2473

Cripple Creek & Colorado Springs Railroad Co. Stock Signed by Spencer Penrose [160290]

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money / Stock & Bond - Transportation Start Price:150.00 USD Estimated At:300.00 - 600.00 USD
Cripple Creek & Colorado Springs Railroad Co. Stock Signed by Spencer Penrose [160290]
SOLD
600.00USDto e********5+ buyer's premium (150.00)
This item SOLD at 2023 Mar 31 @ 15:01UTC-7 : PDT/MST
SHIPPING & HANDLING: The customer is responsible for all shipping and packaging charges. We offer shipping service as a convenience to our buyers. Items are not shipped until the invoice and shipping charges are completely paid. Shipping costs will be calculated and billed separately after your items have been paid for. Purchases will be shipped via our approved, insured carriers: FedEx, UPS, USPS or DHL. Pick up is available from our Reno office, once you have received your invoice post auction
Inc. in Colorado. Low cert. number 12, issued for one share to Chas. L. Tutt in 1925. Signed by Spencer Penrose as president and E. Hartwell as secretary. Not cancelled. Black border and print, gold seal, and locomotive vignette. Folds. 8.25 x 10.75" Spencer Penrose made his first fortune at Cripple Creek with the COD Mine, which he was invited to invest in with the help of his childhood friend, Charles Tutt. Penrose sold the mine and formed the Colorado-Philadelphia Reduction Company, an ore-processing facility in Old Colorado City. Tutt and Penrose brought on tenured miner and miller, Charles Mather MacNeill. By 1899, its plant was treating over $3 million worth of Cripple Creek ore annually. The three men would create a mining, milling, and real estate empire in the years that followed. Penrose later invested in mining operations in Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and Nevada. He settled in Colorado Springs and built the road to the top of Pikes Peak, as well as the Broadmoor Hotel. This railroad is the re-incorporation of the failed Colorado Springs and Cripple Creek District Railway Company, started by WS Stratton, James Burns, Frank Peck, and others. It took over the electric lines serving the towns of the Cripple Creek District, as well as the railroad that went through Victor, Goldfield, and Cameron, then went down the "Gold Camp Road" through Cheyenne Canyon into Colorado Springs.


Date: 1925
Country (if not USA):
State: Colorado
City: Cripple Creek
Provenance: Gary Bracken Collection