- New York Gold Exchange
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The New York Gold Exchange was an exchange formed near the beginning of the Civil War for the purpose of creating an open market for transactions involving gold and the government-created paper currency, the greenback. It was formed by bankers and brokers who had been involved in the New York Stock Exchange and various mercantile exchanges who were instructed that trades in gold and greenbacks were taking up to much of the attention of the older exchanges. Among the pivotal men involved was James Boorman Colgate. It was the locus of the Black Friday (1869) Financial Panic when Jay Gould and James Fisk attempted to corner gold.
References
Categories:- Stock exchanges in the United States
- United States financial services company stubs
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