Front side of document fragment #1 with two pounds, ten shillings British tax stamp
Front side of document fragment #2 with a British tax stamp for one pound and a second for five shillings:
Front side of document fragment #1 with two pounds, ten shillings British tax stamp
Front side of document fragment #2 with a British tax stamp for one pound and a second for five shillings:
Reverse side of fragment:
Meyer Guggenheim was the patriarch of what became known as the Guggenheim family in the United States, which became one of the world's wealthiest families during the 19th century, and remained so during the 20th. Their wealth was largely based on mining and metals processing.
John B. Lyon was member #1976 of the Chicago Board of Trade, and traded, for most of his career, under the firm name Lyon & Company at the head office at 12 Sherman Street in Chicago. The firm was large enough to have multiple offices in the US and beyond.
Front side of document fragment:
John B. Lyon, was a member of the Chicago Board of Trade for forty-six years, joining immediately after arriving in Chicago, and had participated in more "deals" in wheat and corn and had handled larger amounts of corn as a shipper than any other grain man in the West. Although of late years poor health had limited his activities, his last trades were closed out only on the day pre- ceding his death. Between 1860 and 1879 the name of J. B. Lyon stood for immense deals in wheat and corn, straightforward honesty and great wealth. In August of 1872, following the short wheat crop of 1871, Mr. Lyon ran a "corner," in the course of which the price soared to $1.62. The Lyon holding was estimated at 25,000,000 bushels, and stocks of wheat in Chicago were only 6,000,000 bushels. The deal failed, however, owing to the rushing of new crop wheat to market and the passing of a large amount of damp wheat as No. 2 spring for delivery. When Mr. Lyon saw what was coming, he sold out and the deal is said to have cost him $800,000. Pre- ceding this deal Mr. Lyon had run several successful corners in corn in the middle '60s, in which he shipped the bulk of the crop to Buffalo for three successive years, and had the making of prices practically his own way. It was his custom to charter all the boats available on the lakes and move corn east so deliveries could not be made. In 1860 he ran a wheat deal for Angus Smith of Milwaukee, in which heavy profits were realized. Mr. Lyon handled so much corn in the '70s that the trade always was watching for a corner. In 1879 he shipped 50,000,000 bushels of corn. Mr. Lyon formed a number of partnerships, but the firm name generally was J. B. Lyon & Co. until he entered business with John Lester, when the style was Lyon & Lester. Earlier he was connected at different times with G. J. Boyne, now with Armour & Co., W. Meddows and J. Swartz. For more than twenty years he conducted, in connection with his grain operations, an immense sugar plantation at Patterson, La. He owned the town of Bellefontain, Miss. At Ocean Springs, Miss., he had at the time of his death fifteen miles of oyster beds, and the entire Hollinger Island, off Mobile. His holdings of pine lands in the South and of real estate in and adjacent to Chicago were also large.
Merry Christmas from 1898 Revenues!
Reverse side of Botany Worsted Mills document fragment:
On May 17, 1889, the Botany Worsted Mills was established by German immigrants. The Botany Worsted Mill was the first integrated woolen plant in the country and became one of the biggest. The factory employed 6,400 employees. The mill was a huge factor in the growth of the Passaic area.
Reverse side of document fragment:
Front of document fragment with British five shilling tax stamp:
Back side of the bill of exchange:
From Barnett, James P. 2019. Naval stores: A history of an early industry created from the South's forests. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Southern Research Station:
Naval stores are a nearly forgotten legacy in the South, but throughout history nations have depended on them, sought them out, and fought wars over these coniferous products. These products—tar, pitch, turpentine, and rosin—long kept the wooden navies of the world afloat and found many other uses prior to petrochemical dominance. Even with the decline in sailing ships, there has been an international demand for these products. This is the story of a remarkable, but messy, industry that helped support much of the South’s economy for nearly 400 years.
The "U.M.S." in the cancels below stands for United Metals Selling Company. Without knowing better I would be sure the S would stand for Smelting, a core metals processing activity and a business that would make the Guggenheim family wealthy. Whatever the case, this firm is of the Selling variety, and one that worked to keep prices high.
The Sherman Antitrust Act was passed in 1890. Given the scope and purpose of the United Metals Selling Company, established in early 1900, either the definition of restraint of trade was a bit narrower than we understand it today, or the organizers didn't care and thought they could bully and perhaps bribe their way around the 1890 law. The New York Times article from February, 1900 below, provides a good sketch of the mission of the new firm. At the time, many forms of restraint of trade, despite the 1890 law, seemed to be in play, perhaps the best example being John Rockefeller's monopolization of the oil industry. What to me is most interesting about this firm is the name itself, which announces that it exists to set and dictate metal prices.
The document fragments I've included below were a part of a hoard of bills of exchange fragments that were sold by a vendor in the United Kingdom many years ago. The front side of the document below provided just enough information to sort out the firm that canceled these stamps.
Note the R172p on the fragment below.
It appears that there were two prominent J. Q. Adams & Company firms in United States during the 1898 tax period. One firm was a Massachusetts-based publisher, apparently associated with Mary Baker Eddy and the rapidly growing Christian Science faith. The other was a Minnesota-based grain dealer. The stamp below was canceled by the grain firm. See the post from December 1 for E. S. Woodworth & Company, also a grain dealer based in Minnesota. The canceling devices were clearly made by the same company, from design to choice of type.
Today begins a series of document fragments, mostly bill of exchange fragments that came from a large lot acquired from the U. K. I'm assuming that all of them are fragments of bills of exchange, as most that I can decipher seem to be. You can find similar fragments to some of those posted at the Revenue-Collector site.
The New York-based commission merchant firm of Fleitmann & Company starts the series:
Reverse side of document fragment: