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Collection: Books and Periodicals
1895 Pictorial History of Nevada County, California (979.437 COM (622.342 NEV, PH 1-4))(2000) (194 pages)

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Page: of 194

NEVADA COUNTY MINING REVIEW
which have been beneficial to him in after life. He left Germany in
1873, coming direct to Grass Valley. Entering the store of Jacob
Heyman he acted as clerk until November, 1876, when the bank of
Weissbein Bros. & Co. was established. This bank, from a small
beginning, has grown to be one of the a financial institutions of
the county under the efficient management of the Weissbein brothers.
Mr. Weissbein is largely interested in the W. Y. O. D. and other mining
properties, and has recently built for himself an elegant home at the top
of Main Street hill, overlooking the city.
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When making a review of the business interests,
JOHN GLASSON and incidentally the business men of a city, it is
always a pleasure to be able to associate the names
of early timers with the progressive and prosperous business men of the
present time. It goes to show what push, energy, and enterprise will
accomplish. No better example of this can be shown in Grass Valley
than by referring to the subject of this sketch. John Glasson was born
in London, England, December 5, 1851, and was taken by his parents to
Cornwall, where he passed his younger days, and then came to America
in 1864, coming direct to Grass Valley. A year later he went to Nevada
City, where he learned the trade of moulder and remained for nine years,
He then became employed in mercantile pursuits, and was with George
Fletcher, who was then in the grocery and meat business here. Hethen
became associated with John Polglase for eight years and later with Wm.
Coleman for eleven years, the partnership terminating August 1, 1894,
when the firm went out of the business. Mr. Glasson bought out the
interests of the Grass Valley Gas Company in 1886 and putin an excellent electric light plant. He has also been largely and successfully
interested in mining, and has at different times had stock in the
Imperial, Centennial, Washington, Phoenix (now Osborn Hill), North
Banner and North Star. During his long business career in Nevada
County, Mr. Glasson has ever retained an undisputed reputation for
honorable business methods and is prominently identified with the
general progress of Grass Valley in the later years of its existence.
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Among the large grocery houses of Nevada County
E. M. TAYLOR ay be named the firm of Dorsey & Co. of Grass
Valley. This house, which was established in
1894, is owned by S. P. Dorsey and managed by E. M. Taylor, one of the
most efficient commercial men on the Coast. Mr. Taylor is a native of
California and was born near Grass Valley in 1854. He attended the
high schoo] of Grass Valley and graduated from Heald’s Business
College in 1873, immediately accepting a position of bookkeeper with R.
Mercer, a merchant of Gold Hill, Nevada, remaining in said position
until 1880, then engaging in business in San Francisco, and for ten
years held positions as traveling man for a number of leading firms. He
4 Sey
acted as traveling salesman for Adelsdorffer & Brandenstein, otherwise
known as the Washington Manufacturing Company, for eight years.
Early in 1894 be returned to Grass Valley to act as manager for Dorsey
& Co., and by his knowledge of every detail of the business has
established a reputation for Dorsey & Co, second to none. Mr. Taylor
is a genial gentleman and is bound to make friends wherever he may
reside.
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One of the business enterprises which requires
RICHARD NOELL good judgment in purchasing stock is the hardware
business. That Mr. Richard Noell thoroughly
understands this is evinced by the excellent trade he has built up in this
city since first opening his hardware store in 1892. Richard Noell was
born in England in November, 1839, and came to California in 1861. He
located in Mariposa County, where he followed mining for three years.
In 1869 he came to Nevada County and was engaged for a number of
years as clerk in the grocery and provision store of Richard Roberts.
He afterward marelacenta farm on the road leading from Grass Valley to
Nevada City, and built here one of the cosiest rural homes in Nevada
County. He served one term as county supervisor from district No. 2,
with credit to himself and satisfaction to his constituents. During 1892
he opened a hardware and mining supply store on Main Street and in
this short time he has built up a flourishing business, Mr. Noell is a
man of family and is public-spirited and enterprising on all occasions.
His business is rapidly increasing and his well known integrity is an
assurance that all business transacted with him will be carefully and
judiciously done.
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James M. Lakenan, one of Grass Valley’s foremost
citizens, is a native of St. Louis, Missouri, where
he was born in 1833. Heattended school for a few
years and at the age of fifteen began to learn the blacksmithing business.
In 1853, when nineteen years old, Mr. Lakenan came to California,
driving an ox team across the plains. He first located at Sacramento
where he remained three years He then went to ‘‘God’s Country,” in
the northern part of Nevada County, and mined between there and
Omega for three years. After spending a year and a half at engineering at
Nevada City, and a year at the Jennings Mine near Allison Ranch, he
located in Grass Valley and engaged in the foundry business with M. C.
Taylor, At the end of two years and a half the partnership was dissolved
and Mr. Lakenan went East during the war. He purchased improved
machinery, and upon his return in 1865, established the Grass Valley
foundry on lower Main Street, which he has since conducted. He has
led an active life and has been connected with every improvement
inaugurated in this city. He was one of the organizers of the Eureka
Fire Company, the first established in Grass Valley, and remained one
of its active members until it disbanded, when he joined Protection Hose
Company, No. 1. He was an alert fireman for fifteen years, when he
J. M. LAKENAN