2265

Mining Stock Issued to & Signed by Almarin B. Paul, Gold Hill Banker & Mining Man 1882 [164613]

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Mining Start Price:250.00 USD Estimated At:500.00 - 1,000.00 USD
Mining Stock Issued to & Signed by Almarin B. Paul, Gold Hill Banker & Mining Man  1882  [164613]
SOLD
250.00USDto 8*************e+ buyer's premium (62.50)
This item SOLD at 2023 Dec 08 @ 12:48UTC-8 : PST/AKDT

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This is a California mining stock issued to an important figure in California and Nevada mining history. Location: Nimshew, Butte County, California (printed at top). No. 19, issued for 500 shares to A.B. Paul, trustee, on April 28th, 1882 in San Francisco. Signed by A.B. Paul as secretary and N.T. Sheldon as vice-president. Also signed by Paul on reverse. Punch cancelled. Black print on yellow paper, Native American vignette. Folds, stamp and pen writing at upper right. A(lmarin) B. Paul was an early important figure on the Comstock. Paul arrived in California in 1849 having travelled through Panama. He briefly operated a hardware business in Sacramento before heading to Nevada City in 1850 to pursue mining. There, he built one of the first quartz mills in Nevada County, and became associated with George Hearst. In the mid 1850s, he made his way back to San Francisco and was an important figure in its development. He also supported the Vigilance Committee, coming together with others to form the paper the True Californian. In 1857, he made his way back to Nevada County and built the Oriental Quartz Mill. But news of an exciting find in Nevada reached Paul, especially in a letter to him from George Hearst that said: "You will soon know of tons of gold and silver leaving here every month." In 1860, Paul joined the rush to the Comstock and headed to Nevada, where he erected the first mill (twenty-four stamp) on the Comstock to process ore. It was called the Pioneer Mill and was located at Gold Canon, just below Devil's Gate. There, he developed the Washoe pan process first made famous on the Comstock. It was so successful that in 1865, he sold his mining interests and formed a banking business in Gold Hill. He also was the organizer of the Imperial Cons. MC. In 1867, he sold his Gold Hill banking business to the Bank of California and headed to Inyo County to resume mining and milling. In 1868, he secured patents on new processes for amalgamating the precious metals. By 1882, Paul is living in San Francisco where this stock was issued. [Ref: History of the New California Its Resources and People, Volume II, Irvine; History of the Comstock Lode, Smith] The AB Paul papers are currently in the Bank of California archives. Gold Hill Nevada Franklin Collection