3595

Newbold Papers, c1860's Mining Exploration/Development

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Mining Start Price:500.00 USD Estimated At:1,000.00 - 2,000.00 USD
Newbold Papers, c1860's Mining Exploration/Development
SOLD
500.00USDto 8*************e+ buyer's premium (125.00)
This item SOLD at 2018 Mar 17 @ 17:09UTC-7 : PDT/MST
SHIPPING & HANDLING: Shipping and Handling cannot be estimated prior to invoicing, based on the size and weight of your purchase. All shipping is subject to a minimum charge of $19.00. If additional shipping and handling costs are required, the buyer will be reinvoiced for the balance due. Items are not shipped until the invoice is completely paid. Many buyers purchase a number of lots. Every effort will be made to include all lots in a single shipping charge calculated to cover the weight and size of the package(s). NOTE: Some shipments (of unusual size, dimension, or weight) may require sp...
Important papers from the John L Newbold estate of Philadelphia Pennsylvania, circa 1830 to 1880. John L. Newbold was the son of John Newbold of Philadelphia. The senior Newbold was the first president of the Bank of Delaware County. Over the term of his career he became a real estate mogul. At the time of his death, unfortunately a large portion of family landholdings had to be sold, victims of the 1837 financial crash. Meanwhile the son, John L Newbold, went to law school and became a prominent lawyer. He became a member of the Philadelphia Law Academy and served on the Philadelphia Select Council. His business was extremely successful, allowing him to go into the business that his father started of loaning money. The files here show accounts of up to nearly $100,000 or more loaned out in a single year. This level of personal financial loans puts him in a unique position up with some of the most important American financiers. Even though he established wealth at a high-level, he was passive in public. As such, is not mentioned in the Encyclopedia of American Biography.



Newbold became interested in mining ventures in Mexico, South America and the Caribbean about the time of the great Comstock discoveries which followed the California Gold Rush. He formed a prospecting company to go through Mexico and parts of the Dominican Republic around 1861 to 1865. This resulted in the formation of several companies. These companies included the Monta Grandes Silver Mining and Commercial Company in Chihuahua, Mexico, the San Domingo mine in Chihuahua, the San Martin and Santa Rosa silver mines in Chihuahua, and possibly others. After Newbold's death his son continued holding the the reins with mining, investing in new properties or newly discovered properties such as the Tropic mine in Clear Creek County, Colorado and possibly others in Montana.



This archive contains perhaps more than 100 pages of documents related to Newbold's mining holdings and his real estate loans. It is divided into several groups, the Tropic mine, the San Martin and Santa Rosa mines, the San Domingo mine, holdings in Tennessee, holdings of a partnership of Henchmen and Newbold, and holdings from a partnership of Newbold and Mendenhall, among other papers.



One of the most important files starts with an 1861 to 1865 prospecting report for parts of the Dominican Republic and possibly Mexico. This report, of approximately 40 handwritten pages, involves a detailed expedition looking for viable minerals. It was written by F. T. Waldenage (sp?).



The Santo Domingo mine documents date from 1865 to 1867. This collection includes 15 different documents regarding the mining company, the agreement with the Mexican government regarding mineral rights and access, letters about the company stock subscriptions, shareholder meeting minutes, and who was issued shares.



The San Martin and Santa Rosa silver mine papers include four documents from the 1866 to 1867 period. Work on these properties apparently began in 1858 and Newbold's group took control in 1866. There's a production report, and another report discussing specimens of ore held in the New York office as well as assays by US mint assayer Eckfeldt.



Another group of documents discusses the sale of the Santo Domingo Las Bolas mine to Americans in 1866 to 1867.



Newbold had a partnership with a man named Mendenhall. They leased, bought and sold or loaned money to people in Pennsylvania. Some of their holdings included significant properties in Beaver County, Pennsylvania as well as companies that the pair formed. This group contains at least five significant documents.



Newbold had a partnership with Henchmen, circa 1833 to 49. This file includes at least four documents about their accounts and how much money was loaned to various people over time, a significant amount of money.



The Newbold papers also contain a couple of original prospectuses of importance. One is an original printed prospectus from the Tioga Railroad of New York, 1832. Another is a report on Cannell lands situated in Columbiana County, Ohio, 1859 by Benjamin Silliman, the prominent geology professor from Yale. Newbold and Mendenhall were investors in this venture, as evidenced by their manuscript names on the cover.



Newbold’s son took up the mining business after the death of his father. He invested in the Tropic Mine at Silver Creek camp in the Montana mining district Clear Creek, County Colorado. He also invested in a mine in Mexico and others possibly in Montana as well.



The archive contains a number of other papers from this estate. This is a marvelous file that illustrates the level of activity by wealthy Philadelphia financier, at a time of great expansion in the mining business due to the California gold rush and discoveries and the Comstock Lode. Those discoveries resulted in people forming prospecting parties to look for valuable minerals throughout the Western world.



This is an excellent archive. Date: Location: Pennsylvania HWAC# 56165