Box 1902
Contains 22 Results:
Sub-Series 1: Court Records:, 1883-1921
Contains court cases involving Houck's land and railroad properties. The cases are from all different jurisdictions from Common Pleas to United States Supreme Court. The majority of the cases are from Circuit Court. Also included is correspondence. Some records relate to the Little River Drainage District, 1883-1920.
Louis Houck Papers
Correspondence, maps, business and railroad papers, court records, artifacts and ephemera, from the various business ventures of Houck, Southeast Missouri railroad entrepreneur and opponent of the Little River Drainage project.
Supreme Court of Missouri, 1909, 1910, 1910
The collection consists of correspondence, maps, business and railroad papers, and court records from Louis Houck's various entrepreneurial ventures.
Supreme Court of Missouri, 1907 - 1911
The collection consists of correspondence, maps, business and railroad papers, and court records from Louis Houck's various entrepreneurial ventures.
Supreme Court of Missouri, 1916
The collection consists of correspondence, maps, business and railroad papers, and court records from Louis Houck's various entrepreneurial ventures.
United States Circuit Court Eastern Division, 1887
The collection consists of correspondence, maps, business and railroad papers, and court records from Louis Houck's various entrepreneurial ventures.
United States Circuit Court, 1891
The collection consists of correspondence, maps, business and railroad papers, and court records from Louis Houck's various entrepreneurial ventures.
United States Circuit Court Eastern Division, 1904
The collection consists of correspondence, maps, business and railroad papers, and court records from Louis Houck's various entrepreneurial ventures.
District Court of the United States, 1913, 1915, 1915
The collection consists of correspondence, maps, business and railroad papers, and court records from Louis Houck's various entrepreneurial ventures.
United States Court of Appeals, 8th Circuit, 1913
The collection consists of correspondence, maps, business and railroad papers, and court records from Louis Houck's various entrepreneurial ventures.