Governor Records - St. John, 1879-1883
- Introduction
- History and Biography
- Scope and Content
- Contents List
- Related Records
- Bibliography
- Index Terms
- Additional Information for Researchers
Introduction
A number of items from this collection have been digitized and are available on Kansas Memory.
Abstract
Eighth governor of the State of Kansas, 1879 - 1883; of Olathe, Kansas.
Correspondence and other records of the administration of John P. St. John, governor of the State of Kansas from 13 Jan. 1879 to 8 Jan. 1883. Correspondence received includes general letters, official response letters from & letters concerning State agencies, and subject files; some proclamations are also included. Subject files include applications, endorsements, & remonstrances relating to candidates for appointments to normal school, penitentiary, judicial, & other positions; county organizational papers; and letters relating to counties, crime & criminals, justices of the peace, lands, military affairs, relief, the black exoduses, and prohibition. Non-correspondence series include Extradition warrants, 1879-1880, and Executive messages and proclamations, 1881-1882. Additional records of Governor St. John are in separate series common to several governors including an Executive record (Official record), 1861-1879; Executive proclamations, 1861-1980; Pardon and parole files from the Women’s Industrial Farm, 1863-1919; Pardons, 1865-1883; Letter press books, 1865-1904; a Letter register, 1871-1895; a Record of death sentences, 1872-1906; and Death sentence warrants, 1872-1908; Requisitions on governor from governors of other states for persons accused of crimes, 1873-1960; County organization censuses, ca. 1873-ca. 1886; Applications for extradition requisitions: Subseries I and II, 1874-1953; Prisoners in Kansas State Penitentiary, ca. 1875-ca. 1897; and Citizenship pardons, 1876-1960 .
Dates
1879-1883
Quantity
20 ft. (24 boxes + 1 oversize folder)
Creator
Kansas
Title
Kansas Governor John P. St. John correspondence received
Portion of title: Correspondence received
Other titles
Correspondence files
Records of the Kansas Governor’s Office: administration of Governor John Pierce St. John (1879-1883)
Records of the Office of the Governor of Kansas: John P. St. John administration (1879-1883)
Identification
Record group 252.
Language
Text is in English.
Notes
This finding aid describes materials held by the Kansas Historical Society. Materials may be used in the State Archives and Library during regular research hours. Support for telephone, mail, and online reference and research is limited.
In a continuing effort to improve the completeness and accuracy of finding aids, revisions are made as more or new information becomes available. Consequently finding aids in paper format and on the society’s web site may differ slightly.
Repository
Kansas State Historical Society (Topeka)
Biography
History of the Office of the Governor
The Wyandotte Constitution of 1859 established the office of the governor of the State of Kansas. Some of the more important duties, functions, and responsibilities of the governor are to see that the laws are faithfully executed, to require written explanations from other executive officers - at that time the lieutenant governor, secretary of State, auditor, treasurer, attorney general, and superintendent of public instruction - upon any subject relating to their respective duties, convene the Legislature by proclamation on extraordinary occasions, communicate in writing such information as the governor may possess in reference to the condition of the State at the commencement of every legislative session, recommend such measures as he may deem expedient, and commission officers of the State.
No formal qualifications for the governor have been legislated, aside from the provision that no member of Congress or officer of the State or United States can serve. The governor is elected by a plurality, not necessarily a majority of votes cast. The governor takes office the second Monday in January following election. He was authorized to hire a private secretary, pardon attorney, and other staff as appropriations permitted.
At the beginning of John St. John’s term, the governor had the power to appoint Militia officers; members of part - time boards of directors, trustees, or regents of the State Penitentiary (now Lansing Correctional Facility), schools of higher education, the State insane asylum (now Osawatomie State Hospital), and schools for deaf and blind students; a Board of Visitors for the State Agricultural College (now Kansas State University); the Bureau of Immigration; the Commission for Care of Destitute Orphans and Children of State Soldiers; the State librarian; the superintendent of insurance; and a number of minor commissions. He was also an ex officio member of the State Board of Canvassers, boards of directors of the Agricultural College and Normal School, the Bureau of Immigration, the Board of Treasury Examiners, and other committees. St. John was the fist State chief executive to lobby for, and enforce the law of prohibition making Kansas the second State, behind Maine, to do so. He succeeded in persuading the Legislature to pass a constitutional amendment for prohibition that was put before the voters in 1880.
Biography of John Pierce St. John
John P. St. John was born on 25 February 1833 in Franklin County, Indiana. He was the son of Samuel St. John, a simple farmer, and Sophia Snell St. John. He grew up with one brother and one half-brother. His parents originated from New York State where their parents and grandparents had lived and farmed for many years.
For much of his boyhood he grew up on his father’s farm and was educated in sparse and crude public schools operating with limited resources. In 1848, he moved with his parents to Olney, Illinois, but sadly, soon after settling in their new home, his parents died. His father had fallen victim under the weight of the social class and drank himself poor; his mother suffered from severe anxiety and depression and died of a broken heart. At the age of nineteen he crossed the plains to California, and there he mined, chopped wood, clerked in a general store; he did just about anything so he could pay his living expenses.
In 1852, he married Mary Jane Brewer. They had one son but divorced in 1859.
In 1853 - 54, as a young militiaman he fought in the Indian Wars of northern California and southern Oregon being twice wounded. But St. John’s greatest ambition was to study and practice law. After a long day’s work, St. John would read law books, that he had bought and barely could afford, at night by the flickering light of a candle. He was an adventurous man and traveled extensively to Mexico, South America and the Sandwich Islands (present Hawaii). In 1859, John St. John returned to Illinois a poor man but rich in experience and knowledge of culture and the world. He finished his law studies in the offices of law firm Starkweather and McLain, in Charleston, Illinois. Charleston was also where he married his second wife, Susan J. Parker, in March of 1860; they had two children.
During the Civil War, St. John enlisted in the Army in April of 1862, and served as captain of Company C, 68 th Illinois Volunteer Infantry. He later recruited, organized and commanded the 143 rd Regiment, Illinois Volunteer Infantry, as a lieutenant colonel. The record shows that he served gallantly.
Unscathed by battle, at the end of the Civil War, he moved to Independence, Missouri, to practice law. Four years later he relocated permanently to Olathe, Kansas.
John P. St. John, by nature was a Republican in heart and mind, standing firmly on whatever he believed to be morally right. In 1872 he was elected to the Kansas State Senate by popular vote. In 1876, the Prohibition Party nominated him for governor of Kansas, but he immediately declined the offer. However, when the affairs of state became frustrating enough to earn his attention, he ran and was elected to that office two years later by the Republican Party and his vast and growing constituency in Kansas. People adored his warm nature of generosity and political style. He held the governorship for two terms but was defeated for a third term in 1882 by George W. Glick.
John St. John was the first governor to have a formal inauguration ceremony held on the steps of the newly completed east wing of the State capitol; the event was eloquently described in the 8 February 1879 issue of the nationally distributed Harper’s Weekly. After a long day’s work and often quite late in the evening, Governor St. John would retire to his cozy residence at the Tefft House. In the subsequent 1880 race for Governor, St. John defeated United States Senator Edmund G. Ross, who was a former Republican running as a Democrat.
