon P. Chase'tt P(}o­ collateral items. A bibliography of this litical Career Bef&re the Civil ll'ar. Seward, 0. R., William H. Seward's (23) pp., 1943. Travel• Arormd the World, 730pp., large number of Lincoln J'cference 1873. items has never been attempted, except Chase, S. P., Diary and Cor-rcttpon· in Civil War compilations, where many tlence of S. P. Cl1.0.11c, 2 vols., 1903. Seward, W. H., Recent SpeecJwg and of them properly belong, yet, most of Writing• of William H.
    [Show full text]
  • Treason on Trial: the United States V. Jefferson Davis'
    H-Nationalism Walser on Icenhauer-Ramirez, 'Treason on Trial: The United States v. Jefferson Davis' Review published on Monday, March 29, 2021 Robert Icenhauer-Ramirez. Treason on Trial: The United States v. Jefferson Davis. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2019. 376 pp. $55.00 (cloth),ISBN 978-0-8071-7080-9. Reviewed by Heather C. Walser (The Pennsylvania State University) Published on H-Nationalism (March, 2021) Commissioned by Evan C. Rothera (University of Arkansas - Fort Smith) Printable Version: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showpdf.php?id=56425 In Treason on Trial: The United States v. Jefferson Davis, Robert Icenhauer-Ramirez explores why the United States failed to prosecute Jefferson Davis for treason in the years following the US Civil War. When federal troops arrested the former Confederate president outside of Irwinville, Georgia, in the early morning hours of May 10, 1865, few questioned whether Davis would face treason charges. Considering Davis’s role as the leader of the Confederacy, accusations about his involvement in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, and President Andrew Johnson’s well-known stance regarding the need to make treason “odious,” prosecution of Davis seemed inevitable. But as Icenhauer-Ramirez skillfully demonstrates, any efforts to successfully try Davis for treason hinged on the capabilities and willingness of multiple individuals involved in the prosecution. According toTreason on Trial, the inability of the prosecution to determine when and where Davis should be tried, the reluctance of Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase to actively participate in the case in his role as judge, and the skillful use of the countless delays by Davis’s attorneys and wife crippled the prosecution and resulted in Davis’s release from federal custody in December 1868 as a free, and fully pardoned, man.
    [Show full text]
  • Abraham Lincoln, Kentucky African Americans and the Constitution
    Abraham Lincoln, Kentucky African Americans and the Constitution Kentucky African American Heritage Commission Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Collection of Essays Abraham Lincoln, Kentucky African Americans and the Constitution Kentucky African American Heritage Commission Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Collection of Essays Kentucky Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission Kentucky Heritage Council © Essays compiled by Alicestyne Turley, Director Underground Railroad Research Institute University of Louisville, Department of Pan African Studies for the Kentucky African American Heritage Commission, Frankfort, KY February 2010 Series Sponsors: Kentucky African American Heritage Commission Kentucky Historical Society Kentucky Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission Kentucky Heritage Council Underground Railroad Research Institute Kentucky State Parks Centre College Georgetown College Lincoln Memorial University University of Louisville Department of Pan African Studies Kentucky Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission The Kentucky Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission (KALBC) was established by executive order in 2004 to organize and coordinate the state's commemorative activities in celebration of the 200th anniversary of the birth of President Abraham Lincoln. Its mission is to ensure that Lincoln's Kentucky story is an essential part of the national celebration, emphasizing Kentucky's contribution to his thoughts and ideals. The Commission also serves as coordinator of statewide efforts to convey Lincoln's Kentucky story and his legacy of freedom, democracy, and equal opportunity for all. Kentucky African American Heritage Commission [Enabling legislation KRS. 171.800] It is the mission of the Kentucky African American Heritage Commission to identify and promote awareness of significant African American history and influence upon the history and culture of Kentucky and to support and encourage the preservation of Kentucky African American heritage and historic sites.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Updated: 1/4/2019 2:21 PM
