378

New-Brunswick & California Mining & Trading Co. Stock - CA

Currency:USD Category:Western Americana Start Price:500.00 USD Estimated At:1,000.00 - 2,000.00 USD
New-Brunswick & California Mining & Trading Co. Stock -  CA
Preview
Holabird-Kagin Americana Office
3555 Airway Drive Suite#309
Reno, NV 89511
Thursday Feb 20th, 10am-6pm
* Preview also available by appointment

Live Auction
Friday & Saturday
Feb 20 & 21, 2014
9am PDT starting time, both days

Location
Atlantis Casino & Resort
Paradise A Room
3800 S. Virginia Street
Reno, NV 89502

Lot Pick Up
Holabird-Kagin Americana Office
3555 Airway Drive Suite #309
Reno, NV 89511
Sunday February 23rd, 10am-1pm

c1849 This is an important, perhaps earliest known, California Gold Rush stock certificate. A blank certificate for one share, unissued and unsigned. "Association, adopted January 13, 1849" is printed under the masthead. Very plain, 1/3-sheet size (4 x 7.75"), on crème paper with black print. State of New Jersey is printed at left border. Datelined New Brunswick, February, 1849. The Maritime Heritage organization describes this company thusly: "Once news of California's Gold Rush reached the East Coast, groups of men began forming mining companies to help defray the great expenses of reaching the gold fields, and with the hope of having more success by banding together. More than 500 vessels left Atlantic and Gulf ports during 1849. After the best ships were full, virtually anything afloat, including old traders, whalers and small schooners were booked. Groups chartered or purchased a ship, many of which were extremely small, and sailed from their homes to the fields of gold…a partial list of mining companies leaving the Eastern Seaboard for California in 1848 and 1850.…. Isabel (New Brunswick and California Mining and Trading Company), 237-ton bark, built 1844 in Baltimore, Maryland. Left New York, New York on February 7, 1849, arrived San Francisco August 5, 1849. 179 days at sea. Captain N.R. Brewer 48 passengers. Non-stop via Cape Horn. Sold abroad and used in South American trade after arrival. Passenger James V. Spader wrote two long letters (February 7-August 18, 1849) during the voyage, which are held at the Rutgers University Library, New Brunswick, New Jersey. Much of the second letter duplicates information in the first one. Entries are very brief, limited primarily to weather conditions, speed, latitude and longitude, temperature, sails set and taken in, etc" [Ref: www.maritimeheritage.org/PassLists/mining.htm]. - HKA#65982