Essays in the Earlier History of American Corporations: Eighteenth century business corporations in the United StatesHarvard University Press, 1917 - Business & Economics |
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Page 15
... directing him to call the meeting . The proprietors duly met were to become a corporation , with power to arrange for future meetings , elect moderator and directors , etc. , as they chose . Voting rights were to be one vote per share ...
... directing him to call the meeting . The proprietors duly met were to become a corporation , with power to arrange for future meetings , elect moderator and directors , etc. , as they chose . Voting rights were to be one vote per share ...
Page 17
... directing him to call the meeting . The proprietors duly met were to become a corporation , with power to arrange for future meetings , elect moderator and directors , etc. , as they chose . Voting rights were to be one vote per share ...
... directing him to call the meeting . The proprietors duly met were to become a corporation , with power to arrange for future meetings , elect moderator and directors , etc. , as they chose . Voting rights were to be one vote per share ...
Page 74
... directed a 1 Stockholders ' Records , July 19 , 26 , 31 , 1792 , Sept. 1 , 1800. On Blodget , who was active till about the time the bank opened and was absent thereafter , see infra , 97 , 239 . 2 Directors ' Records , 15-17 . An ...
... directed a 1 Stockholders ' Records , July 19 , 26 , 31 , 1792 , Sept. 1 , 1800. On Blodget , who was active till about the time the bank opened and was absent thereafter , see infra , 97 , 239 . 2 Directors ' Records , 15-17 . An ...
Page 75
... directed in 1795 and completed in December , 1796.1 Thus the state soon held one- third of the entire capital stock . The state treasurer was ex- officio a director , though he does not seem to have attended directors ' meetings . The ...
... directed in 1795 and completed in December , 1796.1 Thus the state soon held one- third of the entire capital stock . The state treasurer was ex- officio a director , though he does not seem to have attended directors ' meetings . The ...
Page 77
... directed on request to inform the cashier of either of the other banks how many of its notes he held , on express condition that the favor be reciprocated . In May a committee of the directors was appointed to confer with the boards of ...
... directed on request to inform the cashier of either of the other banks how many of its notes he held , on express condition that the favor be reciprocated . In May a committee of the directors was appointed to confer with the boards of ...
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Popular passages
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Page 375 - The Federalist : A commentary on the Constitution of the United States. A Collection of Essays, By Alexander Hamilton, Jay, and Madison.
Page 14 - His primary object was, however, to secure an easy communication between the states, which the free intercourse now to be opened seemed to call for. The political obstacles being removed, a removal of the natural ones, as far as possible, ought to follow.
Page 87 - These extravagant sallies of speculation do injury to the government, and to the whole system of public credit, by disgusting all sober citizens, and giving a wild air to every thing.
Page 56 - All the influence of the moneyed men ought to be wrapped up in the Union, and in one bank. The State banks may become the favorites of the States. They, the latter, will be pressed to emulate the example of the Union, and to show their sovereignty by a parade of institutions, like those of the nation.
Page 255 - States ; to take the earliest means for erecting and establishing in each Colony a Society for the improvement of Agriculture, Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce, and to maintain a correspondence between such societies, that the rich and numerous natural advantages of the country for supporting its inhabitants might not be neglected. They were further recommended to consider of ways and means of introducing the manufactures of duck, sail-cloth, and steel where they were not already understood, and...
Page 123 - Whereas, it is the desire of the representatives of this Commonwealth to embrace every suitable occasion of testifying their sense of the unexampled merits of George Washington, Esq., towards his country ; and it is their wish in particular that those great works for its improvement, which, both as springing from the liberty which he has been so instrumental in establishing, and as encouraged by bis patronage, will be durable monuments of his glory, may be made monuments also of the gratitude of...
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Page 374 - Duer, William Alexander. A Course of Lectures on the Constitutional jurisprudence of the United States; Delivered Annually in Columbia College, New York.
Page 15 - Mason was for limiting the power to the single case of Canals. He was afraid of monopolies of every sort, which he did not think were by any means already implied by the Constitution as supposed by Mr. Wilson.