| Eads, Thomas |
Robert B. Musick's special bail who was
required to pay Musick's judgment to Berry A. Wilson in
Wilson v. Eads (1831); |
| Eagan, James |
Sheriff of Monroe County in 1830, see
Parker v. Lewis (1828); |
| Earheart, David |
Earheart leased and ran the salt works on the Grand
(Neosho) River (today Oklahoma) with John Campbell. With two accomplices,
Earheart shot and scalped Campbell in and was charged with his murder
in 1819(Nuttall, p. 198);sold Benjamin Murphey and Samuel McCall
a keel boat and later sued them on the debt in Earheart
v. Murphy & McCall (1830);
|
| Earheart, Elijiah |
Deceased; his administrator, Rodney Earheart,
sued Sarah Campbell and Isaiah Goza, administrators of Johnson Campbell
in Earheart v. Campbell and Goza
(1824); |
| Earheart, Rodney |
Administrator of the estate of Elijah
Earheart, sued Sarah Campbell and Isaiah Goza, administrators of Johnson
Campbell in Earheart v. Campbell and
Goza (1824); along with Dickson, owned a mill in Conway County,
see Lemmons v. Toncray (1827);
served as administrator for Elijah Earheart (Ark. Gaz. Feb. 19, 1820);
George Bentley got nine judgments against Earheart in Bentley v. Joslin
(1834); |
| East, Isaac |
Served on jury for murder
trial, September 1814 Grand Jury Venire; |
| Easton, Rufus |
Prominent St. Louis attorney and judge,
Miller v. Cassidy (1812); |
| Eason, Abner |
Sued by Arnold Fisher in
debt in Fisher v. Eason (1836); |
| Eddy, M. |
Robinson v. Tunstall (1832); |
| Edgar, James |
Member of the jury that convicted John
Birmingham of theft in U.S. v. Birmingham
(1828); |
| Edmiston, ? |
Witness in Holliday
v. Sevier (1827); |
| Edmonds, Samuel |
Subpoenaed to testify in Forbes
v. Simmons (1828); |
| Edwards, M.W. |
Deputy Sheriff for Hempstead County
in Musick v. Rice & Boran (1825); |
| Edwards, ? |
William Russell accused Edmund Hogan
of cheating him out of his property and slaves, rendering his widow
and child destitute, see Russell v.
Hogan (1823); |
| Edwards, Peter |
Summonsed to December
1811 Grand Jury but defaulted; summonsed to August
1812 Grand Jury but defaulted; coroner of Phillips County and
defendant in Parker v. Lewis (1828); Justice of the Peace in Forbes
v. Simmons (1828); |
| Egner, Joseph H. |
Member of jury that convicted Mad Buffalo
in the Osage murder trial, see United
States v. Osages (1824); Deputy Sheriff of Independence County
who executed subpoenas on various persons in the divorce suit between
Elizabeth and Samuel Allen in Allen
v. Allen (1827); deputy sheriff in Independence County in Griswell
& Ruddell v. Cornwall (1831); Boswell v. Newton (1835); |
| Elam, Richard |
Member of jury at April 1826
Term of the Superior Court, but the jury could not reach a verdict
so its members were discharged, see Latting
v. Miles (1823); provided information upon which Abraham Secrest's
indictment for running an illegal dice bank was founded, see United
States v. Secrest (1827); |
| Elder |
The intended victim of Allen Cotton,
who instead of shooting and killing him, killed Thomas Whittington
who had entered the Cotton's store at the same time as Elder; Elder
was wounded by Allen's shot, see Cummins
v. Cotton (1826); |
| Eller, David |
Lanusse
v. Flanakin (1826); member of a hung jury in Cocke
v. Henson, Johnson and Sevier (1830); |
| Elliots, ? |
Apparently took possession at some point
of Oppolis, the slave at issue in Bentley
v. Woodruff (1830); |
| Ellis, Radford |
Represented Pulaski County in the first
Arkansas General Assembly (Ark. Gaz. Feb. 12, 1820); recipient of
a letter from William Russell that accused Edmund Hogan of making
inappropriate political deals and other immoralities, see Russell
v. Hogan (1823); security for Moore's bail
bond in Welborn v. Moore (1824); |
| Eliza or Lize |
Slave woman at the center of a trespass
action in Reece v. Johnson (1826); |
| Embree or Embry, Sarah |
subpoenaed to appear as a witness on
behalf of Israel Dodge; did not appear because at the April 1827 Term
and did not appear until the April 1828 Term, see Roane v. Dodge (1827);
had an account with Hewes Scull, the settlement of which was a condition
precedent to Scull's liability on a note to Samuel C. Roane, see Scull
v. Roane (1831); |
| Englbright, John |