In 1879, Governor St. John’s first order of business was to push the Legislature to provide for the building of the west wing of the State House and a new State Reform School in Topeka. Being a staunch politician of temperance, the governor’s agenda included new legislation to amend the constitution of Kansas prohibiting within the State of Kansas the “manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors,” with exception for medical or scientific purposes. The people voted in favor of prohibition and the amendment was adopted at the general election of 1880; in 1881, the Legislature passed the Prohibitory Law making Kansas the second State in the Union, Maine being the first, to pass such a statute.
The governor often spoke sentimentally and from the heart on the issue of temperance, most likely inspired by his father’s alcoholism. St. John never used a prepared speech but delivered his message extemporaneously and ensured no doubt that his agenda was on religious and moral grounds as well being a political statement. “Our covenant touching this matter is with the Lord,” he said, “and we propose to complete the good work.” It was St. John who started what became known as the gubernatorial “water banquettes” where only water was served in lieu of alcohol. This practice fared well for most people visiting the governor but not with Former President Ulysses S. Grant who felt rather annoyed when he wasn’t served his usual alcoholic drink.
One of the greatest results of the Civil War was the thousands of former slaves in the postwar Reconstructed South that were, to a large extent, denied human respect, independence, and the opportunity to work in that region. A huge opportunity for St. John to mark his place in history came during the “exodus” movements toward Kansas that began in 1875 and ultimately resulted in a considerable refugee problem for the State. The 1876 presidential election that put Rutherford B. Hayes in the White House, by very close margin, came with conditions: an agreement with the Democrats that the Republicans would discontinue federal troop occupation in the South and allow the advancement of radical Reconstruction policy promoting African American voting rights, employment, and equality in accommodations. Not surprisingly, the latter was never realized. By 1878 the mass migration of former slaves westward, largely from an existing state of oppression and despair in the South, had begun. Governor St. John stood firmly on moral grounds that to accommodate these brethren, when many other States east of Kansas denied them homestead, was the right thing to do and was in the tradition of Kansas that would later prove beneficial.
Poor, exhausted, and homeless, many of the former slaves displayed a remarkable cheerfulness and childlike trust in Providence. Governor St. John formed the Freedman’s State Central Association and he became the chairman of its board of directors. A Quaker woman, Elizabeth Comstock from Chicago, was given its managerial charge, and henceforth much was accomplished in relief for these displaced persons. Many black immigrants settled on tiny patches of land throughout Kansas. The most prominent was the large settlement of Nicodemus in Graham County, established by Benjamin “Pap” Singleton from Tennessee, with the aid of W.R. Hill, a white minister and land speculator. Two smaller but poor black colonies were established in Hodgeman County. One former slave there became a prosperous farmer who began by breaking an acre of prairie for wheat with a single spade. His annual harvest grew exponentially to be shipped to and stored in Topeka. F. W. Giles was a well-known resident and historian of Topeka. Giles estimated that over seven thousand former slaves had migrated to Topeka by August of 1879. He estimated the population of Topeka was close to 30 per cent African American, all congregated in a section of town called Tenneseetown. Giles wrote, “many had a vague knowledge, since the mid 1850’s, that somewhere on this earth was a place known as Kansas, and they fancied that in some way the question of their emancipation was connected with it.”
The State Legislature of 1879 posed a huge but delicate question to governor St. John: What is Kansas to do with them? Given the complexity of accommodating their vast numbers, Kansans, principally, rejected any notion of turning these people away. The governor believed that the migration could be well managed if the immigrants were distributed evenly around the State. However, many problems ensued in the distribution, the biggest being prejudice. A proclamation made public by the mayor of Wyandotte (now part of Kansas City) threatened legal action against anyone bringing black migrants into the town. The town councils of Atchison and Leavenworth turned a blind eye to those destitute being unloaded from the steamboats. When the relief association sent a group of blacks to Wichita, the city council returned them to Topeka like substandard merchandise on unproven official grounds that they might be diseased. Governor St. John made it publicly clear that Kansas would have no sentinel at her portals as to birthplace, race, condition, color, politics or religion for condition to enter its borders, however difficult the numbers. The Topeka Commonwealth wrote in support of St. John’s policy, “the question of the exodus is not one of business merely, as shallow thinkers and flippant writers would have us believe. A large portion of the American people will ignore the humanitarian side, but Kansas cannot afford to do so by measure of principle in the right to freedom.” Kansas had indeed become the promised land for those who suffered from America’s worse national disgrace toward humanity.
John St. John believed that State institutions should be self-supporting, and not dependent on State or federal funding, so he opened a coal mine at the State Penitentiary at Lansing to provide jobs for inmates.
The threat of Indian raids along the Oklahoma - Kansas border prompted Governor St. John to post a militia guard along the southern border. However, his fear was cautioned on the grounds that an armed militia would perpetuate the violence; therefore he vacillated on the issue of a massive army permanently keeping watch on the border.
The 1869 treaty with the Osage that resulted in the sale of over 8,000,000 acres of Indian land to the Leavenworth, Lawrence and Galveston Railroad Company eventually gave way to public scrutiny. Plans to expand the railroads northwest inflamed fear because the settlers worried that they could lose their homes in the deal. In 1874, a lawsuit pursued on the validity of the patents issued to the railroad companies for the Osage lands led to seven years of litigation. St. John publicly argued for the settlers and the courts finally decided in their favor in 1881.
Governor St. John’s administration was highly praised for its honesty and integrity of leadership. The Governor’s moral ground and rigid standards of honor for life and liberty gave way to a trusted citizenry and his two - term administration was not blemished with a single questionable act.
St. John’s defeat in the third term race for governor did not dampen his ambition for higher public office. The Prohibition Party of the day was a force of power that was not going away, and the party ultimately nominated St. John for president of the United States in 1884. His stature as a candidate caused his campaign to attract national attention, and he tallied fifteen times more votes then any previous prohibition candidate. The votes he received in New York alone were so voluminous that they cut the Republican Party’s tally greatly and cost James G. Blaine that State and the presidency, making Grover Cleveland the first Democratic president since the Civil War.
Although St. John didn’t get the presidency, his righteous enthusiasm for morality and Prohibition continued; he traveled in excess of 350,000 miles across the country advocating its just cause until his death in 1916.
His first religious preference was Congregational, but he later converted to Christian Science. John P. St. John died on 31 August 1916 in Olathe from the effects of his extensive public speaking crusade on behalf of prohibition; he is buried in Olathe Cemetery.
Scope and Content
Governor John P. St. John’s records consist of three series.
Items in the series Correspondence Received, 1879 - 1883 (no. 03417), are primarily letters received by Governor St. John; however there may also be proclamations and a few petitions, reports, copies of letters sent, and other types of documents. The letters and proclamations are organized into four subseries: (1) General (Alphabetical) File, (2) State Departments, (3) Subject Files, and (4) Proclamations. Some proclamations may have also been interfiled with other items received relating to the subjects of the proclamations.
Documents that may have been addressed to Governor St. John but dated or pertaining to the time period after his term expired in 1883 may be filed with the records of his successor, George W. Glick.
The General (Alphabetical) File, 1879 - 1883 (subseries 1), consists of twenty-seven folders containing letters received that were filed in alphabetical order by author. Contained therein are letters relating to positions, recommendations, and vacancies; Governor St. John’s addresses; State contracts; the extension of State jurisdiction to former Indian reservations; the judiciary and judicial procedure; legislation; requests for information, publications, or action; politics; services and goods offered for sale; taxation; transportation; public lands; and interstate co-operation. Letters may have been filed here because there was not an appropriate place for them in the State Departments (subseries 2) or Subject Files (subseries 3).
