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George Washington Signed 6x7.5 1787 Potomac Company Pay Order BAS Slabbed


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  • George Washington Signed 6x7.5 1787  Potomac Company Pay Order BAS Slabbed
  • George Washington Signed 6x7.5 1787  Potomac Company Pay Order BAS Slabbed
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SKU:BAS-13692352

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SKU:
BAS-13692352

Additional Product Details

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Additional Product Details

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Press Pass Collectibles offers only Authentic In-Person Autographs as well as a 100% money back lifetime Certificate of Authenticity with every single autograph we sell. All autographed items come with a Certificate Of Authenticity (COA).

Description

This Autographed 6x7.5 Potomac Company Pay Order Dated May 25th. 1787 Document has been Personally Signed by George Washington. This item is 100% Authentic, it comes slabbed and authenticated by Beckett Authentication Services. The authenticity can be verified on Beckett Authentication Services website. This pay order directed to William Hartshorne, treasurer of the Potomac Company. In full: "Please pay to Colo. William Darke or order One Thousand Dollars for acco. of the Potomac Company." Signed at the conclusion by George Washington, John Fitzgerald, and George Gilpin as directors of the Potomac Company. Endorsed on the reverse by Darke, "Wm. Darke," to confirm receipt of £300. One of George Washington's greatest interests in the period between the end of the Revolutionary War and the start of his presidency was the development of the picturesque Potomac River as a navigable inland transportation route. The Potowmack Company, formed to accomplish this task using a series of locks and canals, was formed in 1785 and Washington was named the company's president. He appointed Col. Darke—himself a hero of the Revolution—as the company’s key upriver agent at Shepherdstown. With an eye toward the greater good of the nation, Washington's ambitions surpassed those of the ordinary businessman—he believed that improved infrastructure would strengthen the fledgling United States, with the Potomac Canal forming a literal link from east to west and binding together territories in a 'chain which could never be broken.' The project was beset by constant difficulty: insufficient funding and constant legal trouble contributed to the company's ineffectiveness and eventual failure.
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