Deposed in Bentley v. Joslin (1834); |
| English, John |
English was one of the first common
pleas judge of Hempstead County, beginning in 1819, along with Wheaton
and Woodward. He represented Hempstead County in the first Arkansas
General Assembly (Ark. Gaz. Feb. 12, 1820) and the first court was
held at his house, about eight miles northeast of the present town
of Washington (Herndon, p. 762); the Court of Common Pleas was held
near his home in Hempstead County, see Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); Boran v. Musick (1823); died from injuries caused
by being mangled by a cotton gin (Ark. Gaz. Dec. 29, 1821); deceased
at the time that William Russell sued Simeon English, as his administrator,
alleging that John had failed to pay on a promissory note, see Russell
v. English (1823). |
| English, Linneas |
|
| English, Simeon |
Sued by William Russell as the administrator
of the estate of John English alleging that John English had failed
to pay on a promissory note, see Russell
v. English (1823); |
| English, William |
Summoned for grand jury duty in December
1811 Grand Jury Venire; Joshua J. Henniss executed a promissory
note in his favor which later came to the hands of Peter Holliday
- Holliday later sued Ambrose H. Sevier for failing to collect on
the note in Holliday v. Sevier
(1827); mentioned in relation to proceedings in the Justice of the
Peace Court in Dillingham v. Skein
(1832); |
| Ervin, James W. |
Tennessee juror in Stewart v. Gray (1834); |
| Ervin, Robert |
Juror who found in Andrew Hemphill's
favor, who later submitted an affidavit stating that he would have
decided differently but for the circuit court's jury instruction,
see Mirick v. Hemphill (1832);
|
| Erwin, James |
Witnessed execution of the George C.
Pickett's postmaster's bond in Postmaster
General v. Pickett (1831); |
| Eskridge,
Thomas P. |
Attorney
and judge of Pulaski County Court of Common Pleas; Circuit Judge in
Berry v. McLeland (1822); Circuit
Judge for Lawrence County in Jeffrey
v. Schlesinger & Gillett (1822); attorney who filed bill of
exceptions for Murphy, arguing that the judge had incorrectly instructed
the jury in Murphy v. McElmurry
(1822); attorney for Murphy who filed the bill of exceptions in Murphy
v. Tindall (1822); presiding judge in Arkansas County Circuit
Court inDanby v. Montgomery (1824);
Arkansas County Circuit Court judge in Demoss
v. Montgomery (1824); one of the executors of the bill of assurances
that accompanied the deed conveying land in what became downtown Little
Rock to Joseph Paxton in Paxton v.
Crittenden & Trimble (1825); Holliday
v. Sevier (1827); Blakely v. Biscoe
(1828); presided over part of the Phillips County Circuit Court case
in Reece v. Johnson (1826);presided
over the Chicot County Circuit Court in Miles
v. James (1830); judge of Superior Court in Sevier v. Holliday
(1830); presided over circuit court proceedings in Lafayette County
for Bradley v. Trammel (1831);
judge of Hempstead County circuit court in Byrd v. Hickman (1831);
Clark v. Shelton (1831) and (1833);presiding judge in Griswell
& Ruddell v. Cornwall (1831); presided over Clark County Circuit
Court in Harrington v. Stroud (1831);
presided over the Hempstead circuit court in Wilson
v. Eads (1831); Buzzard v. James (1832);presiding judge of Hempstead
County Circuit Court in Mirick v.
Hemphill (1832); presided over part of the proceedings in Orr
v. Thurmond (1832); Robinson v. Tunstall (1832); presided in Standifer
v. Dowlin (1832); presiding judge in Tilford,
Trotter, & Co. v. Oakley (1832); Williamson v. Buzzard (1833);
Williamson v. May (1833); Chandler v. Byrd (1834) and (1835); Collins
v. Johnson (1834); Compton v. Palmer (1835); Williamson v. Janes (1836); |
| Estill, James |
Witnessed the service of a writ of garnishment
in Jenkins v. James (1832); |
| Evans, James |
William Hickman's attorney in Missouri
in Byrd v. Hickman (1828); and
(1831); |
| Evans, Lewis |
Sheriff of Washington County in Dillingham
v. Skein (1832);sheriff of Izard County in Earheart
v. Murphy & McCall (1830); |
| Eversull, James |
Juror in Campbell
v. Izard (1831); |
| Ewell, Charles |
Served on original jury that awarded
James Johnson damages for Alexander's trespass to his property in
Reece v. Johnson (1826); |