Papers relating to Central India - Government consider that the Superintendent of Nagod [Mr Coles] had acted 'ultra vires' in sending a newswriter to Chhatarpur, which is not within his jurisdiction - they order the newswriter to be recalled
Papers relating to Central India - re-establishment of the Political Agency at Bhopawar - proposed reconstruction of the public offices at Bhopawar which had been destroyed by the Amjhera and Dhar rebels
Papers relating to Central India - question of the payment of the quit-rent for 1856 which the Chief of Larawat [Ramchandar Rao Puar] owes to the Dhar and Dewas States
Papers relating to Central India - award of 100 rupees each to Clement and Marshall Alexander who helped save the lives of some European Christians at Indore during the Mutiny (includes an account of the previous trial of the Alexanders for allegedly aiding and abetting the mutineers)
Papers relating to Central India - case of Edalji, a Parsee merchant at Sehore, who was sentenced to 14 years imprisonment for receiving the watch of Mrs James, a mutiny victim - he appeals to the Governor General [Lord Canning] and has his sentence reduced to 1 year
Mutiny papers relating to Central India - escape of two NCOs of the Gwalior Contingent viz: Staff Sergeant John Callow and Sergeant Alexander Jervis from Sipri [Shivpuri] to Agra in the latter half of 1857 - rewards are made to the two Dindokhea Brahmins who escorted them from Narwar to Agra (includes the depositions of both Callow and Jervis)
Mutiny papers relating to Central India - payment of compensation to certain inhabitants of Mandleshwar whose houses were demolished by the British authorities as a defensive measure during the rebellion
Papers regarding Central India (Bundelkhand) - death, on 19 Nov 1858, of the Jagirdar of Tori-Fatehpur [Hari Pershad] - Government of India recognize his adopted son Prithi Singh as his legitimate successor
Mutiny papers relating to the North Western Provinces - Munshi Abdul Rahim of the 1st Bengal Native Cavalry who had been sentenced to transportation for life for involvement in the Mutiny is released unconditionally after his father Sheikh Panchu, a Cawnpore merchant, had petitioned the Governor General on his behalf