William A. Leidesdorff Letter

William A. Leidesdorff Letter

Author: William Alexander Leidesdorff

Publisher:

Published: 1847

Total Pages: 2

ISBN-13:

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Letter written from Leidesdorff in Yerba Buena to Smith in Bodega, concerning the chartering and hauling of the Brig Commodore Stockton. The letter also refers to two beach lots in Yerba Buena owned by Smith, part of land dealings involving Smith, Leidesdorff, Washington A. Bartlett, and George Hyde.


William Alexander Leidesdorff - First Black Millionaire, American Consul and California Pioneer

William Alexander Leidesdorff - First Black Millionaire, American Consul and California Pioneer

Author: Gary M. Palgon

Publisher: Lulu.com

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 98

ISBN-13: 1411646258

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William Alexander Leidesdorff is probably one of the best-kept secrets in the pioneering of the West and the creation of the State of California. Born out of wedlock in St. Croix, Danish West Indies in 1810 to a Jewish Danish sugar planter and a black plantation worker, he went on to become the first Black millionaire when gold was found on his property shortly before he died in 1848.


John B. Montgomery Letter

John B. Montgomery Letter

Author: John Berrien Montgomery

Publisher:

Published:

Total Pages: 1

ISBN-13:

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Montgomery discusses firing a 21 gun salute from his ship, Portsmouth, in Yerba Buena, and the reading of a proclamation of Commander Sloat.


J.L. Folsom-William A. Leidesdorff Estate Papers

J.L. Folsom-William A. Leidesdorff Estate Papers

Author: Joseph Libbey Folsom

Publisher:

Published: 1850

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Consists of the legal correspondence of J.L. Folsom and his San Francisco lawyers, H.W. Halleck, A.C. Peachy and P. Warren Van Winkle, regarding Folsom's San Francisco tenants and properties. Also contains letters from Folsom's New York lawyers, Snydum, Reed & Co., regarding Folsom's acquisition of William A. Leidesdorff's property from his mother, Anna Maria Sparks. After Folsom's death, Halleck, Peachy, and Van Winkle became his estate's executors, and continued Folsom's legal correspondence. Also includes a statement "In the matter of the Estate of J.L. Folsom", a bill remitted by Folsom, and leases signed by Folsom. Finally, there is one deed signed by Jacob C. Biedermann.