| Alabama |
Franklin County in Dodge
v. Roane (1828); Standifer v. Dowlin
(1832); |
|
Arkansas County
|
Moseley
v. Murphy (1814), April 1814 Grand
Jury Venire, September 1814 Grand
Jury Venire, Glass v. Dean
(1814), Haden v. Clary (1814),
Wallis v. Cassidy (1814), March
1815 Grand Jury Venire, U.S. v. Glass
& Glass (1815) Berry v. McLeland
(1822), Yarbrough v. Huttzman (1822),
Morrison v. Walker (1823), Russell
v. Hogan (1823), Scull v. Bentley
(1823), Demoss v. Montgomery (1824),
Daniel v. Mitchell (1827); Danby
v. Montgomery (1824), United States
v. Osages (1824), Vaugine v. Coussette
(1826), United States v. Laforge &
Peeler (1828); Woodruff v. Lucas
(1828); Campbell v. Izard (1831), Scull
v. Roane (1831). |
| Arkansas District |
December
1809 Grand Jury Venire, December
1810 Grand Jury Venire, July 1811
Grand Jury Venire, December
1811 Grand Jury Venire, Clary v.
Webster (1810), Phillips v. Peeler
(1810), Clary v. Chisholm (1811),
Clary v. (John D.) Chisholm (1811),
Dill v. Wallis (1811), Wallis
v. Durst (1811), Hudsel v. Bunch (1812), Michel
v. Wallis (1812), Miller
v. Cassidy (1812), Miller v. Fowler
(1812), Morrison v. Wallis (1812),
Phillips v. Peeler (1812),
Smith v. Hudsel (1812), Wallis
v. Lefevre (1812), |
| Arkansas Post |
Also called the Town of Arkansas,
Arkansas Post was the site of the highest court in the territory that
became Arkansas from 1809 until 1821 when the Territorial Superior
Court moved to Little Rock. Arkansas Post is mentioned in the following
cases: Durst v. Hall (1810), Wallis
v. Durst (1811), Michel v. Wallis
(1812), Miller v. Cassidy (1812),
Phillips v. Peeler
(1812), April 1814 Grand Jury
Venire, Haden v. Clary (1814),
Moseley v. Murphy (1814), Wallis
v. Cassidy (1814), Scull v. Bentley
(1823), Demoss v. Montgomery (1824),
Drope v. Miller (1826); Scull v. Roane
(1831), |
| Arkansas River |
Murphy
v. Douglass (1822), Russell v. English
(1823), Paxton v. Crittenden & Trimble
(1825), Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827);
Daniel
v. Mitchell (1827); Peay v. Martin
(1827); Russell v. Tindall (1828);
United States v. Davis (1828), |
| Arkansas Township |
December
1809 Grand Jury Venire, Clary v.
Webster (1810), Phillips v. Peeler
(1810), Scull v. Bentley (1823); United
States v. Laforge & Peeler (1828); |
| Arkansas Village |
United States
v. Laforge & Peeler (1828); |
| Atakapas, or Attucapas, Country
of |
In Dill v.
Wallis (1811), Perly Wallis tried in vain to depose Isaac House,
seeking him first in Natchez, then in the District of Concordia in
Mississippi Territory, and was finally told that House was traveling
in the Atakapas Country. The Atakapa Indians lived in what is today
southwestern Louisiana and southeastern Texas. "Atakapa"
is Choctaw for "eaters of men." According to one scholar,
only about 175 Atakapas were living by 1805, but the geographic area
known by their name still existed in 1811. For more information, see
The
Handbook of Texas Online. |
| Bainbridge, Missouri |
Bainbridge is located in
Cape Girardeau County, Missouri; see Byrd
v. Hickman (1828)(1831); |
| Batesville, Independence
County |
Schlesinger v. Jeffrey (1820), Schlesinger
& Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822), Curran
v. Searcy (1826), Drope v. Miller (1826), Allen
v. Allen (1827); Russell v. McElmurray
(1828); Griswell and Ruddell v. Cornwall
(1831); Boswell v. Newton (1835), Compton v. Palmer (1835),
|
| Bath County, Kentucky |
Tilford,
Trotter, & Co. v. Oakley (1832); |
| Bellemont, Town of |
French v. Tunstall (1832), Jenkins v.
James (1832), |
| Bonhomme Township |
Township in Missouri; Townsend's bail
was taken at Bonhomme Township after he was ordered to answer Dent
of a plea of trespass in Dent v. Ashley (1826); |
| Big Creek Township |
Billingsley v. Bell
(1824);
|
| Big Rock
Township |
Schlesinger v. Jeffrey (1820), Murphy
v. Douglass (1822), Schlesinger &
Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822), Russell
v. Hogan (1823), Scull v. Bentley
(1823), Dent v. Ashley (1826), Cummins
v. Cotton (1826); Crittenden v.