    1 HISTORICAL FILES, Subject and Biographical A – Miscellaneous Abert, James Actors and Actresses Adair, John Adams Papers Adams, Daniel (Mrs.) Adkins, Betty Lawrence African American Genealogy African American History African Americans African Americans – Indiana African Americans – Kentucky African Americans – Louisville Ahrens, Theo (Jr.) Ainslie, Hew Alexander, Barton Stone Ali, Muhammad Allensworth, Allen Allison, John S. Allison, Young E. - Jr. & Sr. Almanacs Altsheller, Brent Alves, Bernard P. American Heritage American Letter Express Co. American Literary Manuscripts American Revolution American Revolution - Anecdotes American Revolution - Soldiers Amish - Indiana Anderson, Alex F. (Ship - Caroline) Anderson, James B. Anderson, Mary Anderson, Richard Clough Anderson, Robert Anderson, William Marshall Anderson, William P. Updated: 1/4/2019 2:21 PM 2 Andressohn, John C. Andrew's Raid (James J. Andrews) Antiques - Kentucky Antiquities - Kentucky Appalachia Applegate, Elisha Archaeology - Kentucky Architecture and Architects Architecture and Architects – McDonald Bros. Archival Symposium - Louisville (1970) Archivists and Archives Administration Ardery, Julia Spencer (Mrs. W. B.) Ark and Dove Arnold, Jeremiah Arthur Kling Center Asbury, Francis Ashby, Turner (Gen.) Ashland, KY Athletes Atkinson, Henry (Gen.) Audubon State Park (Henderson, KY) Augusta, KY Authors - KY Authors - KY - Allen, James Lane Authors - KY - Cawein, Madison Authors - KY - Creason, Joe Authors - KY - McClellan, G. M. Authors - KY - Merton, Thomas Authors - KY - Rice, Alice Authors - KY - Rice, Cale Authors - KY - Roberts, Elizabeth Madox Authors - KY - Sea, Sophie F. Authors - KY - Spears, W. Authors - KY - Still, James Authors - KY - Stober, George Authors - KY - Stuart, Jesse Authors - KY - Sulzer, Elmer G. Authors - KY - Warren, Robert Penn Authors - Louisville Auto License Automobiles Updated: 1/4/2019 2:21 PM 3 Awards B – Miscellaneous Bacon, Nathaniel Badin, Theodore (Rev.) Bakeless, John Baker, James G.
    [Show full text]
  • The Appointment of Supreme Court Justices: Prestige, Principles and Politics John P
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Indiana University Bloomington Maurer School of Law Maurer School of Law: Indiana University Digital Repository @ Maurer Law Articles by Maurer Faculty Faculty Scholarship 1941 The Appointment of Supreme Court Justices: Prestige, Principles and Politics John P. Frank Indiana University School of Law Follow this and additional works at: http://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/facpub Part of the Courts Commons, and the Judges Commons Recommended Citation Frank, John P., "The Appointment of Supreme Court Justices: Prestige, Principles and Politics" (1941). Articles by Maurer Faculty. Paper 1856. http://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/facpub/1856 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at Digital Repository @ Maurer Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Articles by Maurer Faculty by an authorized administrator of Digital Repository @ Maurer Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE APPOINTMENT OF SUPREME COURT JUSTICES: PRESTIGE, PRINCIPLES AND POLITICS* JOHN P. FRANK Hidden in musty obscurity behind the forbidding covers of three hundred and more volumes of court reports, the Justices of the United States Supreme Court seldom emerge into public view. Deaths and retirements, new appointments, and occasional opinions attract fleeting attention; all else is unnoticed. But to the political scientist, to the historian, and, above all, to the lawyer, the Supreme Court is an object of vital concern. To the political scientist, the Court matters because it is the chief juggler in maintaining the Balance of Powers. To the historian, the Court matters because of its tre- mendous influence on the policies of federal and state governments.
