1394

Rhodes & Co. Express and Banking Office Checks, Weaverville, 1850s

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money / Exonumia Start Price:200.00 USD Estimated At:400.00 - 800.00 USD
Rhodes & Co. Express and Banking Office Checks, Weaverville, 1850s
SOLD
200.00USD+ (50.00) buyer's premium + applicable fees & taxes.
This item SOLD at 2018 Mar 15 @ 14:01UTC-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...
Lot of four checks/drafts for the Express & Banking Office of Rhodes & Co., Weaverville, California, 1853-1855 to be paid at the Rhodes & Co. office in Shasta. All are pictorial. All are signed by F.W. Blake as agent. Three were printed by Britton & Rey. Blake is perhaps better known for his dealings in Weaverville, Unionville and Silver City, but he also became an assayer. He came to California with his cousin Gorham Blake in 1852 on board the steamer Constitution. The pair were the same age, born and raised in Boston. Francis Blake immediately went to work for Rhodes & Lusk in Weaverville as an express agent. There he quickly learned the gold business as the Trinity-Shasta region was very rich. In 1861, he went to Nevada ending up in Unionville as an assayer until 1866 when he went to Silver City, ID and set up another assay business. The rich gold deposits at Weaverville, located in Trinity County, was first discovered in 1850. Carr describes a lynching and scalping of three white men who had stolen the mules of a pack train. He also describes the battle between the Hong Kongs and the Cantons, two rival Chinese companies. According to other accounts, the Chinese population in 1854 was 1,000. There was also the incredible story that in 1851, six miners dug by hand a shaft more than 700 feet deep and five feet in diameter, the deepest "coyote hole" ever made! [Ref: Gudde] Date: Location: Weaverville, California HWAC# 572061