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Early Rice Institute papers, 1844-1941

These records include the original William Marsh Rice murder trial records, and the estate records of Rice, founder of Rice Institute, now Rice University. The records relate to the formation of the idea of the Rice Institute and the activities of its first Board of Trustees in the years before Mr. Rice's death and to the Institute's formative years just after his death. (117 boxes)

TABLE OF CONTENTS


Descriptive Summary

Historical Sketch

Scope and Contents

Arrangement

Restrictions

Index Terms

Administrative Information

Detailed Description of the Collection

Series I: Court cases, 1886-1907 (Boxes 1-50)

Series II: WMR will & estate, 1900-1911 (Boxes 51-87)

Series III: Rice Institute, 1882-1941 (bulk 1891-1918) (Boxes 88-97)

Series IV: WMR business records & land titles, 1844-1936, bulk 1880-1900 (Boxes 98-113)

Series V: William Marsh Rice, personal and family correspondence, 1867-1900 (Box 114)

Guide to the Early Rice Institute records, 1844-1941 (bulk 1880-1916)


Descriptive Summary

Repository: Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University, Houston, TX
Title Early Rice Institute records
Dates: 1844-1941 (bulk 1880-1916)
Extent 62 lin. ft. (117 boxes)
Abstract: These records include the original William Marsh Rice murder trial records, and the estate records of Rice, founder of Rice Institute, now Rice University. These records relate to the formation of the idea of the Rice Institute and the activities of its first Board of Trustees in the years before Mr. Rice's death and to the Institute's formative years just after his death. The outcomes of the legal proceedings documented in these records, which related to significant financial resources and real estate, played the critical role in the creation of Rice Institute. A small amount of Rice's personal and business papers are also present.
ID UA 101
Language Materials are in English.

Historical Sketch

William Marsh Rice was born in Springfield, Massachusetts on March 14, 1816. He was the third of ten children born to David and Patty Hall Rice. Little is known about Rice's childhood but records indicate that he worked for a while as a shopkeeper in Springfield before deciding to move to Texas in 1838.

Rice started out in business as a merchant in Houston, Texas. His first business partnership with a Barnabas Haskill was formed in 1840 but dissolved by 1842. In 1844 Rice became a commission and forwarding merchant in partnership with Ebenezer B. Nichols, a successful Houston businessman. By 1850 Rice's siblings began to follow him to Houston and assisted in his ventures. On June 29, 1850 Rice married Margaret Bremond whose father Paul was one of Rice's many business partners. In the census of 1860, Rice is listed as having $750,000 in real and personal property, making him one of the wealthiest men in Texas at the time.

On August 13, 1863 Margaret Rice died, possibly from cholera or yellow fever. Shortly after his wife's death, Rice went to Monterrey, Mexico and stayed there until August of 1865 when he returned to Houston. Later in that summer, he went to Massachusetts for business and did not return to Houston until 1866. On June 26, 1867 Rice married for a second time. His second wife was Julia Elizabeth Baldwin Brown, a widow and a daughter of Horace Baldwin, one of the early mayors of Houston. Elizabeth's sister Charlotte was the wife of William's younger brother Frederic.

Rice and his second wife moved to New Jersey to live with Rice's sister Charlotte and her family. Rice and his wife divided their time between New York City and New Jersey with occasional trips to Houston to oversee business.

During one of the Rices' visits to Houston, he was approached by Cesar Maurice Lombardi, who was interested in building a high school in Houston. Rice had been interested in endowing an educational institute of some kind, having revised his will twice previously to include a school for needy boys, first in New Jersey, then in New York City. After the meeting with Lombardi, Rice decided to fund an institute of higher learning in Houston. On May 19, 1891 the charter for the William M. Rice Institute for the Advancement of Literature, Science and Art was incorporated in Austin, Texas. Captain James Addison Baker, William's brother Frederic, Houston businessmen Emanuel Raphael, Cesar Lombardi, James E. McAshan and Alfred S. Richardson were named as the first board of trustees.