Letters from or relating to State offices are in subseries 2, the State Departments File. Some of the letters relate to personnel, vacancies, resignations, and appointments, but most pertain to the operation of individual State agencies. The letters request the Governor to take specific actions, ask his approval, send him information, ask him questions, tell of events, provide legal opinions, forward other letters and petitions, confirm or acknowledge gubernatorial actions, and request the Governor’s presence. Topics include the Agricultural College (now Kansas State University) (Manhattan), the Attorney General, the School for the Blind (Kansas City), the Deaf and Dumb School (now Kansas School for the Deaf) (Olathe), the Executive Branch, the Fiscal Agency of New York, the Fish Commissioner, the Kansas State Historical Society, the Horticultural Society, the facility for Idiotic and Imbecile Youth, the Insane Asylum, the State Land agent, the Legislature, the Normal School (now Emporia State University), Penitentiary wardens, boards of directors, inspections, State offices, judgeships, audits, the State treasury, the Board of Medical Examiners, Charitable Institutions, Indian raid claims, federal taxation, State payments, prisoners, bonds, the Board of Statehouse Commissioners, detectives, and fraud. A more complete list of contents by folder is in the Detailed Description of the Records section, below.
The largest component of the Correspondence Received is the Subject Files subseries, no. 3. A major part of these files consist of applications, endorsements, and remonstrances; appointments to; and bonds required for State positions. Non-personnel files deal with cities and towns; claims for the Indian raids of 1878, Price’s Raid, and Quantrill’s Raid; soldiers’pensions and bounty claims; commissioners of deeds of other States, England, and France; congratulatory messages; Kansas county affairs, counties and county organization; crime and criminals, extraditions, and rewards; fairs; immigration; Indians; invitations; Indian, school, railroad, and other land; legislation; federal and State military affairs; railroads; relief; the United States government; elections; fairs and expositions; centennials and conventions; the Freedmans Institute and relief associations; the Garfield Monument Fund; immigration; the African American exodus, microfilmed on Kansas Historical Society microfilm roll MS 79, available through interlibrary loan; Indians; invitations; justices of the peace; lands; the Militia; military affairs and special scouts; notaries public; receptions for presidents Grant and Hayes; railroads; relief; women’s suffrage; and prohibition in Kansas and other States. A folder - by - folder contents list is in the Detailed Description of the Records section, below.
The Proclamations subseries, no. 4, consists of notices proclaiming rewards for criminals, 1879 - 1883. Other proclamations are in Executive messages and proclamations, 1881-1882, series 05962, and Series 05959, Executive messages and proclamations, 1877 - 1921.
The series Extradition warrants, 1879-1880; no. 03770, contains two warrants in one folder. The reason why these are housed separately is unknown, but unlike many other warrants a county is not listed.
Executive messages and proclamations, 1881-1882, series 05962, are contained in one volume, Book B. The volume includes handwritten messages and proclamations, arranged chronologically, that were probably used as rough drafts for the printed and signed copies made public. Other proclamations are in the Correspondence received, 1879 - 1883, series, no. 03417, subseries 4, and Series 05959, Executive messages and proclamations, 1877 - 1921.
Additional records of Governor St. John are in separate series common to several governors including an Executive record (Official record), 1861-1879; Executive proclamations, 1861-1980; Pardon and parole files from the Women’s Industrial Farm, 1863-1919; Pardons, 1865-1883; Letter press books, 1865-1904; a Letter register, 1871-1895; a Record of death sentences, 1872-1906; and Death sentence warrants, 1872-1908; Requisitions on governor from governors of other states for persons accused of crimes, 1873-1960; County organization censuses, ca. 1873-ca. 1886; Applications for extradition requisitions: Subseries I and II, 1874-1953; Prisoners in Kansas State Penitentiary, ca. 1875-ca. 1897; and Citizenship pardons, 1876-1960 . Descriptions of each of them are found in the Detailed Description of the Records section, below.
The Kansas Historical Society also holds a large collection of John Pierce St. John’s personal papers (ms. collection 494). A finding aid to the collection is available on-line.
Contents List
Organization of the Records
Subgroup. Organized into 3 series by type of material.
Contents: Correspondence received, 1879-1883 (ser. 03417, 24 boxes) - Executive messages and proclamations, 1881-1882 (ser. 05962, 1 v.) - Extradition and requisition warrants, June 1879-Apr. 1880 (ser. 03770, 2 items).
Detailed Description of the Records
Series 03417. Correspondence Received, 1879-1883. 12 ft. (24 boxes)
Primarily letters received by Governor St. John, however there are also proclamations and a few petitions, reports, copies of letters sent, and other types of documents. Some proclamations may have also been interfiled with other items received relating to the subjects of the proclamations. Copies of letters sent are described below in the St. John portion of the series Letter Press Books, 1865-1904 (no. 03397).
Organized into 4 subseries: (1) General (Alphabetical) File, 1879-1883; (2) State Departments, 1873-1876 ; (3) Subject Files, 1879-1883; and (4) Proclamations, 1873-1876.
Subseries 1. General (Alphabetical) File, 1879-1883. 2 ft. (27 folders). Box 1 (027-03-08-07)
Letters received relating to positions, recommendations, & vacancies; Governor St. John’s addresses; State contracts; the extension of State jurisdiction to former Indian reservations; the judiciary & judicial procedure; legislation; requests for information, publications, or action; politics; services & goods offered for sale; taxation; transportation; public lands; U.S. Dept. of Interior, U.S. Dept. of State, U.S. Dept. of Treasury, U.S. Dept. of War, and interstate co-operation. Letters may have been filed here because there was not an appropriate place for them in the State Departments (no. 2) or Subject Files (no. 3) subseries, described below.
Arranged in alphabetical order by author.
Folders 1-16 |
A – P (1 per letter) |
Folder 17 |
Re – Ro |
Folder 18 |
Ry |
Folders 19-20 |
S – T |
Folder 21 |
Underwood – U.S. Indian |
Folder 22 |
U.S. Interior |
Folder 23 |
U.S. State |
Folder 24 |
U.S. Treasury |
Folder 25 |
U.S. War |
Folders 26-27 |
V – W, anonymous |
Subseries 2. State Departments, 1879-1883. 0.2 ft. (38 folders)
Letters from or relating to State offices: Some of the letters relate to personnel, vacancies, resignations, and appointments, but most pertain to the operation of individual State agencies. The letters request the Governor to take specific actions, ask his approval, send him information, ask him questions, tell of events, provide legal opinions, forward other letters and petitions, confirm or acknowledge gubernatorial actions, and request the Governor’s presence. Topics include organizing another Kansas’s cavalry regiment, supplies, boards of directors, inspections, State offices, judgeships, audits, the State treasury, federal taxation, State payments, prisoners, bonds, and fraud.
Arranged alphabetically by name of State agency.
