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Wyoming Loan & Trust Co. Stock Certificate--Number 2 (100979)

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Documents Start Price:30.00 USD Estimated At:60.00 - 90.00 USD
Wyoming Loan & Trust Co. Stock Certificate--Number 2  (100979)
SOLD
15.00USDto l******8+ buyer's premium (3.75)
This item SOLD at 2019 May 20 @ 11:11UTC-7 : PDT/MST
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Low number 2, issued for 250 shares to Otto Gramm on March 1st, 1887 in Laramie. Signed by president R. Marsh and secretary Rinson. Pen cancelled. Black border and print. State seal vignette. Printed by Collier & Cleaveland, Denver. 6 x 10.5" Folds. Robert Marsh was born in England around 1850 and came to Laramie in 1868 to work as a timekeeper for the UPRR. As Marshís business interests prospered, he left the railroad, became the manager of the Pacific Market, dabbled in ranching. Marsh and his partner Frank Cooper became well known through their enterprises which included a market, ranches, and a slaughterhouse. Otto Gramm was an infamous businessman in Laramie. In 1870, he purchased Dr. Finfrock’s, a successful drug store in Laramie. In 1880, he added a soda fountain, which became a longtime fixture in the Laramie community. Gramm later opened the first bottling company in Laramie. A Republican, he served as probate judge in Laramie, treasurer of Albany County and was appointed State Treasurer in 1890, a position he held through 1895. He also served on the Board of Trustees for the University of Wyoming. In the early 1900s, Gramm had a contract with the State of Wyoming to operate the State Penitentiary in Rawlins. The conditions in the new prison were horrible. Gramm received $.57 per day per prisoner from the state, plus the profits from the facility’s broom works where the inmates worked. The broom works was burned down by the prisoners in 1912. It came to light that the prisoners under Gramm’s charge were given just enough food to prevent starvation. Ken Prag Collection

Date: 1887
City/County: Laramie
State: Wyoming