    [Show full text]
  • H. Doc. 108-222
    OFFICERS OF THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH OF THE GOVERNMENT [ 1 ] EXPLANATORY NOTE A Cabinet officer is not appointed for a fixed term and does not necessarily go out of office with the President who made the appointment. While it is customary to tender one’s resignation at the time a change of administration takes place, officers remain formally at the head of their department until a successor is appointed. Subordinates acting temporarily as heads of departments are not con- sidered Cabinet officers, and in the earlier period of the Nation’s history not all Cabinet officers were heads of executive departments. The names of all those exercising the duties and bearing the respon- sibilities of the executive departments, together with the period of service, are incorporated in the lists that follow. The dates immediately following the names of executive officers are those upon which commis- sions were issued, unless otherwise specifically noted. Where periods of time are indicated by dates as, for instance, March 4, 1793, to March 3, 1797, both such dates are included as portions of the time period. On occasions when there was a vacancy in the Vice Presidency, the President pro tem- pore is listed as the presiding officer of the Senate. The Twentieth Amendment to the Constitution (effective Oct. 15, 1933) changed the terms of the President and Vice President to end at noon on the 20th day of January and the terms of Senators and Representatives to end at noon on the 3d day of January when the terms of their successors shall begin. [ 2 ] EXECUTIVE OFFICERS, 1789–2005 First Administration of GEORGE WASHINGTON APRIL 30, 1789, TO MARCH 3, 1793 PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—GEORGE WASHINGTON, of Virginia.
    [Show full text]
  • Bamzai 93 Notre Dame L. Rev. 1501.Pdf
    +(,1 2 1/,1( Citation: Aditya Bamzai, The Attorney General and Early Appointments Clause Practice, 93 Notre Dame L. Rev. 1501 (2018) Provided by: University of Virginia Law Library Content downloaded/printed from HeinOnline Fri Sep 7 10:14:19 2018 -- Your use of this HeinOnline PDF indicates your acceptance of HeinOnline's Terms and Conditions of the license agreement available at https://heinonline.org/HOL/License -- The search text of this PDF is generated from uncorrected OCR text. -- To obtain permission to use this article beyond the scope of your HeinOnline license, please use: Copyright Information Use QR Code reader to send PDF to your smartphone or tablet device THE ATTORNEY GENERAL AND EARLY APPOINTMENTS CLAUSE PRACTICE Aditya Bamzai* INTRODUCTION Among the structural provisions of the Constitution are a series of rules specifying the method by which the federal government will be staffed. One of those rules, contained in what is known as the Appointments Clause, estab- lishes the procedures for appointing "all ... Officers of the United States, whose Appointments are not .. otherwise provided for" in the Constitu- tion-requiring one mechanism (presidential appointment and senate con- firmation) for "principal" officers and permitting a set of alternatives (appointment by the "President alone," the "Courts of Law," or the "Heads of Departments") for "officers" who are considered "inferior."' The Clause has traditionally been understood to require these appointment procedures for a subset of federal government employees who meet some constitutional threshold that establishes their status as "officers," rather than for all federal employees.2 In light of that understanding, the Clause naturally raises a question about the precise boundary between constitutional "officers" and other federal "employees"-a question that has recently been the subject of substantial litigation and extensive treatment within the executive branch 3 and the scholarly literature.
    [Show full text]
  • Mary Surratt
    CONSPIRATORS and the MILITARY COMMISSION 0. CONSPIRATORS and the MILITARY COMMISSION - Story Preface 1. MARY SURRATT 2. EVENTS at the SURRATT BOARDINGHOUSE 3. JOHN WILKES BOOTH and HIS PLANS 4. CAPTURE and DEATH of JOHN WILKES BOOTH 5. CONSPIRATORS and the MILITARY COMMISSION 6. FREDERICK AIKEN and the TRIAL of MARY SURRATT 7. EXECUTION of MARY SURRATT 8. AFTER THE CONSPIRACY TRIAL Mary Surratt and the other so-called "Lincoln Conspirators" were tried by a military commission, not by a jury of their peers. This contemporary image depicts the defendants, at the top of the picture, with Mrs. Surratt on the right side. Image online, Wikimedia Commons. While the soldiers were at Mary Surratt’s boardinghouse, the night of April 17, someone else knocked on the door. It was a disheveled-appearing man with a pick-axe in hand. Who was he? What did he want at that hour of the night? Inviting him in, the officer-in-charge asked the visitor about the purpose of his visit. He said he was checking with Mrs. Surratt, to see what time she wanted him to dig a gutter the next morning. Doubting the man was telling the truth, the officer summoned Mrs. Surratt. She swore she did not know him. After finding pictures of John Wilkes Booth - and Confederate generals - in the house, the soldiers took no chances. They arrested the visitor - Lewis Powell (a/k/a Lewis Payne) - Mrs. Surratt, and several other boardinghouse residents. With John Wilkes Booth still at-large, investigators wanted to build an assassination-conspiracy case.