Box 2, folder 1 |
Agricultural College, Kansas State |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 2 |
Agricultural, State Board of |
1879-1883 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 3 |
Attorney General |
1879-1883 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 4 |
Blind, School for the |
1879-1883 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 5 |
Charitable Institutions, Bd. of Trustees |
1879-1883 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 6 |
Indian Raid Claims, Commission to Examine |
1878-1879 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 7 |
Deaf and Dumb School |
1880-1881 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 8 |
Executive |
1879 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 9 |
Fiscal Agency (New York) |
1882 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 10 |
Fish Commissioner |
1879-1883 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 11 |
Historical Society |
1881 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 12 |
Horticultural Society |
1880 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 13 |
Idiotic and Imbecile Youth Asylum |
1881 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 14 |
Insane Asylum, Osawatomie |
1880-1882 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 15 |
Insane Asylum, Topeka |
1879-1881 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 16 |
Land Agent, State |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 17 |
Legislature |
1879 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 18 |
Legislature |
1881 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 19 |
Legislature |
1882 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 20 |
Medical Examiners, Board of, |
1879 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 21 |
Normal School, Emporia, Bd. of Regents |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 22 |
Penitentiary, Warden’s Recommendations |
1880 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 23 |
Penitentiary, Warden’s Recommendations |
1880 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 24 |
Penitentiary, Warden’s Recommendations |
1881 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 2, folder 25 |
Penitentiary, Warden’s Recommendations |
1882-1883 |
027-04-01-02 |
Box 3, folder 1 |
Penitentiary, Warden & Directors |
1879-1881 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 3, folder 2 |
Penitentiary, Warden’s Acknowledgements |
1879 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 3, folder 3 |
Penitentiary, Warden’s Acknowledgements |
1880 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 3, folder 4 |
Penitentiary, Warden’s Acknowledgements |
1881 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 3, folder 5 |
Penitentiary, Warden’s Acknowledgements |
1882 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 3, folder 6 |
Statehouse Commissioners, Board of, |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 3, folder 7 |
Supreme Court |
1879 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 3, folder 8 |
Treasurer |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 3, folder 9 |
University of Kansas, Chancellor & Regents |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 3, folder 10 |
Charitable Institutions, Board of Trustees |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 3, folder 11 |
Charitable Institutions, Board, A.T. Sharp |
1881 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 3, folder 12 |
Deaf & Dumb School, Superintendent |
1879-1880 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 3, folder 13 |
Detectives |
1879 |
027-04-01-03 |
Subseries 3. Subject Files, 1879-1883. 2 ft. (21 boxes).
Topics include applications, endorsements, and remonstrances & appointments to State positions; bonds; charitable & correctional institutions; cities & towns; claims; counties & county organization; crime & criminals, including the Bender family, extraditions, & rewards; fairs; immigration; Indians; invitations; Indian, school, railroad, & other land; legislation; federal & State military affairs; railroads; relief; and the United States government.
Arranged alphabetically by topic.
Applications, Endorsements and Remonstrances |
|||
Box 4, folder 1 |
Feeble Minded, School-Winfield |
1881 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 4, folder 2 |
Fish Commission |
1881-1882 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 4, folder 3 |
Governor’s Staff |
1879-1881 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 4, folder 4 |
Indian Raid Commission |
1879 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 4, folder 5 |
Insane Asylum |
1879 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 4, folder 6 |
Insurance, Superintendent |
1879 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 4, folder 7 |
Judicial Districts |
1879 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 4, folder 8 |
Judicial Districts : 6th |
1882 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 4, folder 9 |
Judicial Districts : 8th |
1881 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 4, folder 10 |
Judicial Districts : 9th-Ady, Houk and Reid |
1882 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 4, folder 11 |
Judicial Districts : 16th : Anderson & Robert |
1881 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 4, folder 12 |
Judicial Districts : 16th : Clayton & Joshua |
1880-1882 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 4, folder 13 |
Judicial District : 16th : Judge of : Cornell, A. B. |
1881 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 4, folder 14 |
Judicial District : 16th : judge of : Nimmocks, George W |
1881 |
027-04-01-03 |
Box 5, folder 1 |
Judicial District : 16th : judge of : Orner, George D |
1881-1882 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 2 |
Judicial District : 16th : judge of : Strang, J.C. |
1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 3 |
Judicial District : 17th : judge of : Morse, F.D. |
1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 4 |
Judicial District 17th : Judge of : Nellis, D.C. |
1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 5 |
Judicial District 17th : Judge of : Pratt, Louis |
1880-1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
K |
|||
Box 5, folder 6 |
Judicial Judge 17th : Judge of : Rathbone, |
1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
David |
|||
Box 5, folder 7 |
Judicial Judge 17th : Judge of : Reville, M.C. |
1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 8 |
Librarian, State |
1879-1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 9 |
Medical Society, Homeopathic |
1879 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 10 |
Militia : Brigadier General |
1879-1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 11 |
Militia : Major General |
1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 12 |
Militia : Surgeon General |
1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 13 |
Normal School, Emporia : President |
1882 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 14 |
Penitentiary : Chaplain |
1879-1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 15 |
Penitentiary : Directors, Board of |
1879-1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 16 |
Penitentiary : Warden |
1879-1880 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 17 |
Penitentiary : Guards |
1879 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 18 |
Railroad Commissioners, Board of |
1879-1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 19 |
Reform School |
1879-1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 20 |
Relief Commission |
1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 21 |
State House Commissioners, Board of |
1879 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 22 |
University, Board of Regents |
1879-1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 23 |
Veterinary |
1881 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 24 |
Applications for Enumerators and Supervisors |
1879-1880 |
027-04-01-04 |
Box 5, folder 25 |
Inquiries, Request for admission, |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-04 |
etc. |
|||
Box 6, folder 1 |
Cities & Towns : Atchison |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 2 |
Cities & Towns : Atwood |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 3 |
Cities & Towns : Beloit |
1879 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 4 |
Cities & Towns : Burlington |
1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folders 5 |
Cities & Towns : Clay Center |
1880 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 6 |
Cities & Towns : Columbus |
1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 7 |
Cities & Towns : Hutchinson |
1880 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 8 |
Cities & Towns : Independence |
1879 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 9 |
Cities & Towns : Kansas City |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 10 |
Cities & Towns : Lawrence |
1879 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 11 |
Cities & Towns : Manhattan |
1880 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 12 |
Cities & Towns : Newton |
1880 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 13 |
Cities & Towns : Osage City |
1879 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 14 |
Cities & Towns : Oswego |
1880 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 15 |
Cities & Towns : Topeka |
1879- 1881 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 16 |
Cities & Towns : Wakefield |
1879 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 17 |
Cities & Towns : Wellington |
1880 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 18 |
Cities &Towns : Winfield |
1879 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 19 |
Claims : Indian Raid of 1878 |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6 : folder 20 |
Claims : Price Raid |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 21 |
Claims : Quantrill Raid |
1880 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 22 |
Claims : Soldiers, Pensions, Bounties, etc. |
1880-1881 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 23 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Arizona |
1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 24 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Arkansas |
1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 25 |
Commissioners of Deeds : California |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 26 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Colorado |
1879-1881 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 27 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Connecticut |
1880-1881 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 28 |
Commissioners of Deeds : District of Columbia |
1880-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 29 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Georgia |
1880-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 30 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Illinois |
1880-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 31 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Kentucky |
1880-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 32 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Louisiana |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 33 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Maine |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 34 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Maryland |
1880-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 35 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Massachusetts |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 36 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Michigan |
1879-1880 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 37 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Minnesota |
1881 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 38 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Missouri |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 39 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Nebraska |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 40 |
Commissioners of Deeds : New Jersey |
1880 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 41 |
Commissioners of Deeds : New Mexico |
1881-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 42 |
Commissioners of Deeds : New York |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 43 |
Commissioners of Deeds : North Carolina |
1880 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 44 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Ohio |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 45 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Oregon |
1880 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 46 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Pennsylvania |
