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French corporations

The directors of French corporations received a medal or token, called a "jeton de presence," when they attended a meeting of the board of directors.  This medal was issued by the General Fire Assurance Company (Compagnie d'Assurances Générales contre l'Incendie) of Paris from 1818 through at least 1919.  Made of silver, it measured 35 mm. in diameter.

FR_Share_CdAGCI_large.jpg (93318 bytes) Nineteenth-century French corporations issued nominative shares (actions nominatives) or bearer shares (actions au porteur).  This share certificate was issued by the General Fire Assurance Company (Compagnie d'Assurances Générales contre l'Incendie) of Paris on April 6, 1820, to Monsieur N. Hubbard Junior.  The heading reads "Action nominative de 5,000 Francs" and the certificate indicates that he owns ten nominative shares.
Click share for larger view

From General Fire Assurance Company of Paris, France (La Compagnie d'Assurances Générales contre l'Incendie), 1819-1919:  A Century of Insurance and Financial Wisdom (n.p., [1919]), pp. 33, 38. 

To be added: examples of corporate charters, share certificates, proxies; entrance cards for admittance to shareholder meetings; minutes of nineteenth-century shareholder meetings.

    

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