    [Show full text]
  • Address by the Honorable Griffin B. Bell, Attorney General of the United
    ~tpartmtnt ~ustitt FOR RELEASE UPON DELIVERY ADDRESS BY THE HONORABLE GRIFFIN B. BELL ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES BEFORE THE PHOENIX EXECUTIVES COUNCIL 7:30 P.M. DEL WEBB'S TOWNHOUSE PHOENIX, ARIZONA FRIDAY MARCH 3, 191,8 During the Christmas hQlidays I took the time to read the history of the Justice Department entitled IIFederal Justice." It was written in 1936 by former Attorney General Homer Cummings and his special assistant, Carl McFarland. It covers the office of Attorney General from 1789, and the Department of Justice from 1870, when it was created, through 1936. It is a story of history repeating itself. Many of the things in controversy today have been great issues in the past. Even the IBM case has a short life, only nine years to date, compared to the litigation that ensued over the telephone patents. That litigation lasted for 30 years. More correctly, the litigation covered just 15 years and it took an additional 15 years to find an Attorney General who had the courage to dismiss it, given the fact that the government lost. Several 'of the Attorneys General during this period sought the advice of Congress, hoping for some sharing of responsibility, but they were never able to raise a response. The first Attorney General was Edmund Randolph. The office of A~torney General was created in the First Congress, 1789. Randolph had served as an aide to General Washington and as an Attorney General of Virginia. He was a close friend of President Washington, as well as his lawyer but in that day, far from Watergate, no one suggested that he was disqualified by virtue of being a friend or, as some would say, a crony.
    [Show full text]
  • Acting Attorneys General
    Acting Attorneys General From 1870 until 1953, the Solicitor General served as Acting Attorney General in the event that the office of Attorney General was vacant or the Attorney General was absent or disabled. This plan of succession was modified by Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1953 and by the codification in 1977 at 28 U.S.C. § 508 providing for the following statutory succession: Deputy Attorney General, Associate Attorney General, and in such order as the Attorney General shall designate, the Solicitor General and the Assistant Attorneys General. March 30, 1984 M e m o r a n d u m O p in io n f o r t h e A t t o r n e y G e n e r a l We have prepared in the time available a list of all of the documented occasions in which individuals have served as Acting Attorney General be­ cause of a vacancy in the office of the Attorney General.1 From the time of the establishment of the Department of Justice in 1870 until 1953, the statute governing succession to the office of Attorney General designated the Solicitor General as the individual who would be Acting Attorney General in case of the absence or disability, of the Attorney General, or of a vacancy in the office.2 Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1953, § 2, 67 Stat. 636 (1953), designated the Deputy Attorney General to be the first in order of succession, followed by the Solicitor General. This change was subsequently codified in 28 U.S.C.