Woodruff (1827); Lemmons
v. Toncray (1827); Paxton v. Conway
(1827), Peay v. Martin (1827), Stone v.
Williams et. al. (1827); U.S. v.
Secrest (1827); Hogan v. Woodruff
(1827), Kerly v. Jones (1828); Lemons
v. Chouteau (1828); Lindell &
Lindell v. Shields, et. al. (1828); Secrest
v. Guest (1828); October 1828 Grand
Jury Venire Writ (1828); Bentley
v. Woodruff (1830); Cocke v. Johnson (1830), Wilson
& Stewart v. Johnson (1830); Davies
v. Crittenden (1831); Byrd v. Fowler
(1834); Fisher & Sevier v. Spofford (1833), Fowler v. Wilson (1833),
McLain v. Roundtree (1834), McLain v. Smith (1834), Ledbetter v. Kendall
(1835), Wilson v. Tutewiler (1835). |
| Biscoeville |
Seat of Clark County
Circuit Court in September 1827, see Holliday
v. Sevier (1827); United States
v. Davis (1827); |
| Blue River |
United States
v. Osages (1824), |
| Bodark Township |
|
| Bogart Township, Hempstead County |
Williamson v. May (1833) |
| Cache Township |
Reese v.
Johnson (1829); |
| Caddo Township, Clark County |
Fenter v.
Payton (1825), Holliday v. Sevier
(1827); Trimble v. Stroud (1828);
Harrington v. Stroud (1831); Collins
v. Johnson (1834); |
| Cadron Township |
Called "El Quadrante"
before the Louisiana Purchase, Cadron was one of the first settlements
in Arkansas. It was located at the mouth of the Cadron River on the
Arkansas River, just west of Conway. See, Moseley
v. Murphy (1814); site of Pulaski County Court of Common Pleas
in Murphy v. McElmurry (1822) and
Murphy v. Tindall (1822);
Drope v. Miller (1826); Lanusse
v. Flanakin (1826); Lemmons v. Toncray
(1827); Miller, Montgomery & Crittenden
v. Bentley (1827); Russell v. McElmurray
(1828); Russell v. Tindall (1828);
Earheart v. Murphy and McCall (1830);
Bentley v. Joslin (1832); Murphy v. Howard
(1831); Bently v. Joslin (1834); McKee v. Murphy (1836); |
| Camden County, Georgia |
Campbell,
Patterson & Horner v. Izard (1831); |
| Canadian River |
United States
v. Osages (1824); |
| Cane Hill Township |
Dillingham
v. Skein (1832); |
| Cape Girardeau County,
MO |
Byrd v.
Hickman (1828); |
| Cherokee Nation |
"Cherokee boundary" mentioned
in United States v. Sevier (1828);
U.S. v. One Barrel of Whiskey (1834); |
| Chicot County |
Latting v.
Miles (1823); place where Purvis executed a promissory note to
Ambrose H. Sevier in Russell v. Purvis
(1827); Ashley v. James (1828);
Finney v. Hoskins
(1828); Miles v. James (1830); French
v. Tunstall (1832); Jenkins v. James
(1832); Morehouse v. Archer (1832);
Robinson v. Tunstall (1832); |
| Chicot, Island of |
Visible on some old maps as an island
just north of Greenville, MS, it later became the land inside the
oxbow lake just east of Bachelor's Bend. Today Bachelor's Bend no
longer exists, due to the Leland Cutoff. Chicot Island was the locale
of the alleged torts in Hudsel v. Bunch
(1812) and Smith v. Hudsel (1812).
