At the beginning of the 1898 tax period, Seneca D. Brown, Edwin G. Bruns and William Freudenstein were partners in the NYSE brokerage firm Brown, Bruns & Company. Among them, only Edwin Bruns held a seat on the exchange. By 1901, however, Brown, Bruns was no longer listed as a firm. Edwin Bruns would still be listed as holding a seat, but without a firm. Meanwhile that year, Seneca D. Brown would create his own firm, with what appears to be his son, Frederick W. Brown.
The following memorandum of sale shows Brown Bruns still trading as of late 1900.
I have no sale memo for Seneca D. Brown's self-named firm, but the stamp below, likely used in 1901, has the initials of his firm for a cancel:
S.D.B & ?
SEP 30 ????
I'm still looking for cancel evidence of Mr. Bruns and his trading activity.
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