From A Peoples Guide to Greater Boston:
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- NYSE Brokers 1898-1902 A thru K
- NYSE Brokers 1898 - 1902 L thru Z
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- On-document Uses with Frank Sente
- Revenue Stamped Paper with Bob Hohertz
- On Beyond Holcombe with Malcolm Goldstein
- Graded Stamps
Sunday, November 24, 2024
Boston Stock Brokers: Thomas H. Perkins & Company
From A Peoples Guide to Greater Boston:
Saturday, November 23, 2024
Boston Stock Brokers: Gray, Dewey & Company
Thursday, November 21, 2024
Boston Stockbrokers: Stackpole & Gay
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
Boston Stock Brokers: Clement, Parker & Company
Sunday, November 17, 2024
Boston Stock Brokers: George S. Baldwin & Company
Saturday, November 16, 2024
Thursday, November 14, 2024
Boston Stock Brokers: NYSE Brokers Listed as Primarily Boston-based in the NYSE 1898-1902 Database
Quite a large number of brokers trading on the NYSE also kept offices or traded in Boston. In the case of the brokers listed below, Boston was their main base, while one of the firm's partners maintained a seat on the New York Exchange. So this list is not complete with regard to firms that did business in both places, as firms like Brown Brothers and Blake Brothers, mentioned in recent posts, did not identify themselves as primarily Boston firms, and I did not classify them that way in the NYSE broker database.
Whatever the case, this is another starting point for looking for Boston broker cancels, as David T and I have been methodically collecting the NYSE cancels for years.
Elisha D. | Bangs & Company | Boston |
William | Bassett | Boston |
John W. | Belches & Company | Boston |
George C. | Brooks & Company | Boston |
George F. | Brown Jr. | Boston |
Brown, Reilly & Company | Boston | |
Chase & Barstow | Boston | |
Curtis & Motley | Boston | |
Curtis & Sanger | Boston | |
Dillaway & Company | Boston | |
Dillaway & Starr | Boston | |
Downer & Company | Boston | |
Walter H. | Edgerly | Boston |
Edgerly & Crocker | Boston | |
Emery & Tucker | Boston | |
Estabrook & Company | Boston | |
Hale & Company | Boston | |
Hayden, Stone & Company | Boston | |
E. C. | Hodges & Company | Boston |
Jackson & Curtis | Boston | |
Kidder, Peabody & Company | Boston | |
Lee, Higginson & Company | Boston | |
E. E. | Leland & Company | Boston |
S. D. | Loring & Son | Boston |
F. S. | Mead & Company | Boston |
E. Rollins | Morse & Brother | Boston |
Norman & Company | Boston | |
Paine, Webber & Company | Boston | |
Pearmain & Brooks | Boston | |
John | Pickering & Moseley | Boston |
F. H. | Prince & Company | Boston |
Richardson, Hill & Company | Boston | |
Schofield, Whicher & Company | Boston | |
Sutton & Bowen | Boston | |
Tower, Giddings & Company | Boston | |
Towle & Fitzgerald | Boston | |
Tucker, Anthony & Company | Boston | |
H. C. | Wainwright & Company | Boston |
Andrew N. | Winslow | Boston |
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
Boston Stock Brokers: Working Towards a Complete List
As with the NYSE, Moody's published the membership lists for the Boston Exchange for 1900, 1901 and 1902. But it means that we're missing 1898 and 1899, which are gaps that need an answer. Turns out that at least one book available online provides some help, thought it is not ideal. An 1893 hagiography of the exchange and its members provides a complete list, and a quick scan of my stamps shows at least one broker that shows up in this 1893 list that was no longer in the exchange by 1900.
Sunday, November 10, 2024
New York Stock Brokers: "BB & CO": Brown Brothers & Co., Brown, Bruns & Co., or Blake Brothers & Co.?
Identical corporate initials can confound the identification of firms that used 1898 revenue stamps, as the cases of H&H and AS&Co have demonstrated. In the case today, we consider B.B & Co on the 1898 dollar values, likely used to pay taxes on stock trades. At least three firms with these initials traded stocks on the NYSE during the 1898 tax period, and it is certain that all three of them used their initials to cancel documentary stamps. The best known of the two was Brown Brothers & Company, a multinational firm with offices trading on the exchanges in Boston, Philadelphia, New York, and Baltimore. Blake Brothers & Company also had members with seats in New York and Boston, while Brown, Bruns & Company, appears to have traded only on the NYSE. Brown Brothers would, through a merger, become Brown Brothers Harriman, one of the best known Wall Street firms of the 20th century.
A stock sale memo from Brown, Bruns & Company: 300 shares of a +$13 stock were sold, requiring $6 worth of documentary revenue stamps. 6 copies of Scott R182 were used, each with the same cancel: B. B. & CO. Below is a single stamp from that memo:
Brown Bruns ceased to exist and stopped trading by later 1990 or early 1901, making it less likely that the cancels on the four stamps above came from that firm. My guess would be that one of the cancel types above belong to Brown Brothers, and the other to Blake Brothers. Someday sale memoranda might show up that provide confirmation.
The 1905 year on the second stamp was clearly caused by an incorrect adjustment of the year date slug.
Saturday, November 9, 2024
New York Stock Brokers: Wayland Trask & Company or Walsh, Tailer & Company?
- Walsh, Tailer & Company
- Wayland Trask & Company
Thursday, November 7, 2024
New York Stock Brokers: Allen, Sand & Company vs Alling, Secor & Company
As with the recently discussed firms Halsted & Hodges and Halsted & Hollister, the New York Stock Exchange firms Allen, Sand & Company and Alling, Secor & Company may create some confusion in cancel identification. I've been reviewing my collection to check on accuracy and potential stories for this website, and early in the process I found a cancel where it should not be.
Immediately below is an inset scan of an album page with two "AS&Co" cancels, under the title Allen, Sand & Company. I clearly mounted the green R173 first, assuming the AS&Co to stand for Allen, Sand. Subsequently, the R184 with the fully written out "Allen Sand & Co" was added. But as I paged forward and came to the firm Alling, Secor, I notice that the "A.S.&Co." cancels on the stamps on the Alling, Secor memorandum of sale were familiar, and realized they matched the cancel on the R173 on the Allen, Sand page. So I've subsequently moved the stamp to the Alling, Secor page.
Here is what the page once looked like, with the stamp on the left misidentified:
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
New York Stock Brokers: Sorting Out Clarence M. Cohen; Cohen, Stiebel & Company and Cohen, Greene & Company
Sunday, November 3, 2024
New York Stock Brokers: Halsted & Hodges vs Halsted & Hollister
Saturday, November 2, 2024
New York Stock Brokers: The Bouvier Brothers
The Bouvier brothers, Michel Charles and John Vernou, were both brokers at the New York Stock Exchange during the 1898 tax period, and they both acquired their seats in 1869, making them some of the most senior members of the exchange by 1898.
The cancels of Michel C. Bouvier come as straight line M. C. BOUVIER & CO, or as initials of the same. They seem to be the most commonly found. The only John Vernou Bouvier cancel I know of is shown on a sale memo below.
Memos courtesy of MSgt. David Thompson.
There were three John V. Bouviers; the one trading during the 1898 tax period was John V. Bouvier I. John V. Bouvier III, aka "Black Jack", was the father of Jackie Kennedy.