Death, in Dec 1867, of the Pindiali Chief, Nawab Khan - decision that his jagir of Sadr Garhi should be continued to his son and successor Pir Dost Khan
Question of the disposal of the property of the late Muhammad Abdul Ali Khan, a member of the Ruling Family of Rampur, who died near Mecca in late 1863 -HM Consul at Jedda arranges for the balance of the estate to be remitted to India via Suez (includes a list of the property, on pp 4-6)
Government of India forward to London a kharita in a silver roll from the ex-King of Oudh [Wajid Ali Shah] to HM Queen Victoria offering his congratulations on the escape of her son the Duke of Edinburgh from an assassination attempt in Australia (the kharita is not with the Collection but an English translation appears on pp 3-6)
Memorial to the Secretary of State for India from Edward Fowle, Consul for Siam [Thailand] at Rangoon [Yangon], asking permission to be allowed to wear the 'Illustrious Order of the White Elephant' which had been conferred upon him by the King of Siam (with associated correspondence)
Memorials to the Secretary of State for India from Mir Zulfikar Ali Khan and Mir Akbar Ali Khan claiming a pension from the British Government on the grounds that their father the late Amin-ud-din Ali Khan was a collateral relative of Tipu Sultan and a Bakshi under that Ruler (includes, on p 6, a genealogical table showing the two petitioners relationship to Tipu Sultan)
Papers regarding a murderous raid made on 23 Oct 1868 by a party of Lushai tribesmen upon the village of Nungdang in the Manipur hill territory - measures taken to prevent such incursions in future
Government of India state in reply to paragraph 4 of the Secretary of State's dispatch of 31 October 1868 that the two representatives of the Rangoon Chamber of Commerce [Alexander Bower and Theodore Stewart] who were permitted to join the Bhamo expedition were clearly informed that they were under the orders of Captain Edward Sladen
Papers regarding the ex-Amirs of Sind, Vol 2 - grant of 5000 rupees to Mir Hussain Ali Khan Talpur to defray the expenses attending the betrothal and circumcision of his only son, Nur Muhammad