|
| Christian Township, Independence
County |
Schlesinger
& Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822); |
| Clark County |
Yarbrough
v. Huttzman (1822); Russell v. Hogan
(1823); Johnston v. Ball, Williams &
Blalock (1824); Fenter v. Payton
(1825); United States v. Davis (1827);
Holliday v. Sevier (1827); Blakely
v. Biscoe (1828); Trimble v. Stroud
(1828); Campbell, Patterson & Horner
v. Izard (1831); Harrington v. Stroud
(1831); Collins v. Johnson (1834); |
| Clark Township |
United States
v. Skiggs (1828); |
| Columbia Township |
Wilson v. Jarrett (1836); |
| Concordia,
District of |
After Perly Wallis tried
to depose him in Natchez, word came that Isaac House was in Concordia,
which was in the Mississippi Territory near Natchez, in 1811, see
Dill v. Wallis (1811). |
| Concordia, Parish of |
William Winter lived in this parish in
the Territory of Orleans. Jacob Durst wanted to depose Winter regarding
a horse supposed to be delivered to him in Durst
v. Hall (1810). |
| Conway County |
Lanusse
v. Flanakin (1826); Lemmons v. Toncray
(1827); Russell v. McElmurray (1828);
Russell v. Tindall (1828); Bentley
v. Woodruff (1830);Earheart v. Murphy
and McCall (1830); Murphy v. Howard
(1831); Bentley v. Joslin (1832); Bently v. Joslin (1834); Thompson
v. McHenry (1834); Carr v. Tweedy (1835); McKee v. Murphy (1836); |
| Cower Township |
Stone v. Williams (1827); |
| Crawford County |
United States
v. McCraney (1823); Russell v. Hogan
(1823); Billingsley v. Bell (1824);
United States v. Osages (1824); Roane
v. Dodge (1827); site of horse race in Stone
v. Williams et. al. (1827); Roane
v. Dodge (1827); Dodge v. Roane
(1828); United States v. Skiggs (1828);
Griffing v. Noaks (1829); Shannon
v. Robinson (1829); Postmater General
v. Pickett (1831); Wamsley v. Cummins (1835); |
| Crittenden County |
Grande
v. Fooy (1829); Jenkins v. James (1832); |
| Crittenden, Town of |
Fenter v.
Payton (1825); |
| Dardanelle |
Moseley
v. Murphy (1814); Schlesinger v. Jeffrey (1820); |
| Davidson County,
Tennessee |
Judgment issued here for
Adam Stewart, see Stewart v. Gray (1834); |
|
Davidsonville
|
Seat of Lawrence County;
Jeffrey v. Schlesinger & Gillett
(1822); Schlesinger & Gillett v. Jeffrey
(1822); Musick v. Rice & Boran
(1825); location of a store in Drope v.
Miller (1826); |
| Davidson Township |
Musick v.
Rice & Boran (1825); |
| Delaware or Dellaware Township |
Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); |
| Dwight |
Also called "Old Dwight," this
was a jail in Pope County; see Clark v. Phillips (1835); Bollinger
v. Smith (1835). |
| East Florida Province |
Campbell,
Patterson & Horner v. Izard (1831); |
| Encore Fabre or
Ecorefabre Township |
Township located in Union
County; see Collins v. Johnson (1834); |
| Fayetteville |
Standifer
v. Dowlin (1832); |
| Fayateville, Washington County |
Wamsley v. Cummins (1835); |
| Fourche Caddo |
Russell v.
Hogan (1823); |
| Fort Gibson |
United States
v. Osages (1824); Wilson & Stewart v. Crittenden (1834); |
| Fort Smith |
United States
v. Osages (1824); United States v.
McCraney (1823); |
| Frankin County |
Dodge v. Roane (1828); |
| Franks Township |
Patterson
v. Hill (1831); |
| Fulton, Town of |
Robinson v. Bryan (1828); |
| Georgia |
Campbell,
Patterson & Horner v. Izard (1831); |
| Godwin County |
U.S. v. One Barrel of Whiskey (1834); |
| Grande, Lake |
Grande v.
Fooy (1829); |
| Grand Prairie |
Crittenden
v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Great Prairie |
A horse was allegedly stolen here in
Haden v. Clary (1814); |
| Greenville, Town
of |
Location of Clark County
courthouse; Grande v. Fooy (1830); Collins v. Johnson (1834); |
| Harrisburg |
Murphy v.
Howard (1831); Bently v. Joslin (1834), |
| Heard County, Georgia |
Plaintiff's residence in Williamson v.
Buzzard (1833), Williamson v. May (1833), |
| Helena |
Forbes v.
Simmons (1828), Reese v. Johnson
(1829); Postmaster v. Hornor, Strong
& Phillips (1831); Campbell,
Patterson & Horner v. Izard (1831); Fisher v. Eason (1836). |
| Hempstead
County |
Berry
v. McLeland (1822), Russell v. English
(1823), Boran v. Musick (1824), Musick
v. Rice & Boran (1825), Paxton
v. Crittenden & Trimble (1825); Clark
v. Hickman (1827; Nance v. Hickman
(1827); Montgomery v. Clark (1828;
Byrd v. Hickman (1828); (1831),
Montgomery & Miller v. Peay, et.
al. (1828); Robinson v. Bryan (1820);
Trimble v. Stroud (1828), Cocke v. Henson
(1829); U.S. Postmaster General v. Clark
(1830); Clark v. Shelton (1831),
Hemphill v. Mirick (1832); Poston
v. Bradshaw (1832); Wilson v. Eades
(1831); Tilford, Trotter, & Co. v.
Oakley (1832); Williamson v. Buzzard (1833), Williamson v. May
(1833), Simmerman v. Cross (1834), Hickman v. Scott (1835), McDaniel
v. Milam (1835), Pope v. Campbell (1835), Ex parte Hickman (1836),
Williamson v. Janes (1836), Clark v.
