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V23 2020 INDEX       E-SYLUM ARCHIVE

The E-Sylum: Volume 23, Number 10, March 8, 2020, Article 18

HENRY C. KENDRICK (1828-1894)

John Lupia submitted the following information from the online draft of his book of numismatic biographies for this week's installment of his series. Thanks! As always, this is an excerpt with the full article and bibliography available online. This week's subject is specie broker and coin dealer H. C. Kendrick of Boston. -Editor

Kendrick, Schayer ad, c.1885 Henry C. Kendrick (1828-1894) was born in Bedford, New Hampshire, son of Daniel and Laura Lombard Kendrick. On October 27, 1858 he married Elizabeth Whiting a native of Boston at Boston. They first moved to Charlestown, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, where we find them listed in the 1860 U.S. Census. They moved to Hyde Park, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, listed in the 1870 U. S. Census. The Kendricks then moved to Quincy and lived at 66 Franklin Street, also in Norfolk County, Massachusetts.

Kendrick was an entrepreneur, money & stock broker, revenue stamp, and specie broker in Boston active since the end of the Civil War. By 1865 he was selling Revenue Stamps or exchanged for torn or defaced currency and Greenbacks at the Traveller Counting Room on State Street. This was at the Boston Evening Traveller Building, which published a newspaper from 1845 until 1885. Among their tenants was Henry C. Kendrick listed as an American Bill Broker. In the 1870 Boston Directory he had a business partner, I. W. Elwell in the firm of Kendrick & Elwell, Fractional Currency & Bill Brokers, 31 State Street, Boston. In 1884, he was the proprietor of H. C. Kendrick's, 31 State Street, Boston, a Symphony Concert & Rehearsal Hall, where he sold seats, as well as his Specie & Bill Brokerage. In the 1888 Boston City Directory he is listed as a Specie Broker at 9 State Street, Boston. Circa 1890 he relocated to 15 State Street.

After his death the firm was renamed Kendrick's Money Exchange, and John P. Conroy was hired as the manager. By 1907 the firm relocated once again near the Easton Building, 9 State Street. The following year, 1908, the firm relocated this time to 218 Washington Street. By January 1910 the firm ran an advertising campaign in The Numismatist soliciting that they bought and sold rare coins.

To read the complete article, see:
KENDRICK, HENRY C. (https://sites.google.com/site/numismaticmallcom/encyclopedic-dictionary-of-numismatic-biographies/kendrick-h-c)

To read an earlier E-Sylum article, see:
H. C. KENDRICK OF BOSTON: NO DEMAND FOR GOLD DOLLARS (https://www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v18n30a13.html)



Wayne Homren, Editor

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To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum, write to the Editor at this address: whomren@gmail.com

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