1879-1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 47 |
Commissioners of Deeds : South Carolina |
1882 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 48 |
Commissioners of Deeds : Texas |
1881 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 49 |
Commissioners of Deeds : England |
1881 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 6, folder 50 |
Commissioners of Deeds : France |
1881 |
027-04-01-05 |
Box 7, folder 1 |
Congratulatory Messages on St. John’s nomination and election to a second term. |
1880 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 2 |
Congratulatory Messages on St. John’s nomination for a third term. |
1882 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 3 |
Counties : Allen |
1879 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 4 |
Counties : Anderson |
1881 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 5 |
Counties : Atchison |
1880 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 6 |
Counties : Barbour (Barber) |
1880 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 7 |
Counties : Bourbon |
1879 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 8 |
Counties : Brown |
1879 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 9 |
Counties : Butler |
1881 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 10 |
Counties : Clay |
1879 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 11 |
Counties : Davis |
1881-1882 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folders 12-18 |
Counties : Decatur |
1879-1880 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 19 |
Counties : Dickinson |
1880 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 20 |
Counties : Doniphan |
1882 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 21 |
Counties : Edwards |
1879-1880 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 22 |
Counties : Ellsworth |
1879-1880 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 23 |
Counties : Foote (Gray) |
1879 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 24 |
Counties : Ford |
1879 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folder 25 |
Counties : Franklin |
1880 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 7, folders 26-29 |
Counties : Gove |
1880-1881 |
027-04-01-06 |
Box 8, folders 1-23 |
Counties : Graham |
1877-1880 |
027-04-01-07 |
Box 9, folder 1 |
Counties : Greenwood |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 2 |
Counties : Harper |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 3 |
Counties : Harvey |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 4 |
Counties : Hodgeman |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 5 |
Counties : Jackson |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 6 |
Counties : Jewell |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 7 |
Counties : Kingman |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 8 |
Counties : Labette |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 9 |
Counties : Lane |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 10 |
Counties : Lincoln |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 11 |
Counties : Lyon |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 12 |
Counties : McPherson |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 13 |
Counties : Marion |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 14 |
Counties : Mitchell |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 15 |
Counties : Morris |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folder 16 |
Counties : Nemaha |
1879-1883 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 9, folders 17-24 |
Counties : Ness |
1878-1881 |
027-04-02-01 |
Box 10, folder 1 |
Counties : Norton |
1880 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 10, folder 2 |
Counties : Osage |
1880-1882 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 10, folder 3 |
Counties : Osborne |
1880 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 10, folder 4 |
Counties : Ottawa |
1882 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 10, folder 5 |
Counties : Pawnee |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 10, folder 6 |
Counties : Phillips |
1880-1882 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 10, folders 7-16 |
Counties : Pratt |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 10, folders 17-20 |
Counties : Rawlins |
1879-1886 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 10, folder 21 |
Counties : Reno |
1879-1881 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 10, folder 22 |
Counties : Rice |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 10, folder 23 |
Counties : Riley |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 10, folder 24 |
Counties : Rush |
1880 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 10, folder 25 |
Counties : Russell |
1879 |
027-04-02-02 |
Box 11, folder 1 |
Counties : Saline |
1879 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 2 |
Counties : Scott |
1880 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 3 |
Counties : Sedgwick |
1879 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 4 |
Counties : Shawnee |
1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folders 5-7 |
Counties : Sheridan |
1880 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folders 8-13 |
Counties : Stafford |
1879 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 14 |
Counties : Sumner |
1879 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folders 15-16 |
Counties : Trego |
1879-1881 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 17 |
Counties : Wallace |
1879-1881 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 18 |
Counties : Washington |
1881 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 19 |
Counties : Wilson |
1880-1883 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 20 |
Counties : Wyandotte |
1879 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 21 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Arizona |
1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 22 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Arkansas |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 23 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Colorado |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 24 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Dakota Territory |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 25 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Illinois |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 26 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Indiana |
1880-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 27 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Iowa |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 28 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Missouri |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 29 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Nebraska |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 30 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Nevada |
1880 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 31 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : New Mexico |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 32 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Ohio |
1879-1880 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 33 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Pennsylvania |
1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 34 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions BY Kansas on other states : Texas |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 35 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions ON Kansas by other States : Arkansas |
1879 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 36 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions ON Kansas by other States : Cherokee Nation |
1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 37 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions ON Kansas by other States : Colorado |
1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 38 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions ON Kansas by other States : Illinois |
1879 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 39 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions ON Kansas by other States : Indiana |
1879 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 40 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions ON Kansas by other States : Iowa |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 41 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions ON Kansas by other States : Missouri |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 42 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions ON Kansas by other States : Nebraska |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 43 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions ON Kansas by other States : Pennsylvania |
1879 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 44 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions ON Kansas by other States : Texas |
1879 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 45 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions ON Kansas by other States : West Virginia |
1879 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 11, folder 46 |
Crime & Criminals: Extradition papers : Requisitions ON Kansas by other States : Wisconsin |
1882 |
027-04-02-03 |
Box 12, folder 1 |
Crime & Criminals: Miscellaneous : Bancroft Case |
1879-1881 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 2 |
Crime & Criminals: Miscellaneous : Bender Case |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 3 |
Crime & Criminals: Miscellaneous : Hillmon Case |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 4 |
Crime & Criminals: Miscellaneous : Report of Commutations of Sentence |
1879-1880 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 5 |
Crime & Criminals: Miscellaneous : Report of Pardons granted |
1879-1880 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 6 |
Crime & Criminals: Miscellaneous : List of Returned Warrants |
1879 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 7 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Burke - Wilkerson |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 8 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Bandle, George |
1880 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 9 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Barker, James & Jones, Robert, (alias Triplett) |
1879-1880 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 10 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Beal, L.D. |
1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 11 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Bedford, Henry and Garten, John |
1880 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 12 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Bird, J.W. |
1881-1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 13 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Burks, James & Walters, Samuel |
1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 14 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Daulton, Charles & Fuller, James |
1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 15 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Edington, William & Hannah |
1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 16 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Goltra, Joseph W. |
1879-1880 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 17 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Gwinder & Simpson |
1880 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 18 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Henson, Dan |
1879 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 19 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Howard, Bill |
1879 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 20 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Jennings, William |
1879 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 21 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Jones James |
1879 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 22 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : McClarney, Patrick |
1879-1881 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 23 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : McClain, R.G. (George) |
1880-1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 24 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : McCoy, John M, |
1879 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 25 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : McPherson, Frank |
1879 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 26 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Pearson, Jack and Phil |
