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IXL Gold and Silver Mining Company Stock, Silver Mountain, Alpine County

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money / Stock & Bond - Mining Start Price:200.00 USD Estimated At:400.00 - 900.00 USD
IXL Gold and Silver Mining Company Stock, Silver Mountain, Alpine County
SOLD
450.00USDto i*****l+ buyer's premium (112.50)
This item SOLD at 2018 Oct 20 @ 10:48UTC-7 : PDT/MST
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Number 307 for 50 shares (50225 to 50275) of this English stock. Datelined London 1874. WC Chalmers secretary. Incorporated on July 3, 1864 per the Daily Alta California. Not cancelled. One small hole upper left. Otherwise in great condition. The IXL was one of the earliest and richest claims made in Alpine County. The IXL was discovered in summer, July 1, 1861 (the same day as the Buckeye No. One was taken up); describing the location of the lower IXL tunnel, just 537 feet from the higher-up Accacia (per Chalmers' Exchequer Officials, 1871-2, May 22, 2871, p. 48-49; 54; 56; 67). IXL was located 1,700 feet lower down the Canyon than Exchequer, which was higher up (1871-2 Private p. 535, March 21, 1873). A later report indicates that the discoverers of this mine “are said to have taken out over $50,000 from a space 40 feet long and 22 feet high, within 50 feet of the surface” in 1861, and that 1,000 tons milled in 1863 averaged $250 a ton by assay (but milled at $125 a ton). (Jan. 1922, Report of State Mineralogist). The IXL was mentioned in the Letters of Henry Eno, "In 1867, the IXL Superintendent [probably Slaven ] was telling Henry Eno that the lode – which had produced $18,000 to $20,000 until the lode pinched out a year and a half before, was now back into a "well-defined lode of 8 feet wide of the very richest kind of ore" and he wished he had money to buy stock (Letters of Henry Eno, p. 160). In May he noted, "At Silver Mt. there is a mine called the IXL (I excel) which has also struck a very rich lode, but they try to keep it secret. But have got so many to help keep it that it has leaked out." (p. 163, May 15, 1867). Chalmers, the famous (well, here in Alpine) mining capitalist who represented a London consortium of investors and siphoned British investor money into the mines here in Alpine over a twenty-year period, who became interested in the I.X.L. in 1871. Chalmers says it is to the IXL that Alpine Co. was indebted for its very existence, saying the IXL "in 1862-3 created no small excitement in mining circles and gave birth to the town of Silver Mountain" (1871-2 "Private" p. 49 and p. 535). [Thank you to Karen Dustman, local historian and author of the book "Silver Mountain City (Clairitage Press) for background information on the mine and signatures.] Prag Collection City: Silver Mountain, Amador County State: California Date: 1864 HWAC# 79722