In article two of the charter: "(t)he objects, intents, and purposes of this Institution are declared to be the establishment and maintenance, in the City of Houston, Texas, of a Public Library, and the maintenance of an Institution for the Advancement of Literature, Science, Art, Philosophy and Letters; the establishment and maintenance of a Polytechnic school; for procuring and maintaining scientific collections; collections of chemical and philosophical apparatus, mechanical and artistic models, drawings, pictures and statues; and for cultivating other means of instruction ..." The institute was initially endowed with a promissory note for $200,000 to be paid upon Rice's death. Rice revised his will on September 26, 1896 and left the bulk of his estate to his namesake institute.

Elizabeth Rice's health began to fail in the early months of 1896. The Rices moved to Houston in April 1896, hoping the warm weather would improve Elizabeth's condition. On June 1, 1896 Mrs. Rice drew up a new will without her husband's knowledge naming Orren Holt, a Houston lawyer, as her executor. The will claimed that the Rices were residents of Texas (a community property state) and Elizabeth could bequeath half of the Rice estate as she saw fit. Rice moved Elizabeth to a hotel in Waukesha, Wisconsin shortly after the new will was signed. Elizabeth died on July 24, 1896 in Waukesha. Rice returned to New York City. In September 1896 Orren Holt, Elizabeth's executor, filed to probate Elizabeth's last will. Captain Baker, Rice's lawyer, informed Rice of the situation and a court battle began over the will. Rice disputed his wife's claim that she had been a Texas resident since this division of their estate would decrease what was available for the institute.

During the battle over the estate two lawyers became involved with the proceedings and would end up greatly influencing the final results. Captain Baker, a trustee of the Rice Institute, served as William Rice's lawyer. Albert Patrick, the other lawyer, was hired by Orren Holt in 1898 to investigate the residency question in New York City. There Patrick met Charlie Jones, Rice's valet. The two spent a great deal of time together and slowly a plan was formed. At first it seemed that Patrick was only interested in the settlement of the contested will and was looking for any way to win. He convinced Jones, in the spring of 1900, to start poisoning Rice with mecury pills as a way to avoid a court battle. By the summer of 1900 Patrick came up with the idea to forge a will that left the majority of Rice's estate to himself and small sums to relatives and friends. The forged will was dated June 30, 1900.

On September 8, 1900 a hurricane struck the Gulf Coast and one of Rice's businesses, the Merchants and Planters Oil Company, suffered severe damage. The business manager telegraphed that they needed money for repairs and the sum was most of what Rice had available in his bank account. Patrick was worried at the loss of such a large sum of ready cash and he convinced Jones to use chloroform to kill Rice. On September 23, 1900 Rice was murdered by Jones. Patrick, in his haste to get hold of Rice's cash, tried to withdraw money from Rice's bank using a check forged by Jones right after Rice's death. The bank refused to honor the check since Patrick's name was spelled incorrectly. When calling to verify the check with Rice, the bank learned that he was dead. Since the circumstances were suspicious, the bank contacted Rice's Houston lawyer, Captain Baker.

When Baker arrived in New York City, he learned there had been a new will written up by Patrick. Baker was suspicious of the will since Rice had never notified him of any changes to the one Baker had drawn up on September 26, 1896. This suspicion led to a long and sensational trial where Patrick's version of the will was exposed as a forgery and the scheme to kill Rice was discovered. Patrick was found guilty of murder and forgery on March 26, 1902 and was sentenced to die in the electric chair. Jones, who confessed to his part of the events, ended up being released despite being the one who had actually committed the murder. Patrick's sentence was commuted to life imprisonment by the governor of New York, but eventually won a full pardon in 1912.

On February 6, 1902 Orren Holt settled the suit over Elizabeth's will for $200,000. After the trials and settlement, Captain Baker and the original Board of Trustees set about fulfilling Rice's dream to have an institute for higher learning in Houston, Texas. To guide them, the trustees chose an imaginative first president, a young mathematician and astronomer at Princeton University named Edgar Odell Lovett, who signed on as president in 1908. Lovett had earned doctorates both from the Universities of Virginia and Leipzig and had taught at Johns Hopkins, the University of Chicago, and Princeton, the most innovative American universities of the time. The trustees sent him on a worldwide tour of the "competition," where he interviewed faculty, inspected facilities, and developed an inspired vision of what might be accomplished on the plains of Texas with a blank-check charter, a generous endowment, and high ambitions. The goal was a university "of the highest grade" that kept "the standards up and the numbers down." Lovett shaped the university that Rice would become.

The Rice Institute opened on September 23, 1912, the anniversary of Mr. Rice's murder, with 77 students and a dozen faculty. An international academic festival celebrated the opening three weeks later, a spectacular event that brought Rice to the attention of the entire scholarly world. Four years later, at the initial commencement, 35 bachelor degrees and one master's degree were awarded, with the first doctorate conferred in 1918.

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Scope and Contents

These records include the original William Marsh Rice murder trial records, and the estate records of Rice, founder of Rice Institute, now Rice University. These records relate to the formation of the idea of the Rice Institute and the activities of its first Board of Trustees in the years before Mr. Rice’s death and to the Institute’s formative years just after his death. The outcomes of the legal proceedings documented in these records, which related to significant financial resources and real estate, played the critical role in the creation of Rice Institute. A small amount of Rice’s personal and business papers are also present.

See Series descriptions in the Detailed Description of the Collection for more information.

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Arrangement

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Restrictions

Access Restriction

This material is open for research, but requires 24 hrs. for retrieval. Please call ahead at 713-348-2586 or e-mail woodson@rice.edu.

Use Restrictions

Permission to publish materials from the Early Rice Institute records must be obtained from the Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University.

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Index Terms

Subjects (Persons)

Baker, James A.
Patrick, Albert T.
Rice, William Marsh, 1816-1900

Subjects (Places)

Texas -- Houston -- History - 19th century.
Texas -- Houston -- History - 20th century.

Subjects (Organizations)

Rice University – history.

Formats

Correspondence
Financial documents
Legal documents
Receipts

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Administrative Information

Preferred Citation

Early Rice Institute records, 1844-1941 (bulk 1880-1916), UA 101, Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University.

Acquisition Information

This material was a gift from the law firm Baker, Botts, Shepherd & Coates, and a transfer from within the university, 1962 and 1984.

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Detailed Description of the Collection