    [Show full text]
  • Albert Gallatin Porter Papers, 1759-1934
    Collection # M 0396 OMB 0017 ALBERT GALLATIN PORTER PAPERS, 1759-1934 Collection Information Biographical Sketch Scope and Content List of Prominent Individuals Whose Names Appear Box and Folder Inventory Calendar Cataloging Information Processed by Charles Latham November 1983 Transcripts Added by Ellen Swain Summer 1992 Updated 3 January 2002 Updated 11 May 2004 Manuscript and Visual Collections Department William Henry Smith Memorial Library Indiana Historical Society 450 West Ohio Street Indianapolis, IN 46202-3269 www.indianahistory.org COLLECTION INFORMATION VOLUME OF COLLECTION: 3 manuscript boxes, 1 oversize box, and 6 photographs COLLECTION DATES: 1759-1934 PROVENANCE: Gift of Mrs. Merrily Pierce, McLean, Virginia, 6 June 1983 and transcripts, 14 December 1991 RESTRICTIONS: None REPRODUCTION RIGHTS: Permission to reproduce or publish material in this collection must be obtained in writing from the Indiana Historical Society. ALTERNATE FORMATS: Most of the collection is also held in transcript. See Series VI, Box 3. OTHER FINDING AIDS: none RELATED HOLDINGS: M 0639, Varney Porter ACCESSION NUMBER: 1983.0614, 1992.0069 NOTES: Six Indiana related maps in Series V, have been catalogued and L.C. classification numbers have been assigned, with cards filed in the IHSL browsing catalogue. For patrons requesting access to these maps by the LC classification number, they are located in Box 3, Folders 36 and 43 and stored in Flat File: FF 11-o and OMB 0017, (see also box and folder list). BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH ALBERT GALLATIN PORTER 1824 - 1897 Albert G. Porter was born in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, the son of Thomas and Miranda Tousey Porter. The family soon moved to a farm across the Ohio River in Kentucky.
    [Show full text]
  • [Table 7-6] CABINET NOMINATIONS, Since 1789 President/ Position
    [Table 7-6] CABINET NOMINATIONS, Since 1789 President/ Position Date of Confirmation Nominee Nomination 1 or Other Action 2 WASHINGTON_________________________________________________________________________ Edmund Randolph Attorney General Sept. 25, 1789 Sept. 26, 1789 William Bradford Attorney General Jan. 24, 1794 Jan. 27, 1794 Charles Lee Attorney General Dec. 9, 1795 Dec. 10, 1795 Samuel Osgood Postmaster General Sept. 25, 1789 Sept. 26, 1789 Timothy Pickering Postmaster General Nov. 1, 1789 Nov. 7, 1789 Joseph Habersham Postmaster General Feb. 24, 1795 Feb. 25, 1795 Thomas Jefferson State Sept. 25, 1789 Sept. 26, 1789 Edmund Randolph State Jan. 1, 1794 Jan. 2, 1794 Timothy Pickering State Dec. 9, 1795 Dec. 10, 1795 Alexander Hamilton Treasury Sept. 11, 1789 Sept. 11, 1789 Oliver Wolcott, Jr. Treasury Feb. 2, 1795 Feb. 3, 1795 Henry Knox War Sept. 11, 1789 Sept. 12, 1789 Timothy Pickering War Jan. 2, 1795 Jan. 2, 1795 James McHenry War Jan. 26, 1796 Jan. 27, 1796 Total Cabinet nominations = 14 ADAMS________________________________________________________________________________ Charles Lee Attorney General continued * [Theophilus Parsons Attorney General Feb. 18, 1801 Feb. 20, 1801 D] Benjamin Stoddert Navy May 18, 1798 May 21, 1798 Joseph Habersham Postmaster General continued * Timothy Pickering State continued * John Marshall State May 12, 1800 May 13, 1800 Oliver Wolcott, Jr. Treasury continued * Samuel Dexter Treasury Dec. 30, 1800 Dec. 31, 1800 James McHenry War continued * Samuel Dexter War May 12, 1800 May 13, 1800 [Lucius Stockton War Jan. 15, 1801 Jan. 29, 1801 W] Roger Griswold War Jan. 29, 1801 Feb. 3, 1801 25-5 Total Cabinet nominations =7 JEFFERSON____________________________________________________________________________ Levi Lincoln Attorney General Mar. 5, 1801 Mar.
    [Show full text]