Letter from U.S. Attorney to Mrs. Georgia G. Jones
Letter from unnamed Assistant US Attorney to Georgia G. Jones, declining her request to “look after her interests” in the Madeline Meadows Land & Irrigation Company, since his time was entirely taken up by government business.
Letter from U.S. Attorney to W.H. Cashing, Esq.
Letter from unnamed US Attorney to W.H. Cashing, Financial Traffic Manager for American Express, related to evidence in the 1917 Hindu-German Conspiracy Trial, during which Ghadar Party activists were charged with attempting to foment a rebellion in India.
Letter from U.S. Attorney to William M. Offley, Esq.
Letter from unnamed US Attorney to William M. Offley, Division Superintendent of the FBI in New York, related to evidence in the 1917 Hindu-German Conspiracy Trial, during which Ghadar Party activists were charged with attempting to foment a rebellion in India.
Letter from U.S. Attorney to W.R. Bryan, Esq.
Letter from unnamed U.S. Attorney to W. R. Bryan, special agent in charge of the FBI in Portland, related to evidence in the 1917 Hindu-German Conspiracy Trial, during which Ghadar Party activists were charged with attempting to foment a rebellion in India.
Letter from U.S. Attorney to Mrs. James E. Tucker
Letter from unnamed Assistant US Attorney to a Mrs. James E. Tucker, thanking her for information on the “Americanism of the President of the University” in Berkeley. This likely refers to Benjamin Ide Wheeler, considered a German sympathizer and forced to retire as president of US Berkeley in 1918.
Letter from Edwin B. Smith to John M. Preston
Letter from Edwin B. Smith to US Attorney John W. Preston, related to evidence in the 1917 Hindu-German Conspiracy Trial, during which Ghadar Party activists were charged with attempting to foment a rebellion in India.
Letter to John W. Preston, Esq.
Letter to US Attorney John W. Preston from the offices of H. Hackfeld & Co., in which the writer mentions returning to Honolulu. H. Hackfeld & Co.’s Honolulu-based firm employed mostly Germans, some of whom were indicted in the 1917 Hindu-German Conspiracy Trial, during which Ghadar Party activists were charged with attempting to foment a rebellion in India.
Letter regarding Vaishno Das Bagai
Report written in 1989 that provides information about Vaishno Das Bagai and his involvement with the Gadar Party in San Francisco, California. The report was written by Bagai's son Ram, and includes information from an interview with Govind Behari Lal on February 22, 1962.
"Nose Diamond Latest Fad Arrives Here From India"
Newspaper article from September 1915 issue of San Francisco Call & Post reporting on the "nose diamond fad" from India and describing Kala Bagai's arrival in the United States with her family. The photograph in the article is of Kala Bagai with her son Ram (who is incorrectly identified as Kala's daughter).