2075

William Sharon Silver Ingot to Civil War General & Nevada Mining Capitalist George Sullivan Dodge

Currency:USD Category:Coins & Paper Money / Ingots Start Price:5,000.00 USD Estimated At:10,000.00 - 20,000.00 USD
William Sharon Silver Ingot to Civil War General & Nevada Mining Capitalist George Sullivan Dodge
SOLD
11,000.00USDto t****J+ buyer's premium (2,310.00)
This item SOLD at 2016 Oct 01 @ 09:22UTC-7 : PDT/MST
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INTRODUCTION
The William Sharon (Virginia City, Nevada, Comstock) silver dinner plate ingots were first described by us over a decade ago. Lost to history for over a hundred years, one showed up in an eastern family archive. Since then a few more have surfaced.

DESCRIPTION
Large presentation ingot for a celebration honoring William Sharon "by his old friends of the Comstock Lode," 1876. This ingot was made for all-out surprise celebration for Sharon and his friends. Nineteen of these ingots were reportedly made for each of the attendees and a 20th for William Sharon. It is 6.13 Troy ounces. Approximately 6.25" X 4" and 1+ mm thick.

Geo. S. Dodge, name engraved at the bottom of the obverse of the ingot. General George Sullivan Dodge was a decorated Civil War veteran, who was brought to the West Coast about 1871 to manage the large new silver company in Eureka, the Eureka Consolidated. The mine was so rich that it rivaled the best of the Comstock, ultimately producing over $20 million from 1873 to 1906 alone. Dodges office was in San Francisco, right in the center of the Montgomery Street business section (Bank of California, etc.) where most of the financial ends of the Comstock mining barons took place. Dodge appears to have been appointed the first president of the Company, with the attendant job of getting the mine into profitable and large scale production. He was also associated with Candelaria, Cherry Creek and Virginia City mining operations. He and his wife moved across the Bay, where he died in Oakland in 1881.

THE STORY
The party was at the Palace Hotel, built by Sharon's old boss, William Chapman Ralston. Ralston had committed suicide several months earlier after the Bank of California's failure in 1875. It was at one time the largest and most powerful bank in the United States. The Bank had made it through the failure with the help of Sharon and friends. Reports said the affair had all the accouterments of an inaugural ball but was exceptionally private. Flowers were everywhere. The Palace Hotel manager, Mr. Warren Leland, was told to spare no expense, according to an article that appeared in the "San Francisco Examiner" the next day. It reported:

"It is fair to presume that the grand dinner spread in honor of William Sharon, in the Palace Hotel, on Tuesday Evening, has never been equaled in good taste or elegant surroundings on this continent. An enthusiast might say that 'it was fit for the gods' and it is doubtful whether there would be an exaggeration in such an assertion No public announcement of the intended gathering was given, and Mr. Sharon was ignorant of the arrangements until he was escorted into the banquet hall."

The paper went on to report the attendees were all old friends of Sharon's "long before he found the means to build up a fortune." Twenty men sat at a single table. D. O. Mills, sat at one end, and General John F. Miller, of the Alaska Commercial Company, sat at the other. Judge Heydenfeldt was seated at Miller's left. Seated down the two sides were people who will be a familiar lot to those students of early Comstock history: Thomas Bell, William Lent, and W. Alvord, all part of the original Gould & Curry Company; William Morris Stewart, champion Comstock lawyer and later Senator; Wood A. Head and Bob Morrow, all early claim stakers on the Comstock from Nevada City and Grass Valley; J. Shaw, J. Skae, both mine superintendents on the Comstock (Morrow was also supt. of the Savage); and G. S. Dodge, A. Gansl, A. Selover. Sta. Marina, D. L. Bliss and Steinhart. Apparently, while the men celebrated and told stories to one another, a band played nearby. There were no speeches; the party was a simple celebration of friendship in its grandest form.

The ingots were so exciting to the men and news media, that they were described in detail in the "Examiner". It reported that "At each plate were glasses for eight different kinds of wine. The napkins were folded flat, and on each was a delicate bouquet. Beneath the napkin was a bill of fare engraved on solid silver, dug from the Comstock lode, and highly polished. These measured about 6 1/4 by 4 1/4 inches. An observer laughingly remarked, "Everybody went away from the dinner with a silver brick in his hat."

SUMMARY
This ingot is important not only because of its rarity and of its presentation value to William Sharon, but because of what it represents. It is a remnant of an important turning point in California financial history, recognizing the great mines of the Comstock, the great bankers of California, and the ingenuity of American financiers in general - all at once. There would have been discussion of the Palace Hotel, just completed, and of Sharon's election to the Senate over his bitter rival James G. Fair, one of the Comstock kings. They would have discussed the old times on the Comstock in 1859-60, and their luck in California during the Gold Rush.

City: San Francisco State: California, Date: 1876 Inventory# 39679