Shelton (1836); |
| Hillbern Township, Conway County |
Lemmon v. Toncray
(1827), |
| Huntsville, Alabama |
Location of
Huntsville County Court House; James Gaston obtained a judgment here
in Gaston v. Harris (1833); |
| Iland Nos. 86 & 87 |
Latting
v. Miles (1823); |
| Illinois Township, Pope County |
Bolinger v.
Smith (1835); |
| Independence
County |
Schlesinger & Gillett
v. Jeffrey (1822); Curran v. Searcy
(1826); Drope v. Miller (1826);
Allen v. Allen (1827); Griswell
and Ruddell v. Cornwall (1831); Boswell v. Newton (1835); Compton
v. Palmer (1835); Hynson v. Terry (1837);
|
| Izard County |
Earheart
v. Murphy and McCall (1830); McArthur v. Hogan (1835); |
| Jackson |
Located
in Cape Girardeau County, Missouri; Byrd
v. Hickman (1828); (1830); |
| Jackson Township |
Jeffries
v. Marshall (1836); Wilson v. Jarrett (1836); |
| Jefferson County, Illinois |
Robinson
v. Tunstall (1832); |
| Johnson Township |
Campbell,
Patterson & Horner v. Izard (1831); |
| Kentucky |
Goods
purchased here by Crittenden in Crittenden
v. Woodruff (1827); the Kentucky
towns of Owingsville and Lexington, and counties of Bath and Fayette
are mentioned in Tilford, Trotter, &
Co. v. Oakley (1832); Cumberland County, Kentucky is mentioned
in Simmerman v. Cross (1834); |
| Lafayette County |
Jacobs
v. Jacobs (1828); McLaughlin v. Harned (1831); Buzzard
v. Oakley (1832); Orr v. Thurmond
(1832); Bradley v. Trammel (1831);
Poston v. Bradshaw (1832);
Buzzard v. James (1832); Williamson v. Buzzard (1833); Williamson
v. May (1833);Williamson v. Janes (1836); |
| Lagrange Township |
McLaughlin
v. Harned (1831); Bradley v. Trammel
(1831); Orr v. Thurmond (1832); Williamson
v. Buzzard (1833); Williamson v. May (1833); Williamson v. Janes (1836); |
| Lark County, Missouri |
Campbell v.
Izard (1831); |
| Lawrence County |
Jeffrey
v. Schlesinger & Gillett (1822);
Shlesinger & Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822); Musick
v. Rice & Boran (1825); Larry Campbell's home in Curran v.
Searcy (1826); Lawrence County court house mentioned in Drope v. Miller
(1826); Campbell, Patterson & Horner
v. Izard (1831); Jeffries v. Marshall (1836); Wilson v. Jarrett
(1836); |
| Lewisburgh, Conway County |
Bentley v.
Joslin (1832); Thompson v. McHenry (1834); |
| Lewisville, Lafayette County |
Bradley v.
Trammell (1828); |
| Lexington, Kentucky |
Tilford,
Trotter, & Co. v. Oakley (1832); |
| Little Bayou Meto |
Little Bayou
Meo was located in what is today southeast Jefferson County; Perly
Wallis's plantation was located on the bayou, see Morrison
v. Wallis (1812), |
| Little Missouri Township |
Robinson v.
Bryan (1828), |
| Little Red River |
Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Little Red River Township,
Conway County |
Morrison v.
Walker (1823); Thompson v. McHenry (1834); |
| Little Rock |
Murphy v. Douglass
(1822); Blount v. Hampton (1823); Russell
v. English (1823); Morrison v. Walker
(1823); Russell v. Hogan (1823);
Scull v. Bentley (1823); United States v. McCraney (1823);
Johnston v. Ball, Williams & Blalock (1824); United
States v. Osages (1824); Welborn v. Moore (1824); Moore v. Paxton
(1825); Musick v. Rice & Boran (1826); Paxton
v. Crittenden & Trimble (1825); Vaugine v. Cossette (1826);
Garres v. Bradford (1827); Paxton
v. Conway (1827); Peay v. Martin
(1827); United States v. Johnson
(1827); U.S. v. Secrest (1827);United
States v. Sevier (1827); Hogan
v. Woodruff (1827), Scott &
Rutherford v. Sevier & Johnston (1827); Ashley
v. James (1828); Blakely
v. Biscoe (1828); Kerly v. Jones
(1828); Dodge
v. Roane (1828); Montgomery v.
