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Great Basin Mining Company Stock Certificate 106991

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money / Stock & Bond - Mining Start Price:300.00 USD Estimated At:600.00 - 1,000.00 USD
Great Basin Mining Company Stock Certificate  106991
SOLD
300.00USDto f*****E+ buyer's premium (75.00)
This item SOLD at 2019 Oct 06 @ 18:00UTC-7 : PDT/MST
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Incorporated in 1863. No. 439, issued to J.D. Hunt for 50 shares in 1864 in San Francisco. Signed by president Jno. Williams and secretary George A. Hill. Signed as a witness on the back by William Bigler, brother to California governor John Bigler and also Pennsylvania governor from 1852-1855! Not cancelled. Wonderful vignette at top right showing frontiersmen on one side and Indians on the other overlooking the Great Basin. This is a classic portrayal of the Great Basin in 1864. Black border and print. Humboldt Co. N. T printed in the background. The six ledges owned by the company are printed on a ribbon vignette on the left border. Printer - Britton & Co. 25 cent adhesive revenue stamp attached at lower left. 5.5 x 9.5" Pinholes, folds, and a few small stains. This is an important certificate for a number of reasons. First, the vignette shows the classical representation of the Great Basin at a time when life there was difficult for miners and Indians. The two cultures clashed. Battles were hard fought. This is also the first time we have seen the phrase "Great Basin" that Fremont coined when he crossed it in the 1840's. The term was not well adapted into Nevada language until many decades later. Humboldt County silver mines were discovered right after the Comstock. They were in such a remote location, however, that getting to and from Unionville and surrounding mining camps required risk of life from both the lack of food and water, and conflicts with Indians. The Great Basin Co. owned the Auld Lange Syne, Clydesdale, Occidental, Neptune, Las Tablas, and Frost mines near Dun Glen, the central mining camp for the Sierra District, just south of the Humboldt River south of Winnemucca. The company had built a mill, which was the only one still standing in 1866. Mining came at a time before records of production were kept, though local owners in Winnemucca in the early 1900's claims about $200,000 in silver and gold had been produced there. George Hill was a real estate agent, and Hunt a merchant in San Francisco. The claims of the Great Basin Co. were among those first patented in Humboldt County. The property (not the company) remained active for at least five decades, and may have then changed names. (Ref: Stretch 1867, Clayton 1865, Vanderburg, 1865 SF Dir.) City: Humboldt County State: Nevada Date: 1864