Description:

U.S. Treasury
New York, NY; Philadelphia, PA, ca. 1787-1800
Rare Treasury Certificates from 1787 and 1792
Partially printed DS
[U.S. TREASURY.] Joseph Nourse, Partially Printed Document Signed, Treasury Certificate for Martin Cockburn, August 2, 1787, [New York, New York]. 1 p., 8.25" x 7.75". Separated on one fold; glued to the back of next document.
With: Joseph Karrick, Autograph Document Signed, Transfer of Debt to Samuel Meredith, June 3, 1800. 1 p., 7.75" x 8.25". General toning; glued to the back of the previous document.
Joseph Nourse, Partially Printed Document Signed, Treasury Certificate for John Lockarty, March 9, 1792, [Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]. 2 pp., 7.25" x 7.25". Expected folds; partial separation on two folds; some irregular and folded edges; red ink faint in some areas.

Long-time Register of the United States Joseph Nourse signed both of these Treasury Certificates, and his younger brother Michael Nourse signed an attached transfer of debt.

Complete Transcript
TREASURY of the UNITED STATES.
Register's Office, 2d August 1787
By Virtue of a Warrant from the Comptroller of the Treasury of the United States unto me directed, I do hereby certify to all whom it may concern, that there is due by the United States to Martin Cockburn the Sum of Sixteen Dollars and twenty two ninetieths bearing Interest at Six per Centum per Annum from the Sixteenth day of April 1782, which Debt is duly recorded in the Books of the Treasury, and transferable there only, according to the Rule and Forms in that behalf made.
[Joseph] Nourse / Register
DOLLARS 16 22/90ths

Pursuant to the provisions of an Act of Congress passed on the 12: of June 1798 I do, by virtue of a power of Attorney and for value received, assign and transfer the within debt to Samuel Meredith Esqr Treasr of the United States in trust for said Sta[?]
June 3d 1800.
Joseph Karrick
Debit accompt. / Jno Laub.
Exd & Accompt closed 4th June 1800 / Michl Nourse

Treasury of the United States.
No. 654 Register's Office, 9th March 17[92?]
By VIRTUE of a WARRANT from the Comptroller of the Treasury of the United States, unto me directed, I do hereby certify to all whom it may concern: That there is due from the United States to John Lackarty alias John Lacharty an Invalid Pensioner, New York the Sum of Ten dollars and sixty six Cents bearing Interest at six per Centum per Annum, from the fourth day of March 1789 which Debt is duly recorded in the Books of the Treasury and transferable there only by personal Appearance, or by legal Attorney, according to the Rules and Forms in that behalf made.
Joseph Nourse
Dollars $10 66 Cents
[Verso:]
By virtue of a power of Attorney and for value Received I assign the within debt to Armstrong & Barnwall of New York
Debit Account February 26th 1793
Clement Biddle

I Request the within may be funded in the above mentioned names
Feby 27th 1793 / Thomas Biddle

Joseph Nourse (1754-1841) was born in London, England, and immigrated to Virginia with his family in 1769. During the Revolutionary War, Nourse served as military secretary to General Charles Lee and by 1777 as deputy secretary of the Board of War. In 1779, he served as Assistant Auditor General of the Board of Treasury. In 1781, the Confederation Congress appointed Nourse as Register of the Treasury, a position he held for the remainder of the Confederation government and during the first six presidents under the U.S. Constitution. He was forced from office in 1829

Martin Cockburn (1742-1819) was born in Jamaica, the son of Dr. Thomas Cockburn. He settled in Virginia and owned an estate called Springfield. He later served as tax commissioner for Fairfax County.

Joseph Karrick (1768-1829) was a prominent Baltimore and Philadelphia merchant with business throughout Europe and the Caribbean. He also served as an agent of the North American Land Company and a director of the Patapsco Insurance Company.

John Laub (1776-1837) was born on July 4, 1776, the date of the Declaration of Independence. In 1794, he was appointed a clerk in the First Comptroller's Office in the Treasury Department in Philadelphia. He moved to Washington with the government. By the time of his death, he was chief clerk, after forty-three years of continuous service in the First Comptroller's Office. His son John Y. Laub (1819-1880) was appointed a clerk in the same office within days after his father died in 1837 and remained in the office for forty-three years as well.

Michael Nourse (1778-1860) was born in Virginia and was the younger brother of the first Register of the Treasury Joseph Nourse. He served as chief clerk of the Treasury from the 1790s until he was removed in 1853. During his long tenure, he several times served as acting Register.

John Lockarty (d. 1808) served as a private in a New York regiment in the Revolutionary War. He received a pension of $5 per month after 1801.

Clement Biddle (1740-1814) was born in Philadelphia. As a part of the Society of Friends, he helped to organize the "Quaker Blues," a company of volunteers in the Revolutionary War. He fought in the Battles of Princeton, Brandywine, Germantown, and Monmouth. He served as Commissary General at Valley Forge. After resigning from the army in 1780, he was made quartermaster general of the Pennsylvania troops in 1781. After the war, he served as the first U.S. Marshal for Pennsylvania from 1789 to 1793. He also served as a notary and broker, making him a rich man.

The extended Biddle family of Philadelphia included many persons named Thomas. This signer might have been:
Thomas Biddle (1761-1807) owned part of Biddle's Island in the Delaware River.

This item comes with a Certificate from John Reznikoff, a premier authenticator for both major 3rd party authentication services, PSA and JSA (James Spence Authentications), as well as numerous auction houses.

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