2115

IL. Quincy City Bank Pair.

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money Start Price:1.00 USD Estimated At:400.00 - 800.00 USD
IL. Quincy City Bank Pair.
<b>IL. Quincy City Bank Pair.</b> 1) <B>IL. </B><I>Quincy. </I>Quincy City Bank Certifies Page & Bacon [St. Louis]. <B>$1. </B>1850s. (IL-675 Unlisted). <B>Proof</B> on India paper. Certificate of Deposit for Page & Bacon. Wide Danforth vignette across the note: merchant, sailor, two young women, spinning wheel, train, and mechanic. DB. <B>VG-Fine,</B> repaired, and pieces out. 2) Similar to previous. <B>$2. </B>1850s. (IL-675 Unlisted). Certificate of Deposit. Horses running, top; farmers set out for fields, lower left; Indian woman with child, lower right. DB. <B>VG-Fine,</B> repaired, and pieces out. [2] <BR>    Page Bacon & Co. was a private bank established by Daniel D. Bacon (1790-1869), formerly a director of the Branch of the Second Bank of the United States in St. Louis. He was one of the founders of the Boatman's Savings Institution in 1846 and in 1840 he established a private bank of Page, Bacon and Co., with his son-in-law, Henry P. Bacon. By 1854, the firm was probably the largest one in the Mississippi Valley, doing over $80 million of exchange in a year.
The company got into difficulties when it became deeply involved in the buildings of railroads in Missouri into which it sank a considerable amount of its liquid capital. The office in St. Louis was closed after a run on January 15th, 1855, but re-opened again on February 9, 1855 with fresh funds. However, the San Francisco office in the meantime had been subjected to a divesting run, which was not helped by a falling out with Captain William T. Sherman, who was then working for the local office of the largest rival bank in St. Louis.