Judges.
Subject
Subject Source: Library Of Congress Subject Headings
Found in 7 Collections and/or Records:
Charles Hazen Blood papers
Collection
Identifier: 2263
Abstract
Consists of incoming and outgoing correspondence, depositions and other legal documents, statements of account, and memoranda, mainly concerning legal matters Blood handled in public office and in private practice, as well as his family and personal business affairs. Also documented are Blood's activities as a Cornell alumnus, mainly regarding the promotion and financing of Alumni Field and his candidacy for reelection as alumni trustee in 1906, as graduate treasurer of the Cornell Masque,...
Dates:
1889-1909.
Chester Loomis papers
Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: 2238
Abstract
Papers include correspondence, deeds and agreements, personal and business accounts, petitions, drafts of speeches, and resolutions, mainly concerning local politics and patronage, the Anti-Masonic Party, abolitionist agitation, temperance, the use of convict labor, pensions for veterans of the American Revolution and the War of 1812, opposition to the Bank of the United States, and land speculation in Michigan, Wisconsin, and other parts of the Midwest; also, correspondence and legal and...
Dates:
1813-1865.
Douglass Boardman papers
Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: 435
Abstract
Letters concerning the appointment of the original faculty of the Cornell Law School. Also, an Introductory lecture by Boardman, 1890.
Dates:
1839-1891.
Frederick Boyce Bryant Republican Party correspondence
Collection — Box 1: [Barcode: 31924065201232]
Identifier: 2895
Dates:
1956-1967.
Randolph Horton papers
Collection
Identifier: 1799
Abstract
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; 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.
Dates:
1877-1928.