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S. Molitor & Co. - Gold Receipt, rec'd from W.F. c/o C.T.H. Palmer [169253]

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money / Ingots Start Price:75.00 USD Estimated At:150.00 - 200.00 USD
S. Molitor & Co. - Gold Receipt, rec'd from W.F. c/o C.T.H. Palmer  [169253]
SOLD
80.00USDto c*********p+ buyer's premium (20.00)
This item SOLD at 2023 Aug 27 @ 13:58UTC-7 : PDT/MST
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Memorandum of Gold Bullion deposited at the Assay Office of S. Molitor & Co. Dated July 5th, 1861 ñ No.1574 Bullion deposit with assay results. Deposited by C.T.H. Palmer. Weight before melting 88.00 oz, after melting 87.94 oz, .916 fine, value of gold $1,645.77. Office located at 418 Montgomery Street. Red on white; Towne & Bacon, printers. Extremely Fine. R6. Assay Office of S. Molitor & Co.: Steven Molitor was the son of A. Molitor, considered one of the great California Gold Rush assayers and one of the men originally involved with the U.S. Assay Office. In January 1859 Augustus and his son Steven formed a new company called S. Molitor and Company. By then Steven had worked in British Columbia during the Fraser River gold rush of 1857-1858 as well as in San Francisco with his father during earlier years. A third brother named Titus also worked for the firm. S. Molitor and Company's business in San Francisco flourished for a while. Then Steven took off for a gold rush in San Diego County, but that did not last long. Molitor was then off to Helena, Montana, and the Montana Gold Rush, then to Deadwood, in the early 1880s as part of the Black Hills Gold rush, which was home to United States largest single gold mine, the Homestake Mining Company. Stephen Moliltor's bullion receipts are relatively common with perhaps fifty known. However, Molitor bullion receipts from 1859 are an R8 (1 to 3 known). None are presently known from A. Molitor. There are perhaps a dozen known from 1860, and a similar amount or less from 1861 and 1862. The 1863 receipts are more common. 1864 to 1865 receipts may be considerably rarer, though until recently rarity and year of issue were seldom of concern to most collectors. The majority of the Molitors came from the C.T.H. Palmer archive distributed more than thirty years ago. Palmer was a gold rush banker in the Sacramento/Folsom area and was also involved at Gold Hill, Nevada. Molitor used the same form while he was at the 110 Montgomery St. during the 1860-61 period, though some forms are printed in red ink and others purple, possibly copying G.W. Bell's lead of using different colors each year. In 1863, after Molitor moved to 418 Montgomery St. he used a different form in which his name is printed in large, bold block letters. Towne & Bacon of San Francisco were the printers. Size: 10.625 x 4.875 inches. San Francisco California 1861