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Series I: Court cases, 1886-1907 (Boxes 1-50)
These cases are filed chronologically based on each case’s beginning date. Major cases include cases challenging William Marsh Rice’s late wife’s will and William Marsh Rice’s murder trial. Each generally includes correspondence, notes, and legal documents such as testimony, exhibits, trial documents, affidavits, releases, published versions of the trials, and newsclippings.
The first case is that of William Marsh Rice vs. Orren T. Holt, executor of Mrs. Elizabeth Baldwin Rice’s estate, 1896-1902, regarding Rice’s challenge to his wife’s will. This trial began while W.M. Rice was living and continued after his death. Mrs. Rice’s will assumed that the couple’s property was divisible equally under Texas’ community property law, and would have given away significant funds and lands, including the land on which Rice University sits today. W.M. Rice and his representatives proved that the couple were actually residents of new York and not Texas, making Mrs. Rice’s will essentially null. The lawyer for Mrs. Rice’s executor, Orren T. Holt, was Albert T. Patrick, who features as the defendant in the Rice murder trial. This case was settled in 1903 for $200,000.
The second case is William Marsh Rice’s murder trial, People of the State of NY vs. Patrick, 1900-1902. The evidence available here includes medical and handwriting experts’ testimony, as well as the original glass plate negatives of Rice’s real and alleged signatures used to prove Patrick’s forgery of the 1900 Wm. M. Rice will, which benefited Patrick greatly and essentially scrapped significant plans for the Rice Institute, thereby proving Patrick’s motive for the murder. Patrick was convicted and went to prison, but only a few years later was pardoned and released.
Adele Baldwin vs. W. M. Rice Jr. & executors of Rice will, 1886-1908, the last large case in this series, relates to Mrs. Elizabeth Baldwin Rice’s heirs challenging the executors of W.M. Rice’s estate and is essentially a continuation of William Marsh Rice vs. Orren T. Holt. In November 1905, the case was decided, then appealed. Attorneys included Arthur Turnure of NY, for administrators of estate of E.B. Rice; William B. Hornblower, Atty. for estate of Wm. M. Rice (Hornblower, Byrne, Miller & Potter, of NY); and Oran Holt, Houston representative for E.B. Rice estate, with A.T. Patrick as his NY legal representative (up until the time of his trial and incarceration).
Subseries A: WMR vs. Orren T. Holt, executor of Mrs. Rice’s will, 1894-1904 (Boxes 1-5)
Box Folder
1 1 Elizabeth Baldwin Rice wills
2 Statements by William Marsh Rice
3 Statements by others
4 Correspondence, 1894-1899
5 Lands belonging to William M. Rice
6 Notes, printed materials
7-8 No. 339 Equity, Circuit Court of U.S., Eastern District of Texas at Galveston
Box Folder
2 - No. 339 Equity, Circuit Court of U.S., Eastern District of Texas at Galveston, printed version: Depositions: William M. Rice vs. Oran T. Holt, Executor of the Last Will and Testament of Elizabeth B. Rice, deceased. Depositions of William M. Rice and others, on behalf of complainant taken August 1898, before Edward C. Manners, Special Examiner (copy certified by examiner).
Box Folder
3 1 Depositions: Alice Hanks Adams, Benjamin Perkins Bailey, Anna Baldwin, Edward Banks, John D. Bartine, Charles S. Benedict, C.W. Bocock, Lilla McDougall Boothby, George F. Brown, Charles Carpenter, Isabel H. Carpenter, Louise Clappe, John Cooper .
2 Depositions: Conrad Cramer, Henriette Cruger, Paul Bremond Cruger, Mary Harris Ewer, Clemente Fernandez, George N. Fischer, Blanchard Fosgate, Joseph Fourmy, Furman H. Gise, Mrs. Alexander S. Glassford, William A. Grant, Mary E. House, James H. Jenkins, Lizzie M. Lages, Sara J. Lippincott, David Lowrie
