Showing 13151 - 10000 of +10000 Records

Winslow, John (Minot)
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: Revolutionary War Land Grant Application Records


Land Office Correspondences (July 1835)
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: Revolutionary War Land Grant Application Records


Missing Certificate Notices
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: Revolutionary War Land Grant Application Records


Woodbridge, Christopher (Wiscasset)
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: Revolutionary War Land Grant Application Records


Young, James (Readfield)
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: Revolutionary War Land Grant Application Records


Webber, Noah (Lincoln)
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: Revolutionary War Land Grant Application Records


Welch, Paul (York)
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: Revolutionary War Land Grant Application Records


West, Isaac (Jay)
  • Type: OBJECT
  • Collection: Revolutionary War Land Grant Application Records


Kennebec County Supreme Judicial Court (1799-1929)
Kennebec County was established February 20, 1799, and the Supreme Judicial Court held at least one session in the County each year thereafter until the Court ceased riding the circuit in 1929. Originally established under the governmental authority of Massachusetts, the Supreme Judicial Court maintained jurisdiction over civil cases, capital cases, offenses of a public nature, and crimes against the public good. In 1820 the Supreme Judicial Court was reauthorized under the Constitution of the State of Mane. The Supreme Judicial Court was granted jurisdiction of all types of cases; all cases involving suits by or against the State; and all appeals of all capital and other offices of a public nature. The Supreme Judicial Court of the State of Maine had at least one session in all 16 counties until 1929 when it sat primarily as the Law Court with appellate powers in criminal and civil cases.


Finding Aids and Reference Material
This collection includes Archives-created posters and publications as well as unpublished guides that provide explanations of some of the diverse materials held at the Archives. It features a list of Maine men who perished at the infamous Andersonville prison during the Civil War, a history of the wild lands of Maine (which served as a revenue source for the State) and a report on claims regarding island ownership from 1913. Additionally, there is a guide to the Indian Affairs Collection, which was compiled as part of a federally-funded project by the Civil Works Administration in 1934. Although this guide is incomplete, it organizes Wabanaki-related materials found within the Maine Executive Council collection.