Clark (1828;United States v. Skiggs
(1828); West v. Cotton & Caperton
(1828); October 1828 Grand Jury Venire
Writ (1828); Russell v. Tindall
(1828); Russell v. McElmurray
(1828); Byrd v. Hickman (1828);Finney
v. Hoskins (1828); Lemons v. Chouteau
(1828); Lindell & Lindell v. Shields,
et. al. (1828); Stone
v. Neill et. al. (1828);United States
v. Laforgue and Peeler (1828);
Woodruff v. Lucas (1828);
Izard v. Newton (1828); Cocke v.
Henson (1829); Grande v. Fooy
(1829); U.S. Postmaster General v.
Clark (1830); McLain v. Johnson
(1830); Wilson & Stewart v. Johnson
(1830); Bentley v. Woodruff (1830);
Miles v. James (1830);Earheart
v. Murphy and McCall (1830); Spence
v. Johnson (1831); Postmater General
v. Pickett (1831); Davies v. Crittenden
(1831); Howell v. Crutchfield (1831);
Postmaster v. Hornor, Strong &
Phillips (1831); Wilson v. Eades
(1831);Patterson v. Hill (1831);
Jenkins v. James (1832); Bentley
v. Johnson (1832); Bentley v. Joslin (1832);
Buzzard v. James (1832); French v. Tunstall (1832); Robinson v.
Tunstall (1832); Byrd v. Fowler
(1834); Chandler v. Byrd (1834); McLain v. Smith (1834); Wilson
& Stewart v. Crittenden (1834); Wamsley v. Cummins (1835); Fisher
v. Eason (1836); McKee v. Murphy (1836);Clark
v. Shelton (1836);
|
| Long Prairie |
Paxton
v. Crittenden & Trimble (1825); Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); |
| Louisiana |
Territory mentioned in Miller
v. Fowler (1812); Phillips v. Peeler
(1812);Robinson v. Bryan (1820);
Latting v. Miles (1826);
Holliday v. Sevier (1827); Cocke
v. Henson (1829); Bradley v. Trammel
(1831); St. Francisville, in West Feliciana Parrish, was the location
of the Bank of Louisiana in Swift v. Thorn (1835);
|
| Lovely County |
Russell
v. Tindall (1828); |
| Lovely's Purchase |
Stone
v. Williams et. al. (1827); |
| Lower or Lowen Township |
Stone
v. Williams et. al. (1827); Griffing
v. Noaks (1829); |
| Madison County, Alabama |
Standifer
v. Dowlin (1832); Foreign judgment obtained here by James Gaston,
see Gaston v. Harris (1833); |
| Markham Street,
Little Rock |
Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Melborn Township |
Scull v. Bentley (1823); |
| Memphis |
Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Mexico |
Lanusse v. Flanakin (1826); Lemons
v. Chouteau (1828); |
| Miller County |
Blount
v. Hampton (1823); |
| Mine Creek
Township |
Poston
v. Bradshaw (1832); |
| Mexican Dominions |
Lemons
v. Chouteau (1828); |
| Mississippi River |
Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); Miller,
Montgomery & Crittenden v. Bentley (1827); Grande v. Fooy
(1830); Campbell, Patterson & Horner
v. Izard (1831); United States v.
Desha (1828); |
| Mississippi, Territory
of |
Judgment obtained
here by Anthony Glass against Seth Dean, see
Glass v. Dean (1814); Bradley v.
Trammel (1831); |
| Mississippi Township |
Danby
v. Montgomery (1824); Demoss v. Montgomery
(1824); |
| Missouri River |
United
States v. Osages (1824);Grande v.
Fooy (1829); |
| Missouri, Territory
of |
Hudsel
v. Bunch (1812); Miller v. Fowler
(1812); Smith v. Hudsel (1812); Russell
v. Hogan (1823); Dent v. Ashley
(1826); Byrd v. Hickman (1828);
|
| Missouri, Township of |
Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); McLaughlin v. Harned (1831);Buzzard
v. Oakley (1832); |
| Monroe County |
Russell
v. McElmurray (1828); |
| Monroe, Township of |
Musick
v. Boran (1824); Jacobs v. Jacobs
(1828); Robinson v. Bryan (1820);
Poston v. Bradshaw (1832); Buzzard
v. James (1832); |
| Mountain Township |
Earheart
v. Murphy and McCall (1830); |
| Mount Prairie or Mound Prairie |
Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); |
| Mountserling, Kentucky |
Tilford,
Trotter, & Co. v. Oakley (1832); |
| Nashville, Tennessee |
Judgment issued here for Adam Stewart,
see Stewart v. Gray (1834); |
| Natchez |
Perly Wallis tried to depose Isaac House
in Natchez in 1811, see Dill v. Wallis
(1811); Latting v. Miles (1823); |
| Natchiloches, Louisiana |
Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); Dillingham v. Skein
(1832); |
| New Haven |
Located in Jefferson County,
IL; Robinson v. Tunstall (1832); |
| New Madrid |
Baptiste Calliotte asked for costs of conveying Moses Burnett,
a felon, to the New Madrid jail, see Grand
Jury Writ of Venire for December 1809; Robinson v. Byran (1828);
|
| New Orleans |
Morrison
v. Walker (1823); home of Lanusse, see Lanusse nee Macarty v.