1880 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 27 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Plowman, George A, |
1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 28 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Stackhouse, Charles, |
1879 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 29 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Steward, George, |
1881 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 30 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : True, J. B. |
1879 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 31 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Wells, John, |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 32 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Wilson J. C. |
1879 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 33 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Wooten, Thomas & McCollom, James, |
1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 12, folder 34 |
Crime & Criminals: Reward Papers : Unidentified (By County) |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-04 |
Box 13, folder 1 |
Elections |
1881-1882 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 2 |
Fairs, Expositions, Centennials and Conventions: American Humane Association – St. Louis AGRI & Mechanical Association. |
1879-1882 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 3 |
Cincinnati Industrial Exposition |
1879 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 4 |
International Dairy Fair, New York, |
1879 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 5 |
Mississippi River Improvement Convention, |
1881 |
027-04-02-05 |
Council Bluffs, |
|||
Box 13, folder 6 |
Mississippi Valley Cane Growers Association, |
1882 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 7 |
National Agricultural Society, |
1879 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 8 |
National Tariff Convention, New York, |
1881 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 9 |
National and International Convention, New |
1878 |
027-04-02-05 |
Orleans, |
|||
Box 13, folder 10 |
Soldiers Reunions, |
1879-1881 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 11 |
World’s Fair, (1883) New York, |
1879-1881 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 12 |
Yorktown Centennial, |
1879-1881 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 13 |
Freedman’s Institute, Relief Association, |
1879-1880 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 14 |
Freedman’s Institute, Relief Association, |
1881 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 15 |
Freedman’s Institute, Relief Association, |
1882 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 16 |
Garfield Monument Fund, |
1881-1882 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 17 |
Immigration |
1879 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 18 |
Immigration, |
1880 |
027-04-02-05 |
Box 13, folder 19 |
Immigration, |
1881 |
027-04-02-05 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1879 Apr. |
027-04-02-05 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1879 May |
027-04-02-06 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1879 June |
027-04-02-06 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1879 July |
027-04-02-06 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1879 Aug. |
027-04-02-06 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1879 Sept. |
027-04-02-06 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1879 Oct. |
027-04-02-06 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1879 Nov. |
027-04-02-06 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1879 Dec. |
027-04-02-06 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1880 Jan. |
027-04-02-06 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1880 Feb. |
027-04-02-07 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1880 Mar. |
027-04-02-07 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1880 Apr.-June |
027-04-02-07 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1880 July-Sept. |
027-04-02-07 |
MICROFILM: MS 79 |
Immigration : Negro Exodus |
1880 Oct.-Dec. |
027-04-02-07 |
Box 15, folder 6 |
Indians |
1879 |
027-04-02-07 |
Box 15, folder 7 |
Indians |
1880 |
027-04-02-07 |
Box 15, folder 8 |
Indians |
1882 |
027-04-02-07 |
Box 15, folder 9 |
Indians : Trial of Dull Knife & Cheyenne |
1879 |
027-04-02-07 |
Box 15, folder 10 |
Invitations |
1879 |
027-04-02-07 |
Box 15, folder 11 |
Invitations |
1880 |
027-04-02-07 |
Box 16, folder 1 |
Invitations : Speeches |
1880 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 2 |
Invitations : Speeches |
1881-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Justices of the Peace |
|||
Box 16, folder 3 |
Allen & Atchison Counties, |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 4 |
Barber, and Bourbon Counties, |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 5 |
Butler County, |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 6 |
Chase, Chautauqua, and Cherokee Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 7 |
Clay, Cloud, and Cowley Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 8 |
Crawford, Davis, and Decatur Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 9 |
Doniphan, Douglas, and Edwards Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 10 |
Elk, Ellis, and Ellsworth Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 11 |
Ford, Franklin, and Graham Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 12 |
Greenwood, Harper, and Harvey Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 13 |
Hodgeman, Jackson, and Jefferson Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 14 |
Jewell, Kingman, and Labette Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 15 |
Leavenworth, Lincoln, and Lyon Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 16 |
McPherson County |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 17 |
Marion, Marshall, and Mitchell Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 18 |
Montgomery, Morris, and Nemaha Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 19 |
Neosho, Ness, and Osage Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 20 |
Osborne, Ottawa, and Pawnee Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 21 |
Phillips, Pottawatomie, and Pratt Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 22 |
Rawlins, Reno, and Republic Counties |
1879-1882 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 23 |
Rice, Riley, and Rooks Counties |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 24 |
Rush, Russell, and Saline Counties |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 25 |
Shawnee, Sheridan, and Smith Counties |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 16, folder 26 |
Stafford, Sumner, and Trego Counties |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-01 |
Box 17, folder 1 |
Wallace, Washington, and Wilson Counties |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 2 |
Woodson and Wyandotte Counties |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 3 |
Lands |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 4 |
Lands, Indian |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 5 |
Lands, Railroad |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 6 |
Lands, Salt Spring |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 7 |
Lands, School |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 8 |
Lands, School Indemnity |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 9 |
Lands, University |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 10 |
Legislation |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 11 |
Livestock |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 12 |
Military Affairs : Fort Hays |
1882 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 13 |
Militia |
1879 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 14 |
Militia |
1880-1882 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 15 |
Militia : Paola Rifles Company |
1879-1883 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 16 |
Militia : Patrol Guard |
1879-1880 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 17, folder 17 |
Military Affairs : Special Scouts |
1879 |
027-04-03-02 |
Box 18, folder 1 |
Military Affairs : Special Scouts |
1880 |
027-04-03-03 |
Box 18, folder 2 |
Military Affairs : Special Scouts |
1881-1882 |
027-04-03-03 |
Box 18, folder 3 |
Notaries public |
1879 |
027-04-03-03 |
Box 18, folder 4 |
Notaries public |
1880 |
027-04-03-03 |
Box 18, folder 5 |
President Grant Reception |
1880 |
027-04-03-03 |
Box 18, folder 6 |
President Hayes Reception |
1879 |
027-04-03-03 |
Box 18, folder 7 |
Railroads |
1879 |
027-04-03-03 |
Box 18, folder 8 |
Relief |
1879 Mar.-Aug. |
027-04-03-03 |
Box 18, folder 9 |
Relief |
1879 Sept. -Dec. |
027-04-03-03 |
Box 18, folder 10 |
Relief |
1880 Jan.-Feb. |
027-04-03-03 |
Box 18, folder 11 |
Relief |
1880 Mar.-Apr. |
027-04-03-03 |
Box 19, folder 1 |
Relief |
1880 May-June |
027-04-03-04 |
Box 19, folder 2 |
Relief |
1880 July-Dec. |
027-04-03-04 |
Box 19, folder 3 |
Relief |
1881 |
027-04-03-04 |
Box 19, folder 4 |
Suffrage, Women’s |
1882 |
027-04-03-04 |
Box 19, folder 5 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1879 Jan.-June |
027-04-03-04 |
Box 19, folder 6 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1879 July-Dec. |
027-04-03-04 |
Box 19, folder 7 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1880 Jan.-Feb. |
027-04-03-04 |
Box 19, folder 8 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1880 Mar.-Apr. |
027-04-03-04 |
Box 20, folder 1 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1880 May-June |
027-04-03-05 |
Box 20, folder 2 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1880 July |
027-04-03-05 |
Box 20, folder 3 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1880 Aug.-Sept. |
027-04-03-05 |
Box 20, folder 4 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1880 Oct.-Nov. |
027-04-03-05 |
Box 20, folder 5 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1880 Dec. |
027-04-03-05 |
Box 20, folder 6 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1881 Jan.-Feb. |
027-04-03-05 |
Box 21, folder 1 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1881 Mar.-Apr. |
027-04-03-06 |
Box 21, folder 2 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1881 May-June |
027-04-03-06 |
Box, 21 folder 3 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1881 July-Aug. |
027-04-03-06 |
Box 21, folder 4 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1881 Sept.-Oct. |
027-04-03-06 |
Box 21, folder 5 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1881 Nov.-Dec. |
027-04-03-06 |
Box 22, folder 1 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1882 Jan. |
027-04-03-07 |
Box 22, folder 2 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1882 Feb. |
027-04-03-07 |
Box 22, folder 3 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1882 Mar. |
027-04-03-07 |
Box 22, folder 4 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1882 Apr. |
027-04-03-07 |
Box 22, folder 5 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1882 May |
027-04-03-07 |
Box 22, folder 6 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1882 June |
027-04-03-07 |
Box 22, folder 7 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1882 July |
027-04-03-07 |
Box 22, folder 8 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1882 Aug. |
027-04-03-07 |
Box 22, folder 9 |
Temperance (Prohibition) |
1882 Sept-Dec. |
027-04-03-07 |
Box 23, folder 1 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1881 Jan.-Feb. |
027-04-04-01 |
Box 23, folder 2 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1881 Mar.-Apr. |
027-04-04-01 |
Box 23, folder 3 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1881 May-June |
027-04-04-01 |
Box 23, folder 4 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1881 July-Aug. |
027-04-04-01 |
Box 23, folder 5 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1881 Sept.-Oct. |
027-04-04-01 |
Box 23, folder 6 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1881 Nov.-Dec. |
027-04-04-01 |
Box 24, folder 1 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1882 Jan. |
027-04-04-02 |
Box 24, folder 2 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1882 Feb. |
027-04-04-02 |
Box 24, folder 3 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1882 Mar. |
027-04-04-02 |
Box 24, folder 4 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1882 Apr. |
027-04-04-02 |
Box 24, folder 5 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1882 May |
027-04-04-02 |
Box 24, folder 6 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1882 June |
027-04-04-02 |
Box 24, folder 7 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1882 July-Aug. |
027-04-04-02 |
Box 24, folder 8 |
Temperance (Prohibition) : Other States |
1882 Sept.-Dec. |
027-04-04-02 |
Subseries 4. Proclamations, 1879 - 1882. 14 items. 072-03-11-01
Notices issued by the governor proclaiming rewards for criminals.
