Sunday, May 18, 2025

Chicago Board of Trade Companies: Samuel Waters Allerton

S. W. A.
AUG 17 1900
CHICAGO.

S. W. A.
JUL 12 1898
CHICAGO.

Samuel Allerton was CBOT member 222.  He was one of the richest men in Chicago, at one point only behind Marshall Field and J. Ogden Armour.  Much of Allerton's fortune was made in livestock.  He was the Republican candidate for Mayor of Chicago in 1892.

Samuel Waters Allerton


Saturday, May 17, 2025

Chicago Board of Trade Companies: Grier & Zeller

GRIER & ZELLER
MAR ? 190?
CHICAGO.

Grier & Zeller closed up shop in mid-1901 as reported by the American Elevator & Grain Trade:



John P. Grier from Men of Illinois, 1902

Thursday, May 15, 2025

Chicago Board of Trade Companies: McRea & Waters and Waters, Patterson & Company

WATERS, PATTERSON & CO.
SUCCESSORS TO
JUN 14 1899
M'CREA & WATERS
CHICAGO.

Wiley B. Waters, CBOT Member #1680, traded with M'Crea & Waters until 1899, and then reorganized with someone named Patterson in that year.  However, he was reported by The Grain Dealers Journal of April 10, 1900 to have declared bankruptcy.  Following the bankruptcy, neither Waters nor Patterson were ever included in the CBOT membership lists after its organization in 1899.  

from The Economist, May 20, 1899


Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Chicago Board of Trade Companies: Adams & Samuel

Edward S. Adams, CBOT member #3002
Edward M. Samuel, CBOT member #4238

advert, Catalog of The International Livestock Exposition, Chicago, 1901

Sunday, May 11, 2025

Chicago Board of Trade Companies: R. Lindblom & Company

R. LINDBLOM & CO.
JUN 19 1899
CHICAGO.

Robert Lindblom was CBOT member #2396.


advert from The Democratic Sentinel of Rensselaer, Indiana, October 5, 1883.
Mr. Lindblom appears to have advertised throughout the United States soliciting the business of "speculators".  His ads pop up in newspapers around the country in the 1880s and perhaps beyond.

Saturday, May 10, 2025

Chicago Board of Trade Companies: The American Cereal Company


Originally posted back in 2023 on New Years Day, The American Cereal Company maintained a presence at the Chicago Board of Trade through its representives, including:

  • Henry P. Crowell, CBOT #6654
  • Robert Stuart, CBOT #2849
  • Lincoln Richards, CBOT #6655

The company was a large buyer of raw grain and likely bought for immediate use and to lock in future prices.

The canceled documents above were not used at the Board of Trade; one is a bill of exchange fragment and the other a sight draft.

The Grain Dealers Journal, August 24, 1904




Thursday, May 8, 2025

Chicago Board of Trade Companies: B.S. Sanborn & Company

B. S. SANBORN
JUN
27
1900
CHICAGO

Benjamin S. Sanborn was CBOT member 5082.

from The American Elevator & Grain Trade, May 15, 1905.  B. S. Sanborn & Company's business interests would be taken over by W. J. Thompson & Company.
 

Tuesday, May 6, 2025

Chicago Board of Trade Companies: Chicago Packing & Provision Company

Another example of the CBOT reeded CDS:

C. P. & P. CO.
MAR
19
1900
CHICAGO
 
Grant C. Pryor represented the Chicago Packing & Provision Company at the Chicago Board of Trade and was member 2585.

Chicago Packing & Provision Company promotional poster.

Sunday, May 4, 2025

Chicago Board of Trade Companies: Fred D. Stevers & Company

F. D. S. & CO.
AUG
8
1900
CHICAGO.

Fred D. Stevers was CBOT member #4566.


from The American Elevator & Grain Trade, May 15, 1902

Saturday, May 3, 2025

Chicago Board of Trade Companies: A. S. White & Company

A. Stamford White & Company was known for using a reeded CDS, and there are other brokers at the Chicago Board of Trade that can be found using a similar CDS, sometimes with only initials to identify them.  These cancels are fairly unambiguously those of Mr. White:

A. S. WHITE & CO.
MAR
2
1900





Mr. White was CBOT member 3359.

Thursday, May 1, 2025

Collecting the Chicago Board of Trade on 1898 Revenue Stamps

 

Chicago Board of Trade building c.1900.