3 Depositions: John Edward Matheson, Morris Meyers, Hannah C. Morris, Lalla Baldwin Morton, Laura Geddes Morton, Nadine Neftel, E. Raphael, Robert S. Reid, Paul Reusch
4 Depositions: Juila D. Roberts, Mrs. Marion Robinson, William Garland Rucker, Walter G. Runyon, John Stafford, Mary E. Todd, Robert Kingsley Tomlin, Mary P. Trapp, Josephine Trust, Katie G. Trust, Mary E. Turnure, Maria Van Alstyne
5 Depositions: Dr. Charles Warner, Ruth A. Watrous, Annie L. Winslow
6 Draft of interrogatories re. E.B. Rice’s rights
Box Folder
4 1 Names of witnesses, arranged alphabetically
2 Dates of hearings, persons present, witnesses examined
3 Complainant’s exhibits A-F, photographs of Rice property Dunellen, in New Jersey, photos dated November 6, 1899.
4 Transcripts in the record of No. 219 Equity of O.T. Holt, Executor vs. T.W. House et al, District Court of Washington County, Texas, June 6, 1898. Suit relates to disputed interests in various tracts of land. House is a co-defendant of William M. Rice.
5 Memorandum, No. 339 Equity, Rice vs. Holt. Summary of case, undated.
6 Correspondence: James A. Baker Jr. to Spencer Hutchins, August 29, 1899 with enclosure to William M. Rice, August 29, 1899.
7 Correspondence: Collection of letters re. Elizabeth Baldwin Rice and her estate, and to and from A.T. Patrick and O.T. Holt, ca. 1896-1902
8 United States Circuit Court, Southern District of Texas at Houston, Holt vs. William Marsh Rice Institute, C.L. No. 27. Records of case proceedings with index, 1897-1903.
9 Letter from Hutcheson, Campbell and Hutcheson to O.T. Holt regarding Rice estate case, May 15, 1901. This letter describes the essential strengths and weaknesses of Holt’s case against W.M. Rice’s estate and begins to set the groundwork for the eventual settlement.
10-11 Baldwin vs. Rice, summary, 1903
Box Folder
5 1 Transcript regarding settlement of Rice vs. Holt, n.d.
2 Compromise settlement, March 9, 1904
3 Affidavit of E. Raphael, Secretary, Rice Institute, Aug. 11, 1904
4 Notes, n.d.
Subseries B: People of the State of NY vs. Patrick (William Marsh Rice murder trial 1990-1902), 1894-1907 (Boxes 6-40)
Box Folder
6 1 People of the State of New York vs. Albert T. Patrick: Volume I Selection of jury, Jan. 20-22, 1902
2 People of the State of New York vs. Albert T. Patrick: Volume II Testimony, Jan. 22-29, 1902
3 People of the State of New York vs. Albert T. Patrick: Volume III Testimony, Jan. 30-Feb. 10, 1902
Box Folder
7 1 People of the State of New York vs. Albert T. Patrick: Volume IV Testimony, Feb. 11-18, 1902
2-3 People of the State of New York vs. Albert T. Patrick: Volume V Testimony, Feb. 19-27, 1902 [2 folders]
4-5 People of the State of New York vs. Albert T. Patrick: Volume VI Testimony, Feb. 28-March 10, 1902 [2 folders]
Box Folder
8 1-2 People of the State of New York vs. Albert T. Patrick: Volume VII Testimony, March 11-18, 1902 [2 folders]
3-4 People of the State of New York vs. Albert T. Patrick: Volume VIII Testimony, March 19-April 4, 1902 [2 folders]
5 Unidentified trial proceedings
Box Folder
9 1-3 Abstracts of testimony (synopses)
4 Affidavits, Statements
5 Statements regarding when people last saw WMR
Box Folder
10 1-4 Abstracts of testimony (statements, synopses)
Testimony (statements, synopses, examinations…) of individuals
Box Folder
10 5 Acheson, Harold S.
6 Adams, Charles T.
7 Alsdorf, Edward G.
8 Anderson, Robert C.
9 Aulich, Robert H.
Box Folder
11 1 Baker, James A. Jr.
2 Baldwin, Lillie
3 Baldwin, William L.
4 Bartine, John D.
5 Bauer, Bessie
6 Blinn, Frederick L.
7 Blinn, Joseph L.
8 Boothby, J.W.
9 Brightwell, James D.
10 Brown, William G.
11 Cahill
12 Capron, Mary
13 Cargill, Ennis
14 Carpenter, Charles
15 Childers
16 Chilson, H.B.
17 Coff, Edward J.
18 Cohn, Arthur B.
19 Coleman, J.M.
20 Costello, Elizabeth
21 Dale, William
22 Decker, Arthur
23 Dunham, Curtis
24 Ettinger, Louis
25 Emory, John T.
26 Fane, John
27 Findlay, Charles H.