Arranged numerically.
Series 05962. Executive Messages and Proclamations, 1881 - 1882. 1 v. 024-14-01-01
Contains handwritten messages and proclamations that were probably used as rough drafts for the printed and signed copies made public. Book B only. Other proclamations are in the Correspondence received, 1879 - 1883, series, no. 03417; Proclamations, 1879 - 1882, subseries 4; and Series 05959, Executive messages and proclamations, 1877 - 1921.
Arranged chronologically.
Pardon Attorney
Records of the Pardon, Parole, and Extradition Attorney
Series 03770.Extradition and Requisition Warrants, June 1879 - Apr. 1880. 2 items. 031-13-03-05
Two warrants dated 1879 and 1880 in one folder. The reason why these are housed separately is unknown, but unlike many other warrants a county is not listed.
Other records series of multiple governors containing documents relating to the St. John administration:
Series 03814. REQUISITIONS ON GOVERNOR FROM GOVERNORS OF OTHER STATES FOR PERSONS ACCUSED OF CRIMES, 1873-1960. [2] v. + 1 bundle. 025-12-04-01
The bundle covers years 1886-1898 and does not have any type of arrangement. This bundle contains requisitions and supporting documents that were sent to the Governor's office from other States. Volumes cover the years 1873-1932 and have alphabetical indexes in the front. Entries are arranged chronologically and list the case number, the date of request, fugitive name, the requesting State, name of agent, crime charged, and county suspect is believed to located in.
Volumes arranged chronologically.
St. John administration: Vol. B, pp. 12-43
Series 03660. PARDON AND PAROLE FILES: WOMEN’S INDUSTRIAL FARM, 1863 - 1919. 63 ft. (151 boxes). ACCESS RESTRICTED. 032-01-02-01 thru 032-03-07-04
Contains letters requesting opinions on parole, Parole Board verdict or certificate, and a prisoner history. Interfiled with Pardon and Parole Files for the Kansas State Industrial Reformatory, 1927-1945 (series 03659) and Parole Certificates Issued by the Coffeyville City Court, 1932-1936 (series 03661), as part of Subseries I, 63 ft. (151 boxes), 1863-1919, arranged alphabetically. Women are only contained in Subseries I; after 1919 women’s files are arranged separately as series 06304, Pardon and Parole of Female Inmates.
Arranged alphabetically by inmates’ names.
Series 03397. LETTER PRESS BOOKS, 1865 - 1904. [143] v. 027-02-08-04 thru 027-03-06-02
Exact copies of texts of letters sent by Governors S. J. Crawford and James Madison Harvey through Willis Joshua Bailey; there are no letters for Nehemiah Green. Most of the letters sent respond to concerns expressed to the governor. Subjects are generally similar to those in letters received by governors, including State institutions, departments, & programs; appointments; events; counties; investigations; the cattle trade; land; claims; the military; State funds; immigration; Native American issues; laws & legislation; pardons; and other topics mirroring letters received by governors. Recipients included citizens of Kansas & other States, other elected officials, heads of State institutions & departments, the adjutant general, members of the Kansas congressional delegation, other governors, members of the Legislature, railroad officials, newspaper editors, military officers, local officials, and the president & vice president.
Volumes arranged chronologically.
Some volumes indexed alphabetically by recipient and subject.
St. John administration: v. 14 - 46 (boxes 4 14, 027-03-01-03 thru 027-03-02-06)
Series 03781. DEATH SENTENCE WARRANTS, 1872 - 1908. 1 v. (unpaged). 26-15-08-01
Handwritten and typescript warrants that were sent to the Governor’s Office after the convicted person’s sentencing for the governor to approve when the date and time of execution had been set. Also included are related documents that were written by the sentencing judge, county sheriff or attorney, clerk of the District court, or jury foreman.
Arranged generally chronologically.
St. John administration: 1879 - 1882
Series 03814. REQUISITIONS ON GOVERNOR FROM GOVERNORS OF OTHER STATES FOR PERSONS ACCUSED OF CRIMES, 1873 – 1960. [2] v. + 1 bundle. 025-12-04-01
The bundle covers years 1886-1898 and does not have any type of arrangement. This bundle contains requisitions and supporting documents that were sent to the Governor's office from other States. Volumes cover the years 1873-1932 and have alphabetical indexes in the front. Entries are arranged chronologically and list the case number, the date of request, fugitive name, the requesting State, name of agent, crime charged, and county suspect is believed to located in.
Volumes arranged chronologically.
St. John administration: Vol. B, pp. 12 – 43
Series 03451. COUNTY ORGANIZATION CENSUSES, ca. 1873 - ca. 1886. 0.8 ft. in 2 boxes. 028-03-01-01 thru 028-03-01-02
Census rolls for enumerations conducted 1873 1886. Entries contain number of householders, ages, and number of acres under cultivation. Some also contain gender, number of voters, number of schoolchildren and location.
Arranged alphabetically by county.
Series 03784. PRISONERS IN KANSAS STATE PENITENTIARY, ca. 1875 - ca. 1897. 1 v. 026-15-08-01
Contains information furnished to the governor about each prisoner in the Kansas State Penitentiary (Lansing) (KSP) such as name, county, date of sentences, crime, term of sentence and remarks. Other records of prisoners for this period may be found in the records of the KSP, record group 525, and on an alphabetical, card Index to the Inmate Records at the Kansas State Penitentiary, 1861 1952, on Kansas State Historical Society microfilm rolls AR 7458 AR 7469.
Arranged alphabetically by the first letter of the prisoner’s surname, thereunder roughly chronologically by date of entry.
