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Deadwood Check Archive from Lawyer & Pioneer Henry Frawley [199177]

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Paper Start Price:750.00 USD Estimated At:1,500.00 - 3,000.00 USD
Deadwood Check Archive from Lawyer & Pioneer Henry Frawley [199177]
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This is a spectacular archive of 1,600+ checks from Henry Frawley, a prominent Deadwood lawyer. This archive was previously unknown to us. The collection is mostly pre-1900 with the following rough breakdown: 1880s (300 checks), 1890s (750 checks), 1900-09 (about 200 checks), 1910s (300 checks), and 1920s (about 125 checks). We have pulled pieces from this archive to make many fun lots of different categories and topics, but this lot is the bulk of the archive. Henry Frawley arrived in Deadwood on a stagecoach on July 4th, 1877, roughly a year after Custer's defeat at Little Bighorn and Wild Bill Hickock's murder in the No. 10 saloon at Deadwood. Seth Bullock had just been appointed sheriff five months prior. The camp was booming. Frawley, born to Irish immigrant parents in New York, pursued his education at the University of Wisconsin in Eau Claire, earning a law degree in 1876. He initially practiced law in Wisconsin but soon moved to the Black Hills, where he began a legal career that included several partnerships, most notably with Edward L. Kohen and later John P. Laffey. In 1890, he became the resident attorney for the Burlington and Missouri Railroad, the same year he married Cristina Anderson, heiress to a ranch in the Centennial Valley. By 1892, Frawley had established his own ranch, which grew into a 3,000-acre operation renowned for its draft horses and distinctive horned Hereford cattle. Henry's legal practice continued to grow, and over time included partnerships with his brothers James and Edward, the latter forming the firm Frawley and Frawley in 1903. The firm represented major mining and banking interests, including the Golden Reward Consolidated Gold Mining Company and the American National Bank. Beyond his legal and ranching success, Henry was recognized for his intellect and extensive personal library. His ranch became a model of development in the region, with lasting structures like stone barns, a schoolhouse, and well-furnished residences‚ many of which still stand. Today, his descendants remain in the northern Black Hills, preserving his legacy.
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Date: 1880s-1920s
Country (if not USA):
State: South Dakota
City: Deadwood
Provenance: