-40%

East Palestine Rubber Company Bonus Bond Certificate (Issued to Charles Barney)

$ 15.82

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Modified Item: No
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back

    Description

    East Palestine Rubber Company Bonus Bond Certificate
    Issued to Charles Barney
    This piece is an Ebay exclusive. We are only offering this piece here!
    The price of this piece has been reduced yet again!!!
    Original Price:
    .99
    First Reduction:
    .97
    Second Reduction:
    .97
    Third Reduction:
    .97
    Current Price:
    .97
    (you now save 40%!!)
    The East Palestine Rubber Company was founded in 1916 and was based in East Palestine, Ohio.
    The company had a plant along the tracks of the Pennsylvania Railroad, where they made their line of Nabob tires.
    East Palestine was founded in 1828 and incorporated as a city in 1875. Formerly, the community was known as Mechanicsburg, but the name was changed to East Palestine as part of the religious nomenclature in the area. (Palestine was already a community in Ohio). Mechanicsburg is today a name given to a village in Champaign County, near Dayton. Nearby clay pits supported a pottery industry, including the W. S. George Pottery Company that was formed in 1909 from the East Palestine Pottery Company, and operated in the town until 1960.
    Charles D. Barney
    Barney was born in Sandusky, Ohio, the son of a grain merchant. Barney attended the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan when the American Civil War broke out. Barney's older brother was killed and at the end of 1862, Barney was permitted by his family to enlist in the U.S. Army. After the war, Barney worked briefly as a clerk at a bank in Sandusky.
    After two years, Barney moved to Philadelphia, where he married Laura E. Cooke, the daughter of prominent Philadelphia financier Jay Cooke, joining the firm of Jay Cooke & Company Following the collapse of his father-in-law's Philadelphia banking house, in 1873, Barney reorganized the firm as Chas. D. Barney & Co. Barney's brother-in-law, Jay Cooke, Jr., joined the new firm as a minority partner.
    Barney retired from day-to-day control of the firm in 1906 but remained involved through the 1930s. In 1938, Charles D. Barney & Co. and Edward B. Smith & Co. merged to form Smith Barney & Co.
    Barney died in 1945 at the age of 101 at Elkins Park, Pennsylvania near Philadelphia. At the time of his death, Barney was among the oldest living veterans of the American Civil War.
    Barney was a director of the Union League of Philadelphia.
    Frequently Asked Questions:
    Is the certificate in this listing, the exact piece I will receive?
    Yes.
    Is this document authentic or a reproduction?
    All pieces we offer are originals - we do not sell reproductions. If you ever find one of our pieces not to be authentic, it may be returned at any time.
    Can this certificate be cashed in?
    All of our certificates are sold only as collectible pieces, as they are either canceled or obsolete. Certificates carry no value on any of today's financial indexes and no transfer of ownership is implied.
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    We offer flat rate shipping - whether you order 1 certificate or 100 - you pay only the published flat rate.
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    Is all of your inventory on eBay?
    Absolutely not! We have 1,000s of certificates on our website.