Series 05959. EXECUTIVE MESSAGES AND PROCLAMATIONS, 1877 - 1921. 6 v. 024-14-02-01 thru 024-14-03-01
Handwritten copies of messages and proclamations that were probably used as rough drafts for the printed and signed copies made public. They do not contain exact dates for each, but the volumes do have date spans noted. They also contain an alphabetical index.
St. John administration: vol. A (024-14-02-01), pp. 102 - 393
Series 03811. EXTRADITIONS, 1877 - 1960. 1 ft. (3 v.) 020-10-06-01 thru 020-10-06-02
Contains name, demanding state, crime & where it was committed, agent name, and information about the return of the warrant.
Arranged by application number and date.
Each volume contains an alphabetical index.
St. John administration: v. 1 (020-10-06-01), pp. 14 - 40
Records of the governor’s pardon attorney
Series 03789. PARDONS, 1865 - 1883. 4 v. 059-08-01-20
Includes date pardoned, name, county, crime, sentence, and remarks.
St. John administration: v. 4, 1879 - 1883
Series 04090. APPLICATIONS FOR EXTRADITION REQUISITIONS: SUBSERIES I AND II, 1874 - 1953. 37 ft. 060-03-03-03 thru 060-03-04-20
Applications to other States to extradite criminals for prosecution in Kansas. They show the State applied to, name, crime, and date issued; most also contain court papers or similar documents explaining the case. The application itself was an envelope into which all the related documents were placed. Collection is missing the years 1886-1892; years 1937-1953 have not been refoldered and remain in their original application envelopes. Subseries I: #65-A-1 to 594-A-62 (1874-1885); Subseries II: #1871-B-6 to 6300 (1893-1953).
Arranged by file number.
St. John administration: boxes 1 - 3 (060-03-03-03 thru 060-03-03-05)
Series 03802. CITIZENSHIP PARDONS, 1876 - 1960. 8 ft. (22 v.) 020-13-10-01 thru 020-04-01-02, 026-15-08-02 thru 026-15-10-02, 35-08-05-02
Copies of declarations of pardon, which contain information about the crime committed, date of pardon, and the governor’s signature on a preprinted declaration form. The first subseries covers 1879 1933 and the second subseries covers 1933 - 1960. Also contained in this collection are citizenship pardon stubs, which cover 1876 - 1883. The stubs are arranged chronologically in three smaller volumes and do not contain an index or signatures.
Entries arranged chronologically.
Alphabetical index in each volume.
St. John administration: Stubs, v. [1 - 3] (035-08-05-02), no. 68 - 649½
Series 03791. RECORD OF PARDONS, 1877 - 1888. 0.7 ft. (2 v.) 026-15-07-01
Contains name, county, crime, sentence, reason for pardon, and executive action & reasons. Does not usually list dates for each application.
Arranged chronologically by application number.
Alphabetical index.
St. John administration: vol. A, no. 167 - 477
Series 03769. PARDON ORDERS AND COMMUTATION OF SENTENCE ORDERS, 1878 - 1882. 0.4 ft. (1 box). 031-13-03-04
Issued by the Governor to the Secretary of State. Pardons cover 1878 - 1880, while sentence commutations cover 1878 - 1883.
Arranged alphabetically.
Series 03768. CITIZENSHIP PARDON ORDERS, 1878 - 1884. 0.8 ft. (2 boxes). 031-13-03-02 thru 031-13-03-03
Issued by the governor to the secretary of State.
Arranged alphabetically.
Contents: Box 1. A-L - box 2. M-Z.
Related Records
Records of the Kansas Attorney General’s Office, record group 82
Records of the Kansas Secretary of State’s Office, record group 622
Other Finding Aid
Copies of this finding aid are available in the State Archives & Library and on its web site, http://www.kshs.org .
Bibliography
Drury, James W. The Government of Kansas, 3d ed. Lawrence: Regents Press of Kansas, ©1980. Available in the Kansas Historical Society (KsHS) State Archives & Library: call no. K 350.7 D845 1980.
Harder, Marvin A. The Governor of Kansas: An Analysis of Decision-Making Opportunities, Constraints, and Resources. Topeka, Kans.: Capitol Complex Center, University of Kansas, 1981, ©1982. Available in the KsHS State Archives & Library: call no. SP 378 Z C172 pam.v.1 no. 1.
Kansas, Governor, 1879-1883 (St. John). Biennial Message of John P. St. John, Governor, to the Legislature of Kansas, 1881. Topeka, Kans.: Kansas Publishing House, 1881. Available in the KsHS State Archives & Library: call no. SP 353.03 K13.
Ross, Edith Connelley. “John Pierce St. John,” in William Elsey Connelley, A Standard History of Kansas and Kansans. Chicago: Lewis, 1918, v. 2, chapter 53, pt. 1. Viewed 8 Nov. 2006 on the Internet: http://skyways.lib.ks.us/genweb/archives/1918ks/v2/ch53p1.html. Also available in the Kansas Historical Society (KsHS) State Archives & Library: call no.: Ref. K 978.1 C76 1918.
Socolofsky, Homer E. Kansas Governors. Lawrence, Kans.: University Press of Kansas, ©1990. Available in the KsHS State Archives & Library: call no. K BB So13.
The Topeka Daily Capital, obituary of John P. St. John, Sept. 1, 1916. KsHS microfilm roll T193.
Legions of America. Nicodemus Kansas, A Black Pioneer Town. Nov. 8, 2006.
Index Terms
Persons
St. John, John Pierce, 1833-1916. (subject and co-creator)
Corporate Names
Kansas. Governor (1879-1883 : St. John)-Archives.
Kansas. Governor (1879-1883 : St. John)-Records and correspondence.
Geographic Names
Kansas-Military policy.
Kansas-Officials and employees-Selection and appointment.
Kansas-Politics and government-1865-1950.
Subjects
African American pioneers-Kansas.
African Americans-Colonization-Kansas.
Civil-military relations-Kansas.
County government-Kansas.
Criminal justice, Administration of-Kansas.
Criminals-Kansas.
Extradition-Kansas.
Justices of the peace-Kansas.
Liquor laws-Kansas.
Prohibition-Kansas.
Public institutions-Kansas.
Public lands-Kansas.
Public welfare-Kansas.
State-local relations-Kansas.
Document Types
Government correspondence- Kansas.
Proclamations-Kansas.
Public records-Kansas.
Occupations
Governors-Kansas-Archives.
Governors-Kansas-Messages.
Additional Information for Researchers
Restrictions on Access
None
Restrictions on Use
Notice: This material may be protected by copyright law (Title 17, U.S. Code).
Most documents created by governmental entities, including the State of Kansas, are considered in the public domain, although copyright to documents found in public records that were written by individuals or organizations and sent to government agencies may be owned by the writers or their heirs.
Preferred Citation
Note: [document, folder, subseries, or series description], St. John administration (1879 - 1883), records of the Kansas Governor’s Office, State archives record group 252, State Archives & Library, Kansas Historical Society, Topeka.
Bibliography: Kansas, Governor’s Office, St. John administration (1879 - 1883). Records, 1874- 1883. State archives record group 252, State Archives & Library, Kansas Historical Society, Topeka.
Acquisition Information
Transfer: Office of the Governor, date unknown
Processing Information
Inventory written by David F. Manning, volunteer , 2007.
Accruals
No additional records are expected.