3294

Lexington Consolidated Gold & Silver Mining Company, Aurora, 1863

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money / Stock & Bond - Mining Start Price:250.00 USD Estimated At:500.00 - 1,000.00 USD
Lexington Consolidated Gold & Silver Mining Company, Aurora, 1863
SOLD
700.00USDto r********5+ buyer's premium (175.00)
This item SOLD at 2018 Mar 17 @ 12:29UTC-7 : PDT/MST
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Location: Last Chance Hill, Aurora, Mono County. Certificate No. 50 for 5 shares, issued to R. G. Surdam on May 2, 1863. Signed by Secretary E. W. Kuster and President B. F. Porter. Endorsed on reverse also with signatures. Incorporated March 2nd, 1863 and capitalized at $240,000.00; 1200 shares at $200 per. In the early days of the Comstock, Harvey Harris, a well-known assayer in California with offices in San Francisco, Sacramento and Marysville was busy scouting new locations for expanding his assaying business in the Nevada Territory. Aurora was on the border with California and was county seat to both Mono County, CA and Esmeralda County, Nevada Territory. In late 1864, after the boundary survey prior to Nevada statehood in October of 1864, Aurora was firmly identified as part of Nevada. Harris opened up branch offices first in Aurora (June 5, 1861) and then Carson City in the Nevada Territory by the late summer of 1861. He hired Ernst (Edward) W. Kuster--the E.W. Kuster that signed this stock-- to head his branch assay office in Aurora and later sold out to him. Black print on crème paper with black border; yellow underprint “240,000”. Printed by Robbins & Co. Print, 417 Clay St. San Francisco. Uncancelled. Measures 9 7/8” x 5 3/8”. Vignette of woman center by Loomis and vignette at left a man with a team of oxen. Very rare. Later consolidated by the Real del Monte Mining Company, which took over the highly productive "old" Aurora claims on Last Chance Hill in 1877. [Ref: EMJ,Vol. 27] Date: Location: Aurora, Nevada HWAC# 572005