Box 1
Contains 4 Results:
Nacogdoches Co. deed from Clemens Means and Macy Means to James M. Sharp, 9/25/1854
The bulk of this collection are Nacogdoches Co. deeds for miscellaneous citizens. There are also land documents, promissory notes, field notes, broadsides for land or fugitives from the law, power of attorney and other probate documents, and entrance certificates. Researchers might find the entrance certificates, which are all from 1835 and in Spanish; and a pair of small broadsides from 1890-1891 for fugitives wanted for murder, of particular interest.
Nacogdoches Co. deed from R. Axley and his wife M. F. Axley to J. W. Griffith, 7/20/1900
The bulk of this collection are Nacogdoches Co. deeds for miscellaneous citizens. There are also land documents, promissory notes, field notes, broadsides for land or fugitives from the law, power of attorney and other probate documents, and entrance certificates. Researchers might find the entrance certificates, which are all from 1835 and in Spanish; and a pair of small broadsides from 1890-1891 for fugitives wanted for murder, of particular interest.
Appointment by New Orleans attorney Joseph Lombard of Nacogdoches attornies Peyton Edwards, Robert H. Irion and John Durst as his substitutes in the settling of Arnold Thouvenin's estate in Texas (he died in Vosges, France 3/21/1863). Lombard was given power-of-attorney by Thouvenin's heirs Jean Nicholas Thouvenin, Anne Francoise Cabasse and Charles Jules Cabasse, all three living in France, 8/21/1876
The bulk of this collection are Nacogdoches Co. deeds for miscellaneous citizens. There are also land documents, promissory notes, field notes, broadsides for land or fugitives from the law, power of attorney and other probate documents, and entrance certificates. Researchers might find the entrance certificates, which are all from 1835 and in Spanish; and a pair of small broadsides from 1890-1891 for fugitives wanted for murder, of particular interest.
Entrance certificate no.90 from the alcalde of Nacogdoches Radford Berry to Joseph Reynolds, 9/18/1835
The bulk of this collection are Nacogdoches Co. deeds for miscellaneous citizens. There are also land documents, promissory notes, field notes, broadsides for land or fugitives from the law, power of attorney and other probate documents, and entrance certificates. Researchers might find the entrance certificates, which are all from 1835 and in Spanish; and a pair of small broadsides from 1890-1891 for fugitives wanted for murder, of particular interest.