Saturday, 10 October 2020

1881 Organizational Document

Many readers here will already be familiar with the handwritten organizational document dated February 1881. It outlines the plans of the principals and lists the amounts they donated or pledged to the cause. A discussion of this document can be found in Volume 2 of Separate Identity, pages 169-171.

It is reproduced here, however, so that readers can see it in “full color.”

 


Reproduced with permission from Tower Archives, with thanks

What significance does color have? You will note that there is a purple line down the side of the written word on the left, which covers the whole the document. Additionally, when W H Conley signed the document, he also used a purple pencil or similar.

This would not be accidental. A researcher who has spent much time in Pittsburgh and Allegheny record offices over the years has come across this action several times. And on several other occasions in documents from the 1880s, by the signature in purple someone has written the title “President” or a similar expression to the show the person’s key position in the document.

So William Henry Conley was of course the first president, and signed here in that capacity. It is only a small point, but it’s only by seeing the document reproduced in color that it can it be observed. 


3 comments:

  1. Did C. T. Russel contribute 7,000 or 1,000? And Conley 4,000? Is there a clear version of the text so that it can be read?

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  2. The consensus (covered in Separate Identity volume 2) is that CTR contributed $7000 - the tail on the first figure for "seven" contrasts with the "one" at the start of Joseph Lytle's contribution. Then the other three made up $7000 between them - Conley $4000, Jones $2000, and Joseph $1000.

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