It is time for an upgrade to the "CBOT" or Chicago Board of Trade tab above.  The tab/page was originally created over a decade ago as I began to roll up what were more obvious stamps and cancels used in business at the Chicago Board of Trade, where grain commission, milling companies, livestock, and other businesses could speculate on the future prices of commodities or outright purchase them.  Famously, the Board established standard contracts for grades of grains, like #2 Wheat, which could be bought and sold as futures with fixed dates for delivery, hence the World War I revenue stamps with "Future Delivery" overprinted on them.  During the 1898 tax period, there were no special stamps to pay future delivery taxes, though futures contracts were clearly taxed in the 1898 War Revenue Law:

"Upon each sale, agreement of sale, or agreement to sell, any products or merchandise at any exchange, or board of trade, or other similar place, either for present or future delivery, for each one hundred dollars in value of said sale or agreement of sale or agreement to sell, one cent, and for each additional one hundred dollars, or fractional part thereof in exces of one hundred dollars, one cent: Provided, That on every sale or agreement of sale or agreement to sell as aforesaid there shall be made and delivered by the seller to the buyer a bill, memorandum, agreement, or other evidence of such sale, or agreement to sell, to which there shall be affixed a lawful stamp or stamps in value equal to the amount of the tax on such sale."

This law applied to stock and other similar exchanges, such that lawyers for exchanges and boards of trade in large cities across the United States quickly had their lawyers assess their tax liabilities, with their conclusions leading to highly collectible stamps and documents canceled by their users.  The BEP did not produce special stamps for future delivery during the 1898 tax period.

Unlike like the New York Stock Exchange where stocks were usually traded in multiples of 100 and where dollar value stamps were the norm, the value of futures contracts and the tax rate meant that the use of battleship stamps was more common, and that the denomination(s) of the stamps on the contract or memo might include any or all of the documentary battleships stamps.  A typical example:


A standard memo of sale at the Chicago Board of Trade in 1901; James P. Molloy selling to Weare Commission Company, with 36 cents tax on the sale of contracts for December 1901 wheat.  Price as of October 21, 1901.  James Molloy was member #4623 of the CBOT; Charles and Portus Weare were CBOT members 1684 & 1685, respectively.

Because hundreds of thousands of these types of memos were generated at the CBOT, and there happened to be many stamp collectors in the Chicago area in the early 20th century, any reasonably medium to large sized accumulation of loose documentary battleship stamps today is likely to a include few stamps that were canceled by firms at the CBOT.  Some of the stamps have the full name of the firm, some only have initials, so some work in cancel identification is necessary.  

The key tool of the trade in the cancel identification process is knowledge of or a searchable database of the lists of members of the Chicago Board of Trade throughout the 1898 tax period:

Lists of members of the Chicago Board of Trade:


A database for New York Stock Exchange brokers has been developed that is available on request to 1898revenues@gmail.com that is searchable across the tax period for names and initials to aid in cancel identification.  A similar database needs to be developed for the lists above.  That project will begin this year, especially if I can figure out a way to make AI work for me in the process.

Meanwhile, simpler cancels that have full names, like that on the memo above, or with a relatively complete cancels like that below, can be matched to names in membership lists, as with the two Fyffe brothers below in CBOT members list from 1900:



Meanwhile, since Board of Trade members were last considered in any detail on this site more than 12 years ago, the web has seen a flowering of available material to support collectors of these cancels:


The American Elevator and Grain Trade, with its extraordinary front page, was a weekly trade journal published in Chicago.  The issues may be found online on many different servers, and are replete with advertisements and articles on commission traders like those that traded at the CBOT and in other cities and boards of trade.  A short article on the firm of Grier & Zeller in the May 15, 1901 edition of American Elevator & Grain Trade reported on the company's dissolution.  No point in looking for Grier & Zeller cancels in 1902:


More typically relevant for the 1898 collector are the business card and other advertisements, like this example for Milmine, Bodman & Company:



The Grain Dealers Journal was also a weekly published in Chicago, with less of a focus on grain elevators and grain elevator machinery than The American Elevator and Grain Trade.  


The Grain Dealers Journal published dozens of grain dealer cards, expecially from Chicago.  The next two journals focused on grain millers and their needs, from access to grain to the equipment to mill it.  




Published in St. Louis,  The Modern Miller included reporting and adverts from Chicago and millers and wheat trader from around the United States.




E. S. Woodworth & Co., based in Minneapolis, with an advert in the May 28, 1904 edition of the The Commercial West.

Lastly, the volume below provides photos and bios of many of the prominent members of the CBOT during the 1898 tax period: