Archives & Library Special Collections
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Call Number: 1974.004
Extent: 0.01 Linear feet, in one folder
The collection includes one item, the 1672 judgment of British colonial New York governor Edmond Andros (1637-1714) concerning the estate of the late Captain John Underhill (circa 1597-1672) of Oyster Bay, Long Island. In his will, Underhill had left his estate to his wife, Elizabeth. Elizabeth died intestate. Andros’s judgment named Underhill’s eldest son, John, administrator of the estate.
John Underhill (circa 1597-1672) was a colonial military leader and magistrate. In the 1640s he moved from New England to Flushing, Long Island. After his second marriage, to Elizabeth Feake in the late 1650s, he moved to Oyster Bay, L.I., establishing an estate called Killingworth. Underhill helped the English gain control over New Amsterdam in 1664, became a surveyor of customs for Long Island, and eventually high constable and under-sheriff of North Riding, Yorkshire (L.I.).
Names:
- Andros, Edmund, 1637-1714
- Underhill, John, d. 1672
- New York (Colony)
Places:
- Long Island (N.Y.)
- Oyster Bay (N.Y.)
Subjects:
- Decedents’ estates
- Executors and administrators — New York (State) — Queens County
- Governors — New York (State)
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Call Number: 1985.045
Extent: 0.25 Linear feet, in one folder
A logbook of arrests by police officers in Brooklyn, dated 1860 to 1863 and measuring 0.25 linear feet. The logbook records individuals who were arrested and booked by the Brooklyn Police. Each entry includes the name of the individual arrested, the date on which the arrest and booking took place, the time at which the person was booked, and the offense for which the person was arrested. The specific precinct to which this logbook belonged is not specified.
Names:
- New York (City). Police Dept
Subjects:
- Crime — New York (State) — Kings County
- Law enforcement — New York (State) — Kings County
- Police — New York (State) — Kings County
Types of material:
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Call Number: 1986.034
Extent: 0.06 Linear feet, in one folder
A booklet containing a Kings County lien law passed on June 8, 1853. The law permitted building contractors to place a lien on the owner’s building an/or materials or land on which the contractors worked.
Names:
Places:
- Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.)
Subjects:
- Real estate business — Law and legislation — New York (State) — Kings County
Types of material:
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Call Number: 2006.023
Extent: 2.18 Linear feet, in two manuscript boxes and one oversize box.
This collection contains documents and news clippings of Jacob A. Brenner (1857-1921), former Brooklyn magistrate and Kings County Commissioner of Jurors. The collection chiefly relates to Brenner’s numerous appointments in the Kings County judicial system and his membership in the Republican Party, as well as personal materials regarding the death of his wife, Louise (Blumenau) Brenner.
The Honorable Jacob A. Brenner, born on April 8, 1857 to Simon Brenner (1820-1898), an Orthodox Jewish rabbi, and Caroline Alexander (1830-1900), resided and worked in Brooklyn and Amityville, N.Y. his entire life. The Brenner family’s financial circumstances prohibited Brenner from attending college after graduating at the age of 14 from Public School #27, also known as the Agnes Y. Humphrey School, on Nelson Street in the Red Hook neighborhood of Brooklyn. Brenner instead entered the Manhattan law offices of Smith, Woodward & Buckley in 1871 and “read” law under General Jesse S. Smith, the firm’s senior partner and former Surrogate of Brooklyn. Brenner passed the bar exam in 1879 and soon formed a partnership with William J. G. Bearns. They opened their own law offices on Court Street under the name of Bearns & Brenner, specializing in civil and real estate law, on February 1, 1891.
Brenner had a highly successful career within the Kings County judicial and political systems. Mayor Charles A. Schieren (1842-1915) appointed Brenner counsel to the Brooklyn Police and Excise Board in 1893. He resigned this post when elected to the bench in 1897. Elected Kings County Commissioner of Jurors in 1902, Brenner held the position until his death in 1921, and the Brooklyn Police and Excise Board reappointed Brenner as counsel in 1911. Brenner became very active in Brooklyn politics beginning in the late 1880s. He served as the Republican leader of the Tenth Ward in South Brooklyn, an area bounded by Bergen Street, Fourth Avenue, First Street, the Gowanus
Canal, Second Avenue, Fifth Street, Fourth Place, and Court Street. Brenner held the position of chairman of the Republican Executive Committee of New York State from 1897 on and served through the terms of New York State Lieutenant Governor Timothy L. Woodruff (c.1858-1913) and United States Senator Chauncey M. Depew (1834-1928), both of whom became close personal friends. The New York State Executive Committee of the Republican Party named Brenner as a state delegate to the Republican National Convention from 1904-1916 as well as a delegate to the New York State Constitutional Convention in 1915.
Brenner became prominent in Jewish communal and philanthropic activities, serving as president and Hebrew school teacher at Temple Beth-Elohim, a Reform congregation also known as the Eighth Avenue Temple, located on Eighth Avenue and Garfield Place for many years, as well as on the board of the Hebrew Orphan Asylum, the Young Men’s Hebrew Association, the Federation of Jewish Charities, and as the first president of the Jewish Hospital on Prospect Place. His club memberships included the Euclid Lodge, a Masonic chapter in Kings County, the Royal Arcanum, as well as the Brooklyn, Montauk, and Unity Clubs. Brenner also served as vice-president of the Brooklyn Bar Association, and director of the First National Bank, then located at Fulton Street and Red Hook Lane.
Brenner married Louise Blumenau (ca. 1860-1902), the daughter of prominent Brooklyn real estate developer Levi Blumenau, on June 27, 1883. The couple had two sons, Arthur and Mortimer, and four daughters, Rose, Rica, Selma, and Caroline. The family resided at 252 Carroll Street in the present-day Brooklyn neighborhood of Carroll Gardens. Both Arthur and Mortimer Brenner became prominent lawyers and Republican Party members in Brooklyn. Rose Brenner became a well-known activist in Brooklyn for her work during World War I as president of the National Council of Jewish Women.
A quick succession of deaths within a period of four years marked the Brenner family: Simon Brenner (September 7, 1898), Caroline Brenner (September 22, 1900), and Louise Brenner (February 21, 1902). Jacob Brenner died on October 17, 1921 of heart disease while giving a speech at Temple Beth-Elohim. He is buried at Mount Neboh Cemetery in the Cypress Hills neighborhood of Brooklyn.
Names:
- Brenner, Jacob A., 1857-1921
- Brenner, Louise Blumenau
- Brenner, Rose
- Depew, Chauncey M., 1834-1928
- Woodruff, Timothy L., 1858-1913
- Legislative Correspondents’ Association of the State of New York
- Republican Party (Kings County, N.Y.)
- Republican Party (N.Y.)
- Temple Beth-Elohim (Brooklyn, New York, N.Y.)
Places:
- Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.) — Politics and government
Subjects:
- Courts — New York (State) — Kings County
- Judges — New York (State) — Kings County
- Lawyers — New York (State) — Kings County
Types of material:
- Cards (information artifacts)
- Clippings (information artifacts)
- Correspondence
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Call Number: 1986.036
Extent: 0.84 linear feet, in two manuscript boxes
This collection contains deeds, bonds, mortgages, maps, letter books, and other legal documents pertaining to residents of Brooklyn and Queens, N.Y. generated by the C. and T. Perry law firm. The firm was located in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, where the majority of its clients lived.
Names:
Places:
- Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.)
Subjects:
- Law firms — New York (State) — Kings County
- Lawyers — New York (State) — Kings County
- Real estate business — New York (State) — Kings County
- Real property — New York (State) — Kings County
Types of material:
- Bonds (legal records)
- Legal documents
- Letter books
- Maps
- Mortgages
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Call Number: 1977.617
Extent: 0.06 Linear feet, in one folder
A decision issued in the case of case of Abraham Brower v. Charles Miller, tried in New York State Criminal Court in New York City, regarding the enticement of an indentured servant from the original master.
Names:
- New York (State). Criminal Court (New York, N.Y.)
Subjects:
- Court records — New York (State) — New York
- Indentured servants — New York (State) — New York
Types of material:
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Call Number: 1985.089
Extent: 0.2 Linear feet, in one folder
This collection contains a receipt book of the Village of Brooklyn with entries for payments by John S. Doughty Jr., the Village Treasurer, dated 1827. Also included is a receipt book of the City Court Clerk of the City of Brooklyn with entries for payments to court officers, dated 1869
Names:
- Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.)
- New York Bound Bookshop
- Village of Brooklyn
Places:
- Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.)
Subjects:
- Court records — New York (State) — Kings County
Types of material:
- Receipts (financial records)
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Call Number: 1991.033
Extent: 0.2 Linear feet, in one folder
This collection contains scrapbooks documenting the 1894 criminal trial of Brooklyn-area politician and law enforcement officer, John Y. McKane on charges of violating voting laws. The scrapbooks contain newspaper clippings from the New York Times, the Brooklyn Eagle, and other publications.
Names:
Places:
- Coney Island (New York, N.Y.)
Subjects:
- Elections — Corrupt practices — New York (State) — Kings County
- Police — New York (State) — Kings County
- Political corruption — New York (State) — Kings County
Types of material:
- Clippings (information artifacts)
- Scrapbooks
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Call Number: 1978.004
Extent: 3.72 Linear feet, in two full manuscript boxes, one half manuscript box, and two oversize boxes.
John Notman was a lawyer who specialized in contracts of indemnity and negligence law. He was later Commissioner of the State Board of Charities. He lived with his wife and two daughters at at 149 Joralemon Street in the neighborhood of Brooklyn Heights. The John Notman papers span the period 1849 to 1914 and consist of financial records, legal records, and correspondence covering the activities of the State Board of Charities, Notman’s personal and business expenses, and the management of the estate of Notman’s father, Peter, in which John and his brother, George Notman, were executors. The collection also includes items relating to the merchant firm Howard, Sanger & Co., owned and operated by Samuel E. Howard and Henry Sanger.
Names:
- Howard, Samuel
- Notman, George
- Notman, John, 1851-1907
- Notman, Peter
- Sanger, Henry
- Howard, Sanger & Co. (New York, N.Y.)
- New York (State). State Board of Charities
Places:
- Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.)
Subjects:
- Charities — New York (State)
- Charities — New York (State) — Kings County
- Decedents’ estates — New York (State) — Kings County
- Merchants — New York (State) — New York
- Public welfare — New York (State)
- Public welfare — New York (State) — Kings County
Types of material:
- Account books
- Correspondence
- Financial records
- Legal documents
- Receipts (financial records)
- Wills
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Call Number: 1979.016
Extent: 0.2 linear feet, in five folders
The Gilbert Reid papers span the period 1830 to 1885 and measure 0.3 linear feet. The collection consists of papers relating to both Reid’s personal and business activities. Documents include notes on legal questions, drafts of letters regarding collection of finances, a check book, personal deeds, mortgages, agreements, title searches, and office records. Gilbert Reid Jr. (d. 1845) was a Brooklyn lawyer.
Names:
Places:
- Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.)
Subjects:
- Lawyers — New York (State) — Kings County
Types of material:
- Checkbooks
- Deeds
- Financial records
- Mortgages
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