Flanakin (1826); Cummins v. Cotton
(1826); Drope v. Miller (1826);
Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827); Lemmon
v. Toncray (1827);Miller, Montgomery
& Crittenden v. Bentley (1827); West
v. Cotton & Caperton (1828);Hemphill
v. Mirick (1832); Chandler v. Byrd (1834); Miller traveled there
in Drope v. Miller (1826); |
| North Carolina |
Location of five slaves willed to Samuel
Allen by his father, see Allen v. Allen
(1827); |
| North Little Rock |
Daniel v.
Mitchell (1827); |
| Oden Township, Chicot County |
Latting v.
Miles (1823); place where Purvis was taken into custody in Russell
v. Purvis (1827); Finney v. Hoskins
(1828);Montgomery v. Clark (1828);
Miles v. James (1830);
Jenkins v. James (1832);Morehouse
v. Archer (1832); |
| Oklahoma |
United
States v. Osages (1824); |
| Old River Township, Chicot County |
Robinson v. Tunstall (1832); |
| Opelousas County, Louisiana |
Latting v.
Miles (1823); |
| Orleans, Territory of |
In Durst
v. Hall (1810), Jacob Durst bought a horse from William Winter,
then living in the Territory of Orleans; the Territory became the
state of Louisiana in 1812; Wallis
v. Cassidy (1814); Yarbrough v.
Huttzman (1822); |
| Osage Nation |
Lemons v.
Chouteau (1828); |
| Ouachita Post |
Wallis
v. Cassidy (1814); Yarbrough v.
Huttzman (1822); Latting v. Miles
(1823); Fenter v. Payton (1825); |
| Owingsville, Kentucky |
Tilford,
Trotter, & Co. v. Oakley (1832); |
| Ozan Township, Hempstead County |
Berry
v. McLeland (1822); Russell v. English
(1823); Clark v. Hickman (1827; Byrd
v. Hickman (1828); (1831); Montgomery v.
Clark (1830); Clark v. Shelton (1831); Wilson
v. Eades (1831);Hemphill v. Mirick
(1832); Simmerman v. Cross (1834); Hickman v. Scott (1835); Pope v.
Campbell (1835);Clark v. Shelton
(1836); |
| Palarm Bayou |
Bentley
v. Woodruff (1830); |
| Paraclifta |
Poston v.
Bradshaw (1832); |
| Pecan Township |
Blount v.
Hampton (1823); |
| Pennsylvania |
Izard v.
Newton (1828); |
| Petit Jean River |
United
States v. Davis (1827); |
| Philadelphia |
Wilson v. Jarrett (1836); |
| Phillips County |
Miller,
Montgomery & Crittenden v. Bentley (1827); Blakely
v. Biscoe (1828); Forbes v. Simmons
(1828); Reese v. Johnson (1829);
Postmaster v. Hornor, Strong & Phillips
(1831); Campbell, Patterson & Horner v. Izard (1831); Patterson
v. Hill (1831); Fisher v. Eason (1836); |
| Pittsburgh |
Drope v. Miller (1826); |
| Point Chicot Township |
Yarbrough
v. Huttzman (1822); |
| Point Cooper |
Latting v.
Miles (1823); |
| Point Remove Township |
United States
v. Sevier (1827); Bently v. Joslin
(1834); |
| Poke Bayou |
Drope v.
Miller (1826); |
| Pope County |
Clark v. Phillips (1835); Bollinger v.