28 Ford, Thomas W.
29 Francis, Addie M.
30 Gale, Lucy
31 Gerard, James W.
32 Gould, Charles W. & son
33 Graham, James J.
34 Grant
35 Grotty, A. (alias “W. Bacon”)
36 Guile, Harry J.
37 Hamlin, George N.
38 Harby, Mark E.
39 Harmon, William F.
40 Hertford, William E.
41 Hervey, George
42 Houlehan, John
43 Jayne
44 Johnson, F. Severance
45 Jones, Charles F.
Box Folder
12 1-4 Jones, Charles F., statements and confession
5 Jones, William Lafayette
6 Kate
7 Knowles, Andrew N.
8 Lansdale
9 LeDuc, Marie Clinton
10 Long, William H.
11 Mallaby, Leonard B.
12 Manners, Edward C.
13 Marshall, Olive
14 Matheson, J.A.
15 Mayer, Joseph D.
16 McCarthy, Charles
Box Folder
13 1 McHugh, Annie
2 Meldrum, N.S.
3 Melles, Dorothy
4 Mellett, Lillian
5-6 Meyers, Morris
7 Mikanek, Charles
8 Miller, Frank
9 Moore, A.J.P.
10 Moore, J. Owen
11 Moore, W.H.
12 Moran, John H.
13 O’Keefe, John
14 Oliver, Henry
15 Palmer, Richard
16 Pastoriza, Joseph J.
17 Patrick, Albert T.
18 Pedell, Joseph F.
19 Peters, Curtis
20 Petznick, Leah
Box Folder
14 1 Plowright, Charles
2 Potter, Mark W.
3 Potts, John R.
4 Pratt, James M.
5 Randolph, Andrew T.
6 Raphael, Emanuel
7 Records, Edward
8 Rice, Frederick A.
9 Rice, William M. Jr.
10 Rober
11 Roeder, Gustav C.
12 Rucker, William G.
13 Schepflin, Christian
14 Schmitt, George F.
15 Scott, James J.
16 Scott, Maria
17 Sheerin, Lillian
18-19 Short, David L.
20 Speed, Philip
21 Swenson, Eric P.
22 Teich, Paul
23 Thompson, Martha E.
24 Truesdale, John W.
25 Turner
26 Vallely, James F., Detective
27 Van Alstyne, Maria
28 Voss, George H.
29 Wallace, John H.
30 Westcott, Clarence L.
31 Wetherbee, Walter O.
32 White, Charles T.
33 White, Isaac D.
34 Whittlesey, John E.
35 Willis, Edmund T.
36 Woythaler, Albert B.
37 Wronkow, H.
Individuals’ corroboration of Jones’ testimony
Box Folder
15 1 Corroboration of Jones
2-3 Supplementary memorandum containing references to the corroboration of testimony of Charles F. Jones at preliminary examination
Medical testimony
Box Folder
16 1 Expert medical opinions
2 Summaries of testimony
3 Summaries and notes
4 Curry, Walker, M.D.
5 Donlin, -----, M.D.
6 Ewing, James, M.D.
7 Flint, Austin, M.D.
8 Girdner, John, M.D.
9 Hare, Herbert A., M.D.
10 Huncke, Max
11 Jones, William L.
12 Kemp, R.C.
13 Lee, Edward W., M.D.
14 Leuf, A.H.P., M.D.
15 Loomis, Henry P., M.D.
16 Love, Isaac N., M.D.
17 McAllister, John D.
18 Millican, Kenneth W., M.D.
19 Potter, John S.
20 Schultz, Otto H., M.D.
21 Thayer, Alfred E., M.D.
22 Williams, Hamilton, M.D.
23 Witthaus, Rudolph A., M.D.
Box Folder
17 1 Handwriting expert summaries
2 Handwriting experts lists
3 Lines of questioning regarding handwriting experts
Individuals re. handwriting
Box Folder
17 4 Ames, Daniel T.
5 Bartlett, Francis
6 Carvalho, David N.
7 Clelland, W.W.M.
8 Courtney, Frances B.
9 Curtis, C.C.
10 Davenport, Bennett F.
11 Decker, David C.
12 Dinsmore, Charles H.
13 Drake, W.A.
14 Dummer, C.H.
15 Ewell, Marshall D.
16 Foote, Clarence
17 Frazer, Persifor
18 Gould, H.D.
19 Gumpel, M.
20 Hagan, William E.
21 Harvey, Louis W.
22 Hay, Edward B.
23 Kinsley, William J.
24 Lederle, Ernst J.
25 Lewis, A.R.
26 Malone, S.G.
27 Mann, R. DeWitt
28 Osborn, Albert S.
29 Pengelly, W.G.
30 Spencer, H.A.
Box Folder
18 1 Tolman, Henry L.
2 Truesdale, John
3 Tyrrell, John F.
4 Vincent, Peter A. Sr.
5 Wherry, William M.
6 Wood, George W.
7 Worth, Frederick
8 Correspondence
9 Memos on handwriting questioning
10 Competency of handwriting experts
11 Trial notes
12 Expert handwriting opinions
13 Handwriting examination results
14 Signature authentication by bank employees
15 Paper companies
16 Thiel Detective Service Company
Handwriting evidence: Glass plates
Box Folder
19 1 Documents re. authenticity of signatures, 1881-1906
2 Plates, 1”x4”
3-4 Plates, 3”x8”
5 Plates, broken
6-8 Plates, 8”x10”
9 Examples of signatures, on paper
10 Disputed vs. genuine signatures
11