Tag: Supreme Court
Today’s post is written by Monique Politowski, and is part of her ongoing series on the Federalists. It must have been weird for the readers of the New York Independent Journal to see an essay supposedly written by a long since dead Roman. Hamilton, Jay, and Madison all used the pseudonym “Publius,” intentionally becoming the [...]
Posted by Monique Politowski on October 31, 2011, under Archives I, Civil Records, Outside NARA.
Tags: Alexander Hamilton, Articles of Confederation, Constitutional Convention, federalism, Federalist Papers, Federalists, James Madison, John Jay, John Lansing Jr., Judicial Branch, Monique Politowski, Publius, RG 360, Robert Yates, Supreme Court Comments: 1
This post was written by Katie Beaver, a student intern working with civilian records. It is a follow-up to A few good lawmen and is based on documentation found in ”Appointment Files for Judicial Districts, 1853-1905.” The American South was a particularly tumultuous area after the Civil War and during the occupation of the U.S. Army. Slaves became [...]
Posted by Guest Blogger on August 8, 2011, under Archives II, Civil Records, Reference, Researchers.
Tags: African American, Denise Henderson, DOJ, Katie Beaver, Ku Klux Klan, Reconstruction, RG 60, Supreme Court, U.S. Marshals Comments: 1
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