Smith (1835); |
| Potosi, Town of |
Located in Washington County,
Missouri; see Byrd v. Hickman (1828),
(1831); |
| Prairie Township |
Dillingham
v. Skein (1832); Standifer v. Dowlin
(1832); |
| Pulaski County |
Murphy v. Douglass
(1822), Murphy v. McElmurry (1822),
Murphy v. Tindall (1822), Schlesinger
& Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822), Blount v. Hampton (1823), Morrison
v. Walker (1823), Russell v. English (1823), Russell
v. Hogan (1823), Scull v. Bentley
(1823), United States v. McCraney (1823), Earheart v. Campbell (1824),
Johnston v. Ball, Williams & Blalock (1824), Kelly v. Brumback
(1824), United States v. Osages
(1824), Welborn v. Moore (1824),
Wilborn v. Bentley (1824), Moore v. Paxton (1825), Dent
v. Ashley (1826); Harding v. Walker (1826), Latting v. Miles
(1826), Paxton v. Crittenden & Trimble (1825), Vaugine
v. Cossette (1826), place where William Bradford executed the
writing obligatory in Stagner v. Bradford
(1827); Cummins v. Cotton (1826);
Crittenden v. Woodruff (1827);
Daniel
v. Mitchell (1827);Garres v. Bradford
(1827); Lemmons
v. Toncray (1827); Miller, Montgomery
& Crittenden v. Bentley (1827); Paxton
v. Conway (1827); Peay
v. Martin (1827); Russell v. Purvis (1827), Stone
v. Williams et. al. (1827); United
States v. Johnson (1827); United
States v. Oden (1827);United States
v. Sevier (1827); Hogan
v. Woodruff (1827), Scott &
Rutherford v. Sevier & Johnston (1827); Ashley
v. James (1828); Byrd
v. Hickman (1828); Blakely v. Biscoe (1828);
Izard v. Newton (1828); Kerly
v. Jones (1828); Lemons
v. Chouteau (1828); Lindell
& Lindell v. Shields, et. al. (1828); Dodge
v. Roane (1828); Finney v. Hoskins
(1828); Russell v. McElmurray
(1828); Russell v. Tindall (1828);
Scott v. Sevier (1828), Secrest v. Guest
(1828); Stagner v. Bradford (1827), Stone
v. Neill et. al. (1828); United
States v. Birmingham (1828), Montgomery
v. Clark (1828); United States v. Crittenden (1828), United
States v. Desha (1828), United States v. Lemons (1828), United
States v. McCall (1828); United States v. Rayburn (1828), United
States v. Rector, Scott, & Scott (1828), United States v.
Secrest (1828), United States v. Skiggs
(1828); United States v. Smith (1828),
West v. Cotton & Caperton (1828);
Woodruff v. Lucas (1828), October 1828
Grand Jury Venire Writ (1828); United
States v. Desha (1828); United States
v. Laforgue and Peeler (1828);
U.S. v. Reyburn (1828); Woodruff
v. Lucas (1828); Bentley v. Woodruff
(1830); Cocke v. Henson (1829);
McLain v. Johnson (1830); Miles
v. James (1830); U.S. Postmaster
General v. Clark (1830); Postmater
General v. Pickett (1831); Wilson
& Stewart v. Johnson (1830); Spence
v. Johnson (1831); Davies v. Crittenden
(1831); Howell v. Crutchfield (1831);
Postmaster v. Hornor, Strong &
Phillips (1831); Wilson v. Eades
(1831); Bentley v. Johnson (1832), Bentley v. Joslin (1832), Buzzard
v. James (1832), Earheart v. Murphy and McCall (1832); Desha v.
Henderson & Byrd (1833), Fisher &
Sevier v. Spofford (1833), Fowler v. Wilson (1833), Gaston v. Harris
(1833), Byrd
v. Fowler (1834); Chandler v. Byrd (1834), McLain v. Roundtree
(1834), McLain v. Smith (1834), Stewart v. Gray (1834), Wilson &
Stewart v. Crittenden (1834), Badgett v. Cotter
(1835), Byrd v. McKnight (1835), Ledbetter v. Kendall (1835), McLain
v. McCarty (1835), Swift v. Thorn (1835), Wilson v. Tutewiler (1835),
Hynson v. Terry (1837),
|
| Pyeatt Township |
Russell v.
Hogan (1823); |
| Quawpaw Line |
Paxton v.
Crittenden & Trimble (1825); |
| Rapides Parish, Louisiana |
Cocke v.
Henson (1829); |
| Red River |
United
States v. Osages (1824); |
| Roane Township |
Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); Jacobs v. Jacobs
(1828); Buzzard v. Oakley (1832);Williamson
v. May (1833); |
| Roy Rock Township? |
McLain v. Smith (1834); |
| Ruddell Township, Independence
County |
Schlesinger v. Jeffrey (1820); Schlesinger
& Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822); Drope
v. Miller (1826); Allen v. Allen
(1827); Griswell and Ruddell v. Cornwall
(1831); Boswell v. Newton (1835); Compton v. Palmer (1835); |
| Saline Township, Pulaski County |
Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); Secrest v. Guest
(1828); Ledbetter v. Kendall (1835); |
| Scott Street |
Crittenden
v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Sevier County |
U.S. Postmaster
General v. Clark (1830); Poston v.
