104,242 research outputs found
Unidentified Children
These children are most likely Jean and William T. McCulloch. The McCulloch register identifies this image as "McCulloch Family." The date assigned to this photograph is approximate
Unidentified Children
These children are most likely Jean and William T. McCulloch. The McCulloch register identifies this image as "McCulloch Family." The date assigned to this photograph is approximate
Unidentified Children
These children are most likely Jean, William T., and Patricia McCulloch. The McCulloch register identifies this image as "McCulloch Family." The date assigned to this photograph is approximate
Ben McCulloch House, Guadalupe County, Texas
Photograph shows the west (front) and south elevations of the house, built in the 1850s by T. H. Holloman and later sold to Ben McCulloch.''Inscription at bottom reads: "Ben McCulloch Place (Nephew of Gen. Ben McCulloch)
Letter to Hugh C. McCulloch from Sam T. Walker
Scanned and Uploaded by Will Clinton '19.This letter was sent from Mobile, Alabama to Honorable Hugh McCulloch, Secretary of the Treasury. This letter is a petition by Samuel T. Walker to allow him to trade cotton through the Union lines
Plaque taken from the Old Stacy Bridge, Coleman & McCulloch County
Plaque taken from the Old Stacy Bridge, Coleman County. "Built by Missouri Valley Bridge & Iron Co. Hess and Skinner Agts. Leavenworth Kansas. McCulloch County Judge Harvey Walker, McCulloch County Commissioners Joe Williams, J. J. Armor, J.L. Smith, H. E. McBride, W. S. Dickenson, J. R. Gault, J. P. Sheridan. Coleman County Judge T. J. White, Coleman County Commissioners Jno. R. Havens, S.H. Brown, J. M. Parker, D. T. Chllis. Taken from Old Stacy Bridge 1962.
[Confederate Veterans Reunion, Camp Ben McCulloch, Driftwood, Texas]
Group portrait at the Confederate Veterans' Reunion in Driftwood, Texas.Recto: [handwritten] Camp Ben McCulloch, Driftwood 1912. [imprinted] W. G. Ireland, Traveling Artist, Kyle, Texas. Verso: [handwritten] Mrs W A [illegible]
Confederate empire and the Indian treaties : Pike, McCulloch, and the Five Civilized Tribes, 1861-1862.
From its beginning, the Confederacy looked to expand in power and territory by courting the Five Civilized Tribes away from the United States. To accomplish this, the Confederacy sent an unlikely pair of ambassadors: lawyer-negotiator Albert Pike and former Indian fighter Benjamin McCulloch. While Pike signed treaties with the tribes, McCulloch began organizing the Indians as Confederate soldiers. Pike took over equipping and training the various Indian units and led them to join the main Confederate army in Arkansas. This army, including Pike's Indians,suffered defeat in the 1862 Battle of Pea Ridge. McCulloch's death in the battle, Pike's forced resignation afterward, and the defeat itself doomed Confederate efforts to dominate the frontier. Despite their substantial help to the Confederates, the Five Tribes received little help from Richmond, and paid a massive price for trying to get out of United States protection in unequal and unjust treaties after the war
Letter, [Author unclear] to Paulina T. Merritt
Handwritten letter to Paulina Merritt from an unknown author, October 1, 1876.
It Is a Constitution We Are Expounding: John Marshall, Spencer Roane, and the Fundamental Conflicts Surrounding McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
Using a blend of primary and secondary sources, this research paper examines the lesser-known newspaper debate between Chief Justice John Marshall and Judge Spencer Roane of the Virginia Court of Appeals. The purpose of this research is to answer one question: What were the fundamental issues that divided early Americans as demonstrated by the landmark case of McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)? To contribute to the ongoing discussion of McCulloch and its significance, my paper attempts to understand the issues surrounding McCulloch within its broader, historical context. Instead of confining its importance to the Second Bank of the United States, I identify McCulloch as a judicial case turned political—a divisive instance of constitutional conflict between Hamiltonian nationalism and Madisonian republicanism
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