Box 2
Contains 15 Results:
Waverly Water Case
Primarily legal papers pertaining to various cases over which Judge Horton presided while Justice of the New York State Supreme Court, 6th Judicial District or as a private attorney. Includes typed charges to the jury, printed appeal books, and a few letters; also, correspondence and papers (1917-1919) relating to the Ithaca Calendar Clock Company, of which Horton was a trustee, mainly in connection with its going into receivership and with its dissolution.
Westmiller, Warren D., Estate of
Primarily legal papers pertaining to various cases over which Judge Horton presided while Justice of the New York State Supreme Court, 6th Judicial District or as a private attorney. Includes typed charges to the jury, printed appeal books, and a few letters; also, correspondence and papers (1917-1919) relating to the Ithaca Calendar Clock Company, of which Horton was a trustee, mainly in connection with its going into receivership and with its dissolution.
Miscellaneous documents (not in folder)
Primarily legal papers pertaining to various cases over which Judge Horton presided while Justice of the New York State Supreme Court, 6th Judicial District or as a private attorney. Includes typed charges to the jury, printed appeal books, and a few letters; also, correspondence and papers (1917-1919) relating to the Ithaca Calendar Clock Company, of which Horton was a trustee, mainly in connection with its going into receivership and with its dissolution.
Reprint from Ithaca Journal (undated) re: Horton's running for re-election as Justice, Supreme Court, 6th Judicial District (Democrat)
Onetime Mayor of Ithaca 1909-1912(?); born Truxton 1850, lived in Cortland, Ithaca, attended Cornell; City Attorney; practiced law 1877-; circa. 1877-1928
Typed carbon copy of a 9 pp. Report to Randolph Horton, Ithaca Mayor, Apr. 15, 1909
From the Mayor's Committee of Citizens (Jacob Rothschild, Walter McCormick, Robert C. Osborn, Charles C. Howell, Joseph Campbell) who considered and investigated the question of erecting a Hospital for contagious diseases in the City of Ithaca and providing for its operation and maintenance. The Report also includes a summary of early hospital facilities, 1889- .