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Highland Mining Company Stock Certificate #15 [200565]

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Mining Start Price:150.00 USD Estimated At:300.00 - 500.00 USD
Highland Mining Company Stock Certificate #15 [200565]
SOLD
250.00USDto 8*************e+ buyer's premium (62.50)
This item SOLD at 2025 Aug 09 @ 16:33UTC-07:00 : PDT/MST
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Highland Mining Company stock certificate, No. 15, the lowest number in the Shaddrick Collection, issued to O.J. Salisbury for 1000 shares and signed by Lloyd Tevis as president and Edward Clark as Secretary. October 28, 1895.
The Highland, right after the Homestake, was considered the most important mine at Lead by Horatio Burchard, Director of the Mint in his 1881 Report of the (mineral) Production of the States and Territories. That year, Burchard reported that the Highland Mill had 120 stamps, 50% larger than the Homestake Mill's 80 stamps. Unfortunately, no interim formal report was made for the Government between 1875 (Raymond) and 1881 (Burchard). The Government had struggled to change control of precious metal production reporting. It had previously been under the control of the US Mineral Commissioner, but that office was poorly funded, and each of the two Mineral Commissioners had to leave their job after Congress failed to allow or provide funding - first for J. Ross Browne in 1868, then Ross Raymond in 1875. After 1875, and a lot of political maneuvering, the Govt created the USA Geological Survey, whose job it was to report on the major mining districts, as well as the Grand Canyon as a first priority. That left the rest of the country up for grabs, so they assigned the tasks given Browne and Raymond to the Director of the Mint. That lasted until 1885.
There will be much data in further research in the Engineering and mining Journal as well as the Mining and Scientific Press.
Tevis, partner with Hearst and Haggin, took control of this mine early on, but that full story remains for another day.
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Date:
Country (if not USA):
State: South Dakota
City: Lead
Provenance: Homestake Mine Geologist Dave Shaddrick Collection