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Sociedad Mini ,Share Certificate 1869 Uruguay .Juan D.Jackson signature.

$ 44.88

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Circulated/Uncirculated: Circulated
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Uruguay

    Description

    One Share Certificate of "Sociedad Mini"  Montevideo 1869,Uruguay . At Rincon de Tacuari,Departamento de Cerro Largo .Condition (opinion) :Fine (F) .Capital 270,000 pesos divided in 270 shares of 1000 pesos. Capital represented by  18 "Suertes de Estancia" (*)
    cattle and sheep (
    "18 Suertes de Estanci ,Ganado Vacuno y Lanar") .Three handwritten signatures including the president :Juan D.Jackson.(see related information below). Uncancelled .Printer:Lit A.Hequet y Cohas Hermanos ,Montevideo.Sice: 24cm/22cm (average or average/small).
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    (*) Each "Suerte de Estancia" means 1,5 leagues (leguas) x 2 leagues wich would be about 7.794m/10.392m of land.
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    Postage, including packing material, handling fees : Europe: USD 4.10 / USA $ 4.90. Rest of the World: USD 5.70
    FREE of postage for any other additional banknote , stocks & bonds or other items
    .
    Only one shipping charge per shipment (the highest one) no matter how many items you buy (combined shipping).
    Guaranteed genuine -
    .
    One
    month
    return
    policy
    (retail sales).
    Customers are invited to combine purchases to save postage.
    Full refund policy ,including shipping cost,guaranteed in case of lost or theft after the completion of the complaint with Spanish Correos for the registered letters (purchases above $ 40.00).
    As we have (or could have) more than one identical  item ,the serial number may differ from those shown in the picture which is for reference only.
    For purchases above .00 we send the orders registered with tracking number without extra charge, for purchases below .00 we ship as regular letters at the buyer's risk.
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    Banknote Grading
    UNC
    AU
    EF
    VF
    F
    VG
    G
    Fair
    Poor
    Uncirculated
    About Uncirculated
    Extremely Fine
    Very Fine
    Fine
    Very Good
    Good
    Fair
    Poor
    Edges
    no counting marks
    light counting folds OR...
    light counting folds
    corners are not fully rounded
    much handling on edges
    rounded edges
    Folds
    no folds
    ...OR one light fold through center
    max. three light folds or one strong crease
    several horizontal and vertical folds
    many folds and creases
    Paper
    color
    paper is clean with bright colors
    paper may have minimal dirt or some color smudging, but still crisp
    paper is not excessively dirty, but may have some softness
    paper may be dirty, discolored or stained
    very dirty, discolored and with some writing
    very dirty, discolorated, with writing and some obscured portions
    very dirty, discolored, with writing and obscured portions
    Tears
    no tears
    no tears into the border
    minor tears in the border, but out of design
    tears into the design
    Holes
    no holes
    no center hole, but staple hole usual
    center hole and staple hole
    Integrity
    no pieces missing
    no large pieces missing
    piece missing
    piece missing or tape holding pieces together
    See below related information from the web:
    Biography [edit]
    He was the son of John Jackson, an English immigrant, a native of Leek, and Clara Errazquin Larrañaga, a Uruguayan, of Basque origin. Of a Protestant father and a Catholic mother, he was baptized in the Catholic faith, his baptismal godfather being Mons. Dámaso Antonio Larrañaga, Vicar Apostolic of Montevideo and carnal uncle of his mother, to whom he owed his middle name. He studied at the Stonyhurst College of the Jesuits in England and carried out commercial practices in that country and in the United States between 1851 and 1858, returning to Montevideo after the death of his father, to take charge of the administration of family assets. .
    He inherited large tracts of land from his father. In the properties of the Jacksons, the reality of the Uruguayan rural environment was helped to transform: the cattle were mixed, the flocks were improved, the fields were wired and, in a certain way, Uruguay began to be made into an agro-exporting country. His father had introduced South Down beef herds from England and Argentina. After the Great War and until 1880, shearing shears were given in Jackson's ranches to women who asked.
    He was several times a member and president of the Charity and Public Welfare Commission, which was in charge of the administration of the Hospital de Caridad, now Hospital Maciel. He contributed financially and helped personally during the yellow fever (1856) and cholera (1867) epidemics. He never wanted to claim the government for the consumption of farms by the armies in civil wars, whatever their currency, they were countrymen who had to eat.
    He participated from the first attempts to achieve the arrival of the Salesians in Uruguay, together with Fr. Rafael Yéregui and his brother-in-law Félix Buxareo. He collaborated with the commission in charge of equipping the Colegio Pío, founded in 1877, and together with Buxareo acquired the land for the Salesian novitiate in Las Piedras, which began in 1887.
    He shared with Monsignor Luis Lasagna the concern for the technological and intellectual development of the new Republic. On his initiative and at his expense, the first agronomic school in the country was established in the Puntas de Manga area, near the capital, on an area of ​​more than 500 hectares, later known as the "Jackson School". He brought specialized teachers from France to train the teachers.
    He married Petrona Cibils, daughter of the important Catalan businessman, Jaime Cibils, with whom he had the construction of a careening dam, with an attached dock that was known as the "Cibils-Jackson" dam .1
    He died in Montevideo, at the age of 59, and his remains rest in the church on Avenida Luis Alberto de Herrera, known as the Jackson Chapel.
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    Biografía[editar]
    Fue hijo de John Jackson, inmigrante inglés, natural de Leek, y de Clara Errazquin Larrañaga, uruguaya, de origen vasco. De padre protestante y madre católica, fue bautizado en la fe católica, siendo su padrino de bautismo Mons. Dámaso Antonio Larrañaga, Vicario Apostólico de Montevideo y tío carnal de su madre, al cual debió su segundo nombre. Estudió en el Stonyhurst College de los jesuitas de Inglaterra y realizó prácticas de comercio en ese país y en Estados Unidos entre 1851 y 1858, regresando a Montevideo tras la muerte de su padre, para hacerse cargo de la administración de los bienes familiares.
    Heredó de su padre grandes extensiones de tierra. En las propiedades de los Jackson se ayudó a transformar la realidad del medio rural uruguayo: se mestizó el ganado, se mejoraron las majadas, se alambraron los campos y, en cierta forma, se comenzó a hacer del Uruguay un país agro exportador. Su padre había introducido desde Inglaterra y Argentina los lanares de carne de la raza South Down. Después de la Guerra Grande y hasta 1880 se les daban tijeras para esquilar en las estancias de Jackson a las mujeres que pidieran.
    Fue varias veces miembro y presidente de la Comisión de Caridad y Beneficencia Pública, que tenía a su cargo la administración del Hospital de Caridad, hoy Hospital Maciel. Contribuyó financieramente y ayudó personalmente durante las epidemias de fiebre amarilla (1856) y cólera (1867). Nunca quiso reclamar al gobierno por el consumo de haciendas de los ejércitos en las guerras civiles, fuesen cuales fuesen sus divisas eran paisanos que tenían que comer.
    Participó desde los primeros intentos para lograr la llegada de los salesianos a Uruguay, junto al Pbro. Rafael Yéregui y a su cuñado Félix Buxareo. Colaboró con la comisión encargada del equipamiento del Colegio Pío, fundado en 1877, y adquirió junto con Buxareo los terrenos para el noviciado salesiano en Las Piedras, que comenzó en 1887.
    Compartía con monseñor Luis Lasagna la preocupación por el desarrollo tecnológico e intelectual de la nueva República. Por su iniciativa y a su costo se implantó en la zona de Puntas de Manga, cercana a la capital, la primera escuela agronómica del país en un predio de más de 500 hectáreas, posteriormente conocida como "Escuela Jackson". Trajo docentes especializados de Francia para la formación de los profesores.
    Se casó con Petrona Cibils, hija del importante hombre de negocios catalán, Jaime Cibils, con quien había la construcción de un dique de carena, con un muelle anexo que fue conocido como dique "Cibils-Jackson".1
    Murió en Montevideo, a los 59 años, y sus restos descansan en la iglesia de la Avenida Luis Alberto de Herrera, conocida como capilla Jackson.2
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