Bradshaw (1832); |
| Strawberry
River |
Schlesinger
& Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822); |
| Strawberry
Township, Lawrence County |
Jeffrey
v. Schlesinger & Gillett (1822); Schlesinger
& Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822); |
| St. Domingo |
Birthplace of slave, Toby, in Lanusse
nee Macarty v. Flanakin (1826); |
| St. Francis County |
Patterson
v. Hill (1831); |
| St. Francis
River |
Moses Burnett and other felons
were apprehended near the mouth of the St. Francis River; the circumstances
of this capture are mentioned in Grand
Jury Writ of Venire for December 1809; Paxton
v. Crittenden & Trimble (1825); |
| St. Francis, Settlement of and/or
Township of |
Place where Sylvanus Phillips was arrested
in Phillips v. Peeler
(1812); Chelish was murdered here, see September
1814 Grand Jury Venire; Forbes v.
Simmons (1828); Campbell, Patterson
& Horner v. Izard (1831); Fisher v. Eason (1836); |
| Sant Landry Parish,
Lousiana |
Latting
v. Miles (1823); |
| St. Louis, County of |
Dent v. Ashley (1826); |
| St. Louis, Missouri
|
Schlesinger
& Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822); Russell
v. English (1823); Russell v. Hogan
(1823); place where McNair executed note to O'Hara in Dent
v. Ashley (1826) |
| Sumpter, South Carolina |
Moore v.
Paxton (1825); |
| Tennessee |
Musick v.
Rice & Boran (1825); Holliday
v. Sevier (1827); |
| Texas |
Cocke v. Johnson (1830); |
| Theton |
Robinson
v. Bryan (1820); |
| Tumlinson Township |
United States
v. Skiggs (1828); |
| Union County |
Collins v. Johnson (1834); |
| Union Township |
Patterson
v. Hill (1831); |
| Upper Township |
United States
v. McCraney (1822); |
| Vanburen Township |
Clark v. Phillips (1835); |
| Vaugine Township? |
Vaugine v. Cossette (1826); |
| Verdigris River |
United
States v. Osages (1824); |
|
Villimont or Villemont
|
Miles
v. James (1830); Jenkins v. James
(1832);Morehouse v. Archer (1832);
|
| Walnut Bend |
Campbell,
Patterson & Horner v. Izard (1831); |
| Walnut Township |
Campbell,
Patterson & Horner v. Izard (1831); Patterson
v. Hill (1831); |
| Warm Springs Township |
Johnston
v. Ball, Williams & Blalock (1824);
Fenter v. Payton (1825); |
| Warren
County, Kentucky |
Residence of William Bradford
who was sued in debt by William Stagner in in Stagner
v. Bradford (1827); |
| Warren
County, Mississippi Territory |
Warren County was established
in 1809. It lay north of the Big Black River and the county seat at
that time was Warrenton; a judgment was obtained here by Anthony Glass
from Seth Dean in Glass v. Dean
(1814); |
| Warrington, Mississippi Territory |
Glass
v. Dean (1814) |
| Washington County,
Missouri |
Location of judgment in Byrd
v. Hickman (1828); |
| Washington
County |
Earheart
v. Murphy and McCall (1830); Dillingham v. Skein (1831); Standifer
v. Dowlin (1832); Wamsley v. Cummins (1835); |
| Washington, D.C. |
Crittenden
v. Woodruff (1827); |
| Washington Township
|
Cocke v. Johnson (1830); Byrd v. Hickman
(1831); Clark v. Shelton (1831); Poston
v. Bradshaw (1832); Hemphill
v. Mirick (1832); Wilson v. Eades
(1831); Tilford, Trotter, & Co. v.
Oakley (1832); Dillingham v. Skein
(1832); Williamson v. Buzzard (1833); Williamson v. May (1833); Hickman
v. Scott (1835); McDaniel v. Milam (1835); Pope v. Campbell (1835);
Ex parte Hickman (1836); Williamson v. Janes (1836);Clark
v. Shelton (1836); |
| Welborn Township, Conway County |
Scull v.
Bentley (1823); Welborn v. Moore
(1824); Lemmons v. Toncray (1827);
George Bentley's home in Miller v. Bentley (1827); Russell
v. Tindall (1828); Bently v. Joslin (1834); McKee v. Murphy (1836); |
| Wheeline, Virginia |
Wilson v. Jarrett (1836); |
| White County |
Hynson v. Terry (1837); |
| White River |
Sheriff Harold Stillwell
asked for costs for removing some traders from the White River by
order of the Indian Agent, see Grand Jury
Writ of Venire for December 1809; Schlesinger
& Gillett v. Jeffrey (1822); mentioned in reference to land
sale in Curran v. Searcy (1826); Paxton
v. Crittenden & Trimble (1825); location of a store in Drope
v. Miller (1826); Crittenden v. Woodruff
(1827); Miller,
Montgomery & Crittenden v. Bentley (1827);United
States v. Johnston (1827); United
States v. Desha (1828); Fisher & Sevier v. Spofford (1833); |
| Willemont Township |
Morehouse v. Archer (1832); |
| Williamson County, Tennessee |
Judgment issued for Adam Stewart, see
Stewart v. Gray (1834); |