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Gold Bullion Assayer Sales Receipt Document- Thomas Price [132309]

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Mining Start Price:100.00 USD Estimated At:200.00 - 400.00 USD
Gold Bullion Assayer Sales Receipt Document- Thomas Price  [132309]
SOLD
80.00USD+ (17.60) buyer's premium + applicable fees & taxes.
This item SOLD at 2021 May 14 @ 10:07UTC-7 : PDT/MST
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Memorandum of bullion deposited by Wheeler & Rodgers to Thomas Price, Analytical Chemist, Assay and Bullion Melter, at his office at 524 Sacramento Street. The sample is 142 ounces of gold with a value of $2763.49 Printed by Britton & Rey.

According to researcher Fred Holabird “Price went to work as an assayer with Kellogg, Hewston & Co. He began teaching a series of private assay and chemistry classes in San Francisco about 1862 or 1863, advertising in the Mining and Scientific Press, the news organ for the western scientific community. The classes lasted for three months, two nights a week, and by June 1863, he was attracting twenty or more students to each class. About 1865, he supplemented his assaying career by teaching chemistry at the San Francisco City College and Toland Medical College. Kellogg, Hewston & Co. was purchased and the name of the firm changed to the San Francisco Assaying & Refining Works, and Price continued there. In 1875, Price left the firm and started his own assaying business. About ten years later, he brought in his son as a partner, and changed his firm’s name to Thomas Price & Son. His career was flourishing, and many of his students went on to become assayers, among them Henry Hanks, later a prominent San Francisco assayer himself. About 1880 Price began using the initials M. D. after his name, probably because of a degree earned from Toland Medical College. By 1887 Price’s business at 524 Sacramento Street had grown. He employed thirteen assistants and boasted the latest and most complete equipment and services. During the course of his career he examined mining properties in all the major mining locations of the west, and even in North Carolina. In 1892 he was commissioned to supervise the establishment of an enormous mining plant in South Africa. Price died at home at the age of 77 on October 13, 1912. He was father to Arthur, Minnie, and Annie, and Mrs. J.P. Turner.”

Date: 1883
Country (if not USA):
State: California